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Impressions
of Ghana
By Ellie Schimelman, Director, ABA Tours
“Wofre
wo den?”
They call you what? “Wo fre me Aba.” They call me Aba. This always gets a smile. My
full name is Aba Broni Kakraba, “small Thursday-born white woman.” This
always gets a laugh. When I took a local name many years ago it was considered
amusing, but now the custom has become more common. Especially among
African-Americans who attend special naming ceremonies to welcome them back to
their homeland. The Ghanaian government has established an Emancipation Day
Festival that brings people from the Black Diaspora to Ghana to reconnect with
their ancestors and the highlight of this event is to receive an African name.
Some Ghanaians, impressed by the interest of outsiders, are also beginning to
use their African names in place of their Christian ones.
Ghanaian names are wonderfully descriptive. By knowing people's names you
already know a lot about them and their place in the family. For example, you
know that Tewia was born after twins, and that Kakra and Pane are the twins.
Many Ghanaians are named after the day of the week on which they were born.
Outsiders comment that this limits the parents to only seven boys’ names and
seven for girls, but that isn't the case. There are always nicknames and
descriptive names, or birth order names.
Some children do not have the same surname as their fathers. They may be named
after a deceased relative taking both that person’s first and last name. When
I found this confusing, my informant didn't understand why. He said,
"Everybody knows who your father is."
And bless the missionaries who randomly attached anglicized names to entering
school children when they couldn't pronounce or spell the African name, thus
creating another way for someone not to have a father’s surname.
|
|
Monday |
Tuesday |
Wednesday |
Thursday |
Friday |
Saturday |
Sunday |
|
Boy |
KOJO |
KOBINA |
KWAKU |
YAW |
KOFI |
KWAME |
KWASI |
|
Girl |
ADWOA |
ABENA |
AKUA |
ABA |
AFUA |
AMA |
ESI/AKOSUA |
DAYS
OF WEEK:
Tuesday - BENADA
Wednesday - WUKUDA
Thursday - YAWDA
Friday - FIDA
Saturday - MEMENEDA
Sunday - KWASISA
The
exact date of birth has never been as important to Africans as it is to
Westerners. There was a time when mothers didn't record the date of birth and
might have calculated the birth of her child by how many festivals have passed
since his birth or by remembering something else that happened in the same year.
There is a reluctance on the part of some Africans to reveal the exact birth
date because of a superstition that someone who possesses this information can
do magic that will harm you. Also birthday celebrations are a western concept.
The year of birth might not be important, but that is not true of the day.
Kwame
Nkrumah – the first president of Ghana – tells us in his autobiography,
"Great importance is placed by the Akan
(one of the major ethnic groups of Ghana) on the day of the week on which a
child is born for this determines his platonic soul. They believe that a man is
possessed of three souls: the blood soul transmitted by the female and
considered synonymous with the clan, the ntoro,
which is transmitted by the male and the okra,
or platonic soul. In order that there should be no mistake about the okra, a
specific name is given to the child according to the day of the week on which he
is born. There are other superstitions surrounding the child's birth. For
instance, the first child is supposed to be less bright. . . .Whilst I can claim
to fall into the pattern of things by being born on Saturday and bearing the
name of Kwame, it is surely disheartening that I was the first and only child of
my mother and am therefore, according to tradition less bright than
average."
In
Ghana don't try to figure out family relationships. It is impolite to give your
aunt and uncle less status than your parents, so they are introduced as mother
and father. I have a terrible memory for faces and names so it took me awhile to
catch on to this, but one day I arrived in a village and my host family was
standing in a row to receive me. As we worked our way down the reception line,
Kwamina introduced me to three women as his mothers. Everyone knew I was
confused, but confusing foreigners is fair game. In Africa when calling a female
name it is customary to preface it with sister or auntie or mami.
Sister is used if you don't know someone very well. When I first went to Ghana I
was called auntie. Now I am called mami and I commented that this change made me
feel old. I was told that it was meant as a sign of respect. Older people are
presumed to be more mature and wiser. I still don't like that greeting, but
that's my western preoccupation with age.
Great
variety in a small country
The
Republic of Ghana is unique in so many ways. On March 6, 1957, it was the first
African country to attain independence from colonial rule. It is an
English-speaking country surrounded by French-speaking Togo, Cote D'Ivoire and
Burkina Faso.
The southern border is a stretch of beautiful coastline with inviting beaches.
Each of its 10 regions offers a different experience – from infamous slave
castles and traditional artisans, to game parks and the only canopy walk in
Africa.
Although
Ghana is a small country, about the size of Oregon, the indigenous crafts are
collected worldwide and there are many festivals and activities that celebrate
its rich culture and heritage.