Audio By Carbonatix
Celebrated musician Okyeame Kwame has revealed that beneath his lyrical genius lies a quiet battle, one that started in childhood classrooms where he was misunderstood, mislabeled, and punished for a condition no one could name.
Speaking on Joy Prime’s Prime Time Show with George Quaye on Wednesday, June 25, the rap icon opened up about growing up neurodivergent, living with undiagnosed dyslexia, and the intense personal drive that has taken him from academic ridicule to the cusp of a PhD.
“I was one of those kids on the spectrum,” the musician said.
“I couldn’t read or write properly, and it wasn’t diagnosed. So I was beaten at home, beaten in school—during dictation, during lessons—because I was seen as lazy or stupid.”
But far from holding him back, Kwame says his neurodivergence became his motivation.
“Even though I had difficulty in learning, even though my brain wasn’t wired for the traditional system, I’ve done two master’s degrees, and I’m now working on my PhD. I just do it for myself—to tell myself I wasn’t stupid.”
Kwame, whose real name is Kwame Nsiah-Apau, credits his late father as both his fiercest critic and most enduring influence.
“He didn’t agree with me doing music at first. We fought a lot when I was 14 to 16. But then he saw me perform once, and he made me promise, no matter how far I go with music, I must still go to school. Two years later, he died. Since then, I’ve kept that promise. I go to school for him. And for myself.”
Despite being an accomplished artist, Kwame said he ultimately sees himself ending his journey as a teacher.
“That’s where my love is. I taught at Meduma in the Kwabre East District after A-levels, and I loved it. I want to end up teaching philosophy, psychology, sociology—or even the philosophy of African music—at a university.”
Describing his learning condition as both a superpower and a challenge, Kwame called for greater understanding of children with learning difficulties in Ghanaian schools.
“Some kids have dyslexia, some dyscalculia. They’re not stupid. Their brains just work differently. But we beat them, punish them, shame them—because we don’t understand. That has to change.”
Latest Stories
-
IAEA backs Ghana’s nuclear readiness amid Africa’s growing energy transition
26 minutes -
Tema West MP demands urgent probe into missing Constituency Women’s Organiser
30 minutes -
Church of Pentecost Chairman calls on Nkwanta residents to embrace peace
33 minutes -
Mahama presides over 48th Change of Guards Parade at the Presidency
37 minutes -
Mahama receives letters of credence from seven new envoys
40 minutes -
IAEA, FAO targets Striga threat to legume production in Africa
43 minutes -
Africa must turn gas wealth into prosperity – Leaders declare
45 minutes -
Ghana positions itself as preferred outsourcing hub at London roundtable
48 minutes -
Police arrest suspect in murder of UCC student Innocentia Avinu
51 minutes -
Over five phones were stolen at Alex Ekubo’s service of songs – Stan Nze
59 minutes -
Oil rebounds on concerns about US-Iran peace deal, restoration of supply
1 hour -
Jordan feeling pride not pressure over World Cup debut
1 hour -
Refuse at McCarthy Down poses serious threat to Weija Dam and public health – CSIR scientist warns
1 hour -
Iran draw 2-2 with New Zealand in politically charged World Cup clash in LA
1 hour -
Ghana coach Queiroz enters record books at his fifth World Cup in row
2 hours