GhanaStar
  • News
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Music
No Result
View All Result
GhanaStar
  • News
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Music
No Result
View All Result
GhanaStar
No Result
View All Result
Home Opinion

Ama Ata Aidoo, Forever A Teacher

September 19, 2016
in Opinion
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

I had signed a letter without closing. I felt embarrassed that I should do that. So my spine shivered when I read that the great Ama Ata Aidoo had deserted a function elaborately planned to celebrate her. Her name had been spelt Atta instead of the correct Ata.

You Might Also Like

4 Reasons Not To Give In To Social Pressure

11 Beautiful Signs Your Relationship Is Perfect

An Interesting Travel Experience Through The Eyes Of Amarachi, A Travel Blogger

Quickly, I phoned to check with a colleague if she still had in her possession the two EC presidential poll announcement posters.

Each had the same name spelt differently: one as John Evans Atta Mills and the other as John Evans Atta-Mills. When in 2012 an EC rushed through creating 40 something constituencies three months to a major election, Parliament condoned the error-ridden document. It is now history that that election was an error in all its aspects.

Insidious it might seem. But my gut feeling tells me there were congress elements who felt some kind of embarrassment replacing a Rawlings with a Mills. Apparently, people outside the motherland, would ask: ‘Is he a Ghanaian?’ anytime the Mills precursor name was mentioned. Congress must, therefore, have found it expedient to hyphenate Atta and Mills. Those who knew the professor well knew J. E.A. Mills. Strange a whole EC fell for the trick; unless it lacked thoroughness or was being incompetently complicit.

Hyphenated Akufo-Addo has often been spelt Akuffo-Addo. Kufuor is also often spelt Kuffuor.

The suggestion is that, as a people, we lack detail. A colleague professor once remarked that as we sat next to each other at a public function. As I read the great feminist writer’s departure from that event, I started self-introspecting in a backdate of occasions when I have messed up because I wasn’t detailed enough.

I have seen an institution struggling with misspelling someone’s Susana name as Susuanna. A friend for long struggled with a Kate versus Catherine spelling with official documents. As someone interested in names, their formats and spelling, I thought Teacher Ama’s action was timely. I think it is a positive wake-up call to us all who strive for precision and accuracy.

In the heady false revolution 1980s, I had been invited to ostensibly serve as her deputy in a military junta. Today, I can say it would have been a tough assignment because I was made to understand the invitation was at her personal instance.

I had known and admired her political views at UCC in the early 1970s when I was a student and she was a lecturer. She did not teach me but I found myself listening to her in many ‘socialist’ fora. I saw her as a compassionate intellectual with deep concern for social justice. Unfortunately, I never met her to discuss the invitation and I never ended up part of the junta. It was no surprise she lasted only for a short period of time with the regime, in charge of education. There were even rumours she was removed in her absence by competence intolerant forces within the regime who could not withstand her forthrightness and desire to apolitically do the right thing.

When I failed to meet her because she had travelled outside the motherland, one of her assistants told me about her thoughts about me. I remember asking him about the education revolutionary agenda. He enthusiastically showed me an ‘education reform’ draft document which had a lot of Paulo Freire plagiarised material. They had even named the innocent philosopher as a panel member in the West Africa magazine. When I met the man face-to-face in my then university in Canada, he denied any knowledge.

In the interim, I had taken a quick glance at the document. As someone with some little knowledge about the theory and practice of education, I quickly looked for transformative ideas.  Nothing, absolutely nothing was written about the dropout challenge which needed transformative treatment. It confirmed my view that there was no revolution going on and that pretenders were destroying the little the motherland had. Fast-forward, I have been proven right.

A3 (Ama Ata Aidoo) is known, acknowledged and celebrated as an intellectual with feminist convictions.

She looms large in Africa and in international feminist circles.

She may have disappointed those who strove to put that programme together.

We should understand her more, though, for her commitment to the good of the woman and the propriety to be thorough.

Let that be explained to the young girls ‘she disappointed’ that it was only to encourage them to do the right thing.

As to the rest of us, we may take up her challenge to keep trying to be excellent in a hurry and in the midst of a flurry of things and activities to accomplish.

She is accomplished because she believes in excellence and I think that should be more of encouragement than disappointment.

Tags: 9africaAidooAkan peopleAma Ata AidoocanadacongressECEducation in GhanaFante peopleGhanaian peopleGovernment of Ghanagreat feminist writerJohn Atta MillsJohn Evans Atta MillslecturerPaulo Freireprofessorteacherthe West Africa magazineWest Africa

Related News

4 Reasons Not To Give In To Social Pressure

by
February 28, 2017
0

There is something about pressure from loved ones, peers and people in our social circle that places such a heavy...

11 Beautiful Signs Your Relationship Is Perfect

by
February 28, 2017
0

Most of us have read enough and been through enough to know the signs to look out for that indicate a relationship's...

An Interesting Travel Experience Through The Eyes Of Amarachi, A Travel Blogger

by
February 27, 2017
0

Jumia Travel had an interview with Amarachi, a Systems Engineer who runs Chapter One travel blog. She shared her travel...

Ten Tips For Girls On How To Get Ready For A Date

by
February 27, 2017
0

When you are getting ready for a date, especially when it's a first date or when you've only met the...

Next Post

Nduom Unfit To Be President

98% of Voters Don’t Care About Manifestos – Obiri Boahen

Categories

  • Africa & World
  • African Music Lyrics Directory
  • Business
  • Business Directory
  • celebrities
  • Computing
  • Diaspora
  • Entertainment
  • Events
  • Feature
  • Featured
  • Ghana Elections 2016
  • Headlines
  • Health
  • International
  • Internet
  • Jobs
  • lifestyle
  • Music
  • News
  • Offbeat
  • Opinion
  • Politics
  • Profiles
  • Religion
  • Security
  • Seth Terkper
  • Smart Home
  • Social Networks
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Top Stories
  • World News

Tags

accra addo africa Association football Banks - NEC business Business_Finance chairman Donald Trump economy education Entertainment_Culture environment Geography of Africa ghana Ghanaian people government Government of Ghana Human Interest John Dramani Mahama john mahama Law_Crime mahama minister MPs elected in the Ghanaian parliamentary election Nana Addo Nana Addo Dankwa Nana Akufo-Addo National Democratic Congress National Democratic Congress (NDC) New Patriotic Party New Patriotic Party (NPP) nigeria politics Politics of Ghana president Social Issues Social Media Social Media & Networking sports United Kingdom United Nations United States Vice President War_Conflict

Recent Posts

  • Government of Ghana Unveils Official Portraits of President John Dramani Mahama and Vice President Prof. Naana Jane Opoku-Agyemang
  • Who Is the Woman (Sheena Gakpe) in Sarkodie’s Latest Hit “No Sir” and Why Everyone Is Talking about It
List of Ghana Holidays for 2020
Ghana Geocoding
Ghana Cedis Exchange API
Ghana Maps Service
Toyota Cars Auto Auction History
  • African Music Lyrics Directory
  • Business Directory
  • Diaspora
  • Top Stories

All rights reserved © 2021 GhanaStar.com

No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Music

All rights reserved © 2021 GhanaStar.com