Audio By Carbonatix
As the air with pomp and pageantry stirs
With our people, a poet our story shares
An African epic of a freedom adventure
Abounding with optimism and overture
A near delirium of delight that fills this poet
Arises not from a boast or a perch on a post
Elated, he is rather heeding the solemn call
That to our ancestors, piety we must accord
See, if for nothing, they lent us life, left us art
A wealth of wit and wisdom and myths
Only the poor fool begrudges the dead
So demurs, so shirks a duty held sacred
Our elders say:
The arc of a story must always bend
Towards a moral: Ours begins at the end
Of the beginning of an episode that’s lain
In our much treasured legend and lore
Once upon a time,
Imperial conquest corralled diverse peoples,
Stringing strands of traits and scores of tastes
Into a trophy colony; our assorted peoples
Hemmed into one people
In the contrived design,
Our names overlain with names at the whim
Of the conquistador
We know why we name the names
Of places and persons, yet an ancient people,
Now, a curious mix of names:
Heathen, aborigine, indigenous, native, tribe,
Ethnic; today, emerging
Don’t our elders say:
“Your character reflects the name bestowed upon you?”
Enthralled, a race to crave
The allure of the colonial
A tongue to master;
A mellifluous name to assume
Many a tradition,
Proselytizers would forswear as heathen
But to the received shibboleth,
Folks would swear fealty
Soon though, the riveting irony:
Ranks of the lettered few swelled
To offer a soothing antidote
To the swelling imperial carbuncle
On a diminished people
And a vanished pride
At history’s crossroads,
Chance and choice crisscrossed:
A veteran soldier’s unprepossessing
March for a just recompense,
A lethal gun ready at the trigger:
Adjetey, Odartey, and Sowah
Fallen, as it were,
Not in battle in the rice paddies of Burma
Felled they were
While promenading a Castled beach
Yet reparations to their memory
Extracted neither in gold nor in silver
Nor in cannonading the Castled beach
But in the glory of a freedom fighter’s
Apt moment for outlawry
The bond of 1844
A deed of a people’s grave error of surrender
Now a lightning rod to stoke the embers
Of muted discontent into a raging flame
Of unquenchable rebellion;
Martyrs would shed blood
So that within freedom’s fortress,
A people could life’s battles prosecute
Men of valor, unbroken of spirit, would endure
The agony of the Usher Fort
So that at the trodden Old Polo Park,
At the voice of freedom’s herald,
A downtrodden folk could frolic!
Our founding fathers’ foresight;
A perfect vision in hindsight;
A profit of prescience
For they trawled upriver to the watershed
Of our motherland’s story
Reckoning what that she had been before:
Ghana, Mali, Songhai Empire;
Beholding what she had become
Amid the twists and turns of time
See, deflowered she was
At the onset of a dark,
Orgiastic trade; the hulking remnants
Lay prostrate, pointing heavenward,
Perhaps penitent, on the beachhead
At Osu, Cape Coast, Elmina and beyond
Still, she cuddled precious stones
In her ample bosom
Unbowed and radiant,
She bathed in the sun-drenched,
Restorative tidal waters
Of the Atlantic realm
At Elubo, Anomabo and Keta
She was the sacred summit of Afadjato;
The beckoning Akwapim range,
Easing into the bucolic savannah
Of grain and game, of the vast, rustic North;
She was the lush millennial forest of
An interior sodden with the living waters
Of Asuo Afram, Ankobra, Birim,
Otadee Bosomtwe, Densu, Offin, Oti, Pra,
Tano; Black Volta and White Volta;
Then and there on the cusp of history;
They saw ahead what she could become:
From that Gold Coast colony:
Servile, an unadorned beauty;
Shorn of wealth and self-worth
To a renascent Ghana: free, unmolested,
Bejeweled, wealthy and worthy;
Kwame Nkrumah, Kyeretwie Boakye Danquah,
Ako-Adjei, Obestebi-Lamptey, Akufo-Addo
And Ofori-Atta were the storied Big Six
Pioneers whose was a bequest of heroic deeds
We, we are a memorial in full bloom;
Befitting their seminal toil!
And such as she was,
Such would a young nation brazenly answer
The clarion call to liberation:
A few million-folk; un-readied
Yet ready for a venture in adventure
She would parlay statecraft
To breach her scrawny African frontiers
A David in stature yet with an epic temerity,
To confront the bemused Goliaths of an era
A Prometheus at the mid-20th century,
The virtue of a reconfigured continent
She would proclaim such as
To tackle the Herculean task ahead
To that odyssey would she lend
A pioneering spirit and verve!
She would wage many a noble war
Against dire human privations:
Saplings of education in blissful bloom over
Meadow, hill and vale
To inoculate the folk against the malady of want
To loosen the shackles of ignorance;
Such would be her evocative enterprise
She would tame game, subdue land
To yield harvest for her granaries
A Sphinx of a harbor would realize along
Her Atlantic shorelines
A fleet of her flag-flown vessels would
Venture out to sea and the distant shore
Braving the trade wind and the hurricane
Announcing the spirit of amity
Coaxing commerce from among the comity of nations
She would raise a lake across a gorge,
An nkonson nkonson bo
To lift Akosombo on a grid
A light of hope to cast a radiant glow on
A new dawn of boundless possibilities
And into the arm of the infant nation,
The artist would inject such as to suffuse
The nation with an adrenal rush
And a romantic revue
Ephraim Amu: Extolling our forbear’s
Sacrifice; the ethos of the patriot
Theodosia Okoh: Exuding inventive
Genius in a freedom’s flag that flutters at mast
In an anthem, Philip Gbeho; exhorting
A nation to bravery and dignity
Agya Koo Nimo: Waxing lyrical in nostalgic
Folksongs of an endearingly, enduring troubadour
And our exultant poets –
Efua Sutherland, Kwesi Brew,
Ama Atta-Aidoo and Atukwei Okai:
Soothing our yearning for triumph
With streams of staves
Strewn with sweet melodies
Such as so elated,
Such as she would ooze
With a contagion of hope
Such as so inspired,
Such as she would
Set her Elysian sights on new heights
Oh Ghana!
Jubilant!
Confident!
Bon vivant!
Even Bohemian!
This Ghana!
Now, an artfully knitted quilt
A rich tapestry
In hue and in habit;
In trait and in taste;
In tenet and in testament
This Ghana
Like a long colorful yarn
On the loom and lap
In the ambidextrous hands
Of the Bonwire kente craftsman!
This Ghana,
Our beloved land of destiny,
But now a benighted sovereign,
Summons our generation to a Pax Africana:
To a new Newtonian age of reason
Such as nurtures nature,
Her teeming treasure-store to unleash
For progress yet to be heralded
For poetry yet to be heard
So while our mood is euphoric
May this new journey be begun!
From this glorious 60th anniversary hour!
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