I am happy that African American actor, Michael Jai White, is a king in Ghana

Last week, a friend sent me a post about African American actor, Michael Jai White’s, recent enstoolment in Ghana and asked me to share my thoughts on it.

White was enstooled by Odeneho Kwafo Akoto III, the Akwamuhene (Akwamu king) in the Akwamu traditional area this past December. White along with 90 African American celebrities were in Ghana for the Full Circle Festival, as part of the government’s Year of Return initiatives.

White was bestowed the name Nana Akoto III, Odopon, which means “The tree with strong roots that does not fear the storm”.

There is beautiful footage of the ceremony here. White and his wife have expressed deep gratitude for the honor.

Perhaps my friend asked for my opinion because some people, perhaps Ghanaians, have been murmuring or insinuating that White does not deserve the honor - I’ve heard one or two people reason that he hasn’t done anything for the Akwamu people.

Firstly, chieftaincy has its own familial, metaphysical/spiritual honor system for appointment that has nothing to do with merit or “deservedness”…so the point is mute.

Secondly, White’s contribution to the African-American community and by virtue the African diaspora makes him deserving of the honor. He is a fighter, educator, and respected author, extending his success to positively influence many others, especially youth, in the black community.

Thirdly, White’s enstoolment is a beautiful gesture of unity and embrace between Ghanaians and African Americans that really has little to do with White. White, his wife, and those with him probably felt more deeply tied to Akwamuhene, Ghana, and the continent as a result of the gesture because of the event but its ripple effect on others will be told for generations to come.

In other words, this historical moment happened through White but it is not for White.

The gesture is really a TANGIBLE note of Ghana’s investment in making African Americans feel at home and reconnected to the land. It seemed to say, “we are willing to welcome, embrace, celebrate, and bestow great honor to you should you return”.

This will not be the first time Ghana has made such symbolic gestures of inclusion to our African American counterparts. In 1957, Ghana’s first president, Kwame Nkrumah, invited prominent African American leaders, Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcom X, to the country’s independence day celebration.

Nkrumah also invited Du Bois to Ghana to work on Encyclopedia Africana three years later. Many other prominent African Americans and other Black people of the Diaspora have made the journey home. Hundreds, if not thousands, have fully repatriated, and many have gained citizenship in Ghana. In 2016, then president, Mahama granted 34 members of the African-Caribbean diaspora full citizenship which made them entitled to every privilege deserving and due any Ghanaian.

Other countries in Africa also have also made great strides in this area.

King of Pop, Michael Jackson, was enstooled as the king of Amalaman Anoh in Krindjabo, a village in the southeastern corner of Ivory Coast. The chief had asserted that Michael was Sanwi royalty and, accordingly, invited him to be crowned king-in-waiting. Apparently, civil rights leader, Jesse Jackson, has been enstooled in Krindjabo since Michael passing.

Are there other African Americans who have been enstooled as royalty in the continent? Perhaps there are but I can’t seem to find a list.

Nevertheless, this moment is worth celebrating by us all!

It won't always go as planned

It is 9:47pm in Accra and I am sitting in a restaurant called Mangos…writing.

Just a few minutes ago, I had written a thoughtful piece on my reason for starting my platform, Africans on China. I have had to do a lot of work around it this week so I thought to share what led me to that initiative anyway.

I was editing the post and some how, deleted the text. I tried to retrieve it …Ctlr Z-ed to no avail.

Anyone who has lost a text online knows how this feels.

I wouldn’t mind writing the post over but I have to head home before it gets too late; I don’t like driving at night, especially in Ghana, and I have already overstayed my welcome outside.

Tomorrow will be another day to try. But at least, I wrote this and a lot of life is this - making plans, working towards it, and having things go otherwise.

BBC Africa Debate 2018: To Say The Thing Without Saying The Thing

Last month (Feb 23rd), I was invited to the Annual BBC Africa's Komla Dumlor Award and Africa Debate held at the Alisa Hotel in Accra. The topic: Is the older generation failing Africa’s youth? It was hosted by BBC journalists Akwasi Sarpong and Amina Yuguda. 

The debate is now available online. Perhaps you find yourself agreeing or disagreeing with a  side, perhaps you are in the middle. Nonetheless, you wish you had a visual aide to help you place the people and their perspectives you hear on audio in its proper context. Below, I "say the thing without saying the thing" - I answer the question without answering it. Take a read at my synopsis/context analysis and let me know your thoughts. Which side of the debate do you fall on?


On February 23rd, BBC invited a mixed crowd of about 100 Africa enthusiasts to Accra, Ghana for an intergenerational conversation about the future of the continent. We are to debate the question: “Is the older generation failing Africa’s youth?”.


I am there with the Accra discourse usuals: Will Senyo, the visionary behind Accra’s tech enclave in Osu, discourse peddlers like members of the World Economic Forum’s youth initiative, Global Shapers Accra Hub, and the heralded Mustapha Hamid, Ghana’s Minister of Information.


There are socialites like actress/artist Sister Deborah, impassioned students from oft-cited Ashesi University, and acclaimed journalists like Joy FM’s Kojo Yankson. The panel for the day’s debate is also to note: Zanetor Rawlings, Member of Parliament in Ghana; Patrick Awuah, founder of Ashesi University; Fatima Tambajang, a 24 year-old Gambian woman who returned from Denmark to live in Ghana; Ethel Cofie, entrepreneur and founder of Women In Tech Africa; and John Kufuor, former Ghanaian president and African Union Chairperson.


Like the event’s venue, the attendees and panelists are unassuming. No fancy suits or thousand dollar shoes or purses, a few young people notably wear ankara print, or ‘African wear’ as is the traditional Friday fashion in Ghana. Decorations are sparse - there are just a few pull up banners projecting a smiling Komla Dumor, the iconic Ghanaian journalist who worked for the BBC and in whose honor the mornings event was held. There are light refreshments a few people meander around.


The ambiance is genial, people in the room are generally familiar with each other, or at least, each other’s work. There is no trophy to be won, no points to be scored, and no money to be earned; we are freed our our usual African competitiveness and let their guards down. With the exception of the launch of the Komla Dumor awards prior and a five minute run down on the opening and closing applause for the show, no parts of the conversation are contrived.

The debate is how you hear it- the magnetic moderators, Ghana’s Akwasi Sarpong and Nigeria’s Amina Yuguda, guide the audience through a build up of questions on the state of affairs between African youth and and the older generation. Like one blows into a balloon, Sarpong and Yuguda effortlessly guide the conversation between the panelists and one or two audience members, till, pop, twelve hands shoot up and stay up, and Yuguda must choose who can speak. The room becomes measurably opinionated, energetic, and spirited. By the end, Sarpong notes that even the Minister for Information did not get to speak.

You will hear or have heard the meat of the show so what is of essence here is I paint a picture of what you cannot hear: the humor with which former President Kufuor courts the crowd despite vivid protests on the face of many when he affirms traditional gender tropes in his arguments. It’s almost like knowing both the intention and harmlessness of a person so forgiving him before he is remorseful.

Many may not agree with the former president but the man is endearing. It is also important to note the sympathy, despair, and concern with which many listen when a young Ghanaian man talks about his to journey to Libya. He talks about starting a business and losing his money in the mid 2000s. Pushed to the wall, he decides to head to Libya. Just like the saying goes, he too is saying the thing without saying the thing. Many of us know too well the uncertainty of the African marketplace, the plight of economic migration, and the reality of our precarious existence as young people in Ghana and Africa at large.

Finally, it is worth noting the agnst with which the students from Patrick Awuah’s brainchild, Ashesi University, speak. These students are among the youngest in the crowd and are armed with budding consciousness about our society and world. They are innocent and moral enough to seek justice and repair. If this is any testament to the temperament of the audience assembled, when they speak, we become silent and deliberate. Many times, we know they are right.

In fact, the debate closes with no clear answer to the question posed but prescriptions from audience members and panelists alike are commendable. As we prepare to usher in a new decade, Africa, like the rest of the world, is anxious about what the future holds. The continent, perhaps unlike its counterpart, contends with a hyper-charged reality, a growing and more vocal and visible youth, the world’s largest and youngest population.

As old paradigms disintegrate and shift, discourse is imperative to imagining and creating new systems and beliefs. If the continent can exhibit the attentiveness the BBC Africa debate audience extends to the ferocious Ashesi students who speak, we might be in good standing to create a prosperous continent for the most affected: our youth.

The Bronx Is Burning: The African Haven That Almost Wasn't

I recently learned about the grim history of the Bronx of the mid 70s to early 90s. How does the current conversation around the African Diaspora and contributions to the continent fit into this history and narrative? I share the history of the burning borough and how it relates to development in this post.

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It Matters, Even When We Think It Does Not, Part II

I wrote a post on Instagram about a movement in the young Diaspora that a lot of people, especially those doing the work, showed love to (that is, appreciated). It was such an honor to be acknowledged in that way. I wish more people would receive these tokens of validation for their work. But even when they/we do not, it is important that we continue the pursuit.

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The One Thing I Wish My African Friends Understood About Black Lives Matter

The period of the 1950s and 60s was a vibrant one for Africa and African Americans. During both the Independence Struggle in Africa and the Civil Rights Movement in the U.S., the two groups collaborated, with leaders visiting and seeking council and perspective from each other. We don't see that same level of collaboration for today's social movements, especially Black Lives Matter. This might explain why. 

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Would Mobile Money Take Off In The U.S. Or Europe?

Mobile Money, the money transfer platform which has gained significant traction in East and West Africa, is not an Africa-only product because it can function anywhere. But it is useful because it is relies on and upholds deep traditional values. What happens if you take the product, and its values, to the U.S. and Europe?

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