THE UNTOLD STORY/HISTORY OF THE GA-ADANGME PEOPLE YOU MUST KNOW
Ga-Adangbe
people
The Ga-Dangbe, Gã-Daŋbɛ, Ga-Dangme,
or GaDangme are an ethnic group in Ghana, Togo and Benin. The Ga and Dangbe
people are grouped respectively as part of the Ga–Dangme ethnolinguistic group.[2][3] The Ga-Dangmes are one ethnic group that lives primarily
in the Greater Accra of Ghana. Ethnic Ga family names
(surnames) include Nikoi, Amon, Kotey, Kotie, Adei, Kutorkor, Oblitey, Lartey,
Nortey, Aryee, Poku and Lamptey. The following are names derived from the
ethnic Dangme and common among the Ningos Nartey, Tetteh, Kwei, Kweinor,
Kwetey, Narteh, Narh, Dugbatey, Teye, Martey, Addo, Siaw, Saki, Amanor,
Djangba. These are aligned to the ethnic Ga as well: Lomotey, Tetteh, Ankrah,
Tetteyfio, Laryea, Ayitey, Okai, Bortey, Quaye, Quaynor, Ashong, Kotei, Sowah,
Odoi, Ablor, Adjetey, Dodoo, Darku and Quartey. (Dawhenya royal family name:
Darpoh)
Under their great leader King Ayi Kushi (Cush) (1483-1519) they were led from
the east in several states before reaching their destination in Accra. Oral
traditions state the Ga came from the region of Lake Chad and reached their destination in the 16th century.[4] It is also believed that by the 17th century they traveled
down the River Niger and crossed the Volta to reach present
day Ghana.[5] This leader is the Moses of the Ga-Dangme people, with his
seven puritan laws he gave them and that has formed the basis and philosophy of
the state, making the state a friendly state recognised by all in respect to
making Greater Accra Region the capital of the, then, Gold Coast in 1877.[6]
The Ga people were organized into six independent towns (Accra (Ga Mashie), Osu, La, Teshie, Nungua, and Tema).
Each town had a stool, which served as the central object of Ga ritual and war
magic. Accra became the most prominent Ga-Dangme towns and is now the heartbeat
and capital of Ghana.[7] The Ga people were originally farmers, but today fishing
and trading in imported goods are the principal occupations. Trading is
generally in the hands of women, and a husband has no control over his wife's
money. Succession to most offices held by women and inheritance of women's
property are by matrilineal descent. Inheritance of other property and
succession to male-held public offices are by patrilineal descent. Men of the
lineage live together in a men's compound, while women, even after marriage,
live with their mothers and children in a women's compound. Each Ga town has a
number of different cults and many gods, and there are a number of annual town
festivals.[7]
The Dangme people occupy the coastal area of Ghana from Kpone to
Ada, on the Volta River and South Atlantic Ocean along the Gulf of Guinea and
inland along the Volta River. The Dangme People include the Ada, Kpone, Krobo, Ningo, Osudoku, Prampram, and Shai, all speaking
Dangbe of the Kwa branch of the Niger-Congo family of languages.[8] The Dangme People have the largest Population among the
two related Ga-Dangme People. About 70% of the Greater Accra Regional Land is
owned by the Dangmes located in Dangme East and Dangme West Districts of Ghana.
Also, in the Eastern Region and Volta Region of Ghana, about 15% of lands
belong to the Dangme People. These are mainly in the Manya Krobo and Yilo Krobo
Districts of the Eastern Region. In the Agotime Area of Volta Region and the
Dangme Area in the Southern part of Togo.
Dangme occupations are fishing, trading and farming which is
based on the Huza system. This was an early and innovative form of capitalism
where an elaborate system of property ownership was established and
subsequently shared. In this system a huge tract of land is acquired by a group
of people but represented by a prominent member of the group, the group were
usually members of an extended family; the land is subdivided among them
according to the amount each has paid, and each individual thereafter has
complete control of his own section. Negotiations with the seller are carried
out by an elected Huzatse (“father of the Huza”), who later acts as the Huza
leader and representative. Millet was formerly the staple food, but more common
crops now include cassava, yams, corn (maize), plantain, cocoa, and palm oil.
Lineage members generally return to the traditional lineage home from the Huza
farms several times a year to participate in the festivals of their lineage
gods. There are also many annual festivals.[8]
The Ga-Dangme are organized into clans based on patrilineal
descent; the clans are subdivided into localized patrilineages, the basic units
of the Ga-Dangme historical, political, cultural tribal group.[8]
Language[edit]
Linguistically, the Ga-Dangbe speak the Kwa languages Ga and Dangme and are a patrilineal people.
Dangme is exclusively closer to the original Ga–Dangme languages than the Ga
language.[6]
Arts and culture[edit]
The Ga people celebrate the Homowo festival, which literally means
"hooting at hunger". This festival originated several centuries ago.
It is celebrated in remembrance of a great famine that hit the Ga people. It is
mainly a food festival which celebrates the passing of that terrible period in
the history of the Ga people. It takes place in August every year and is
celebrated by all the Ga clans.
The Dangbe people from Ada celebrate the Asafotu festival, which is also called
'Asafotufiam', an annual warrior's festival celebrated by Ada people from the
last Thursday of July to the first weekend of August. It commemorates the
victories of the warriors in battle and is a memorial for those who fell on the
battlefield. To re-enact these historic events, the warriors dress in
traditional battle dress and stage a mock battle. This is also a time for
male rites of passage, when young men are introduced to warfare. The
festival also coincides with the harvest cycle, when these special customs and
ceremonies are performed. These include purification ceremonies. The
celebration reaches its climax with a durbar of chiefs, a colourful procession
of the Chiefs in palanquins with their retinue. They are accompanied by
traditional military groups called 'Asafo Companies'
amidst drumming, singing and dancing through the streets and on the durbar
grounds. At the durbar, greetings are exchanged between the chiefs, libations are poured and declarations of allegiance are made.
The Dangbe people from Odumase - Krobo also Celebrate the [Ngmayem]
festival, An Annual Harvest festival to Celebrate the bounty harvest of their
farmers is celebrated by the Krobo people throughout the last week (Seven days)
of October with a visit to their famous Ancestral home, the Krobo Mountains [Kloyom]
on the last Friday of October with a climax on the Saturday with a grand Durbar
of Chiefs and People of the Krobo Traditional Area. the [Konor] who is
the Paramount Chief sits in state as the overlord together with his sub-chiefs,
Government officials, other traditional Authorities and Invited guests.
Music and sports[edit]
The Ga-Dangbe music includes drumming and dancing. One of their
traditional music and dance styles (albeit a fairly modern one) is kpanlogo, a modernized traditional dance
and music form developed around 1960. Yacub Addy, Obo Addy, and Mustapha Tettey Addy are Ga drummers who have achieved
international fame. Music of the Ga-Dangbe people also include [Klama],
[Kpatsa] and the Dipo dance all of the Krobo people.
In addition to music, the Ga-Dangbe people are known for their
long history and successes in the sport of boxing. The fishing community of Bukom on
the outskirts of Accra, is considered as the mecca of boxing in
Ghana and has produced several notable boxers. It is the home of many famous
boxing "clubs" and gymnasiums. Notable fighters include former WBC
champion, David Kotei aka DK Poison, Alfred Kotey, Joshua "The Hitter" Clottey, and former WBA Welterweight champion
boxer Ike
"Bazooka" Quartey,
and former multi-weight class champion Azumah "Zoom Zoom" Nelson aka Prof.[9]
Rites of passage[edit]
For the Shai and Krobo people,
the Dipo is the formal rite of passage.
Originally designed as a formal marriage training for mature women in their
twenties,[10] Dipo has evolved into a pre-marital sexual purification[11] rite that involves teenage girls conducting traditional
religious rituals and putting on dance performances for the public. Initiates
are partially nude throughout much of the ritual. In addition, they are each
adorned with custom-made glass beads, colorful loincloths, and various forms of woven headgear. According researcher and
author Priscilla Akua Boakye, "[Dipo] was a form of vocational training
for young women in which they were taught generally how to assume their roles
as responsible women." Despite the ritual being designated for older
teenaged girls, it is not uncommon for young pre-adolescent and even toddler
aged girls to take part.[10]
Funerals and
"fantasy" coffins[edit]
The Ga people are known for their funeral celebrations and processions. The Ga believe that when
someone dies, they move to another life. Therefore, special coffins are often
crafted by highly skilled carpenters since this tradition spread in the 1950s.
The pioneers of these artistic coffins were master craftsmen, such as Ataa Oko (1919-2012) from La, and Seth
Kane Kwei (1925-1992) from
Teshie.
The coffins can be anything wanted by relatives of the deceased
from a pencil to an elephant. Coffins are usually crafted to reflect an
essence of the deceased in forms such as a character trait, an occupation, or a symbol of one's standing
in the community.[12] For example, a taxicab driver is most likely to be buried in a coffin shaped as a
car. Many families spend excessive amounts on coffins because they often feel
that they have to pay their last respects to the deceased and being buried in a
coffin of cultural, symbolic as well as expensive taste is seen as fitting.
Prices of coffins can vary depending on what is being ordered. It is not
unusual for a single coffin to cost $600. This is expensive for local families
considering that it is not unusual to meet people with an income of only $50 a
month. This means that funerals are often paid for by wealthier members of the
family, if such a member exists, with smaller contributions coming from other
working members of the family. This is needed as the coffin is only a portion
of the total funeral cost that will be incurred.
Some foreigners are known to have been buried in Ga-styled
coffins.[13]
Ataa Oko and
his third wife in front of his boat coffin, c. 1960. p. 137, "The
buried treasures of the Ga", 2008Pompidou
coffin by Kudjoe Affutu,
2010. Photo by Regula Tschumi
The use of these fantasy coffins is explained by the religious
beliefs of the Ga people regarding their afterlife. They believe that death is
not the end and that life continues in the next world in the same way it did on
earth. Ancestors are also thought to be much more powerful than the living and
able to influence their relatives who are still living (lucky as they are).
This is why families do everything they can to ensure that a dead person is
sympathetic towards them as early as possible. The social status of the
deceased depends primarily on the size and the success of the burial service
and of course the usage of an exclusive coffin. These coffins are only seen on
the day of the burials when they are buried with the deceased. They often
symbolise the dead people's professions, the purpose being to help them
continue with their earthly profession in the afterlife. Certain shapes, such as a sword or chair coffin, represent
royal or priestly insignia with a magical and religious function. Only people
with the appropriate status are allowed to be buried in these types of coffins.
Various creatures, such as lions, cockerels and crabs represent clan totems. Similarly, only the
heads of the families concerned are permitted to be buried in coffins such as
these. Many coffin shapes also evoke proverbs, which are interpreted in
different ways by the Ga. Design coffins have been used since around the 1950s,
especially in rural Ga groups with traditional beliefs, and have now become an
integral part of Ga burial culture. Today, figural coffins are made in several
workshops in Togo and Greater Accra. Popular coffinmakers are, for example,
Cedi and Eric Adjetey Anang of Kane
Kwei Carpentry Workshop, Paa Joe, Daniel Mensah and Kudjoe Affutu. Most of the figural coffins are
used for funerals, only a few are exported for international art exhibitions.
Notable Ga-Adangbe people[edit]
·
Ebenezer Ako-Adjei (17 June 1916 – 14 January 2002) was a
lawyer and politician, who served as foreign minister and in other leading
cabinet roles during the first Republic of Ghana as a member of the Convention
People's Party. He was a founding
member of the United
Gold Coast Convention and is one of
the "Big Six", who were arguably the most famous people
in Ghana's fight for independence from British rule.
·
Tetteh Quarshie (1842 – 25 December 1892) was a
pre-independence agriculturalist and the person directly responsible for the
introduction of cocoa crops to Ghana, which today constitute one of the major
export crops of the Ghanaian economy.
·
Carl Christian
Reindorf (31 May 1834 – 1
July 1917) was a Euro-African-born pioneer historian, teacher, farmer, trader,
physician and pastor who worked with the Basel Mission on the Gold Coast. He
wrote The History of the Gold Coast and Asante in the Ga language, considered a
pioneering work and a "historical classic". The work was later
translated into English and published in 1895 in Switzerland. He used written sources and oral tradition, interviewing more
than 200 people in the course of assembling his history.
·
Nii Tackie Tawiah III (6 October 1940 – December 2012) was the
monarch of the Ga State from 2006 to 2012.
·
John William Hansen (23 February 1927 – 7 April 2012),
popularly known as Jerry Hansen, was a highlife musician. He was a singer, a
composer, an arranger, a saxophonist and a pioneer of highlife music. He was
the bandleader and founder of the Ramblers International
Band. He was a founding
member and the first president of the Musicians Union of Ghana (MUSIGA)
·
Lieutenant
General Joseph Arthur Ankrah (18 August 1915 – 25 November 1992)
served as the first commander of the Ghana Armed Forces, the Chief of the Defence Staff of Ghana and
from 1966 and 1969 as the second President of Ghana. Ankrah also served as Chairperson of
the Organisation
of African Unity from 24 February to 5 November 1966.
·
Mustapha Tettey Addy, traditional drummer & composer (b. 1942)
·
Nii Narku Quaynor is a scientist and engineer who has
played an important role in the introduction and development of the Internet throughout Africa.
·
Raphael Nii Amaa Ollennu, JSC, FGA (21 May 1906 – 22 December 1986) was
a jurist and judge who became a Justice of the Supreme Court of Ghana, the
acting President of Ghana during the Second Republic from 7 August 1970 to 31
August 1970 and the Speaker of the Parliament of Ghana from 1969 to 1972.
·
Obo Addy, traditional and contemporary drummer,
composer and educator; NEA National Heritage Fellow 1996 U.S.A. (1936-2012)
·
Yacub Addy, traditional drummer, composer, choreographer and educator: NEA
National Heritage Fellow 2010 U.S.A.; collaborated with Wynton Marsalis (1931-2014)[14][15][16]
·
Christian Tsui Hesse, popularly known as Chris Hesse (born 29
August 1932) is a cinematographer, filmmaker, film administrator, photographer
and Presbyterian minister who is known for his cinematography in several films
such as Love Brewed in the African Pot (1980) and Heritage Africa (1989). He
was the personal photographer of Ghana's first President, Dr Kwame Nkrumah.
Chris Hesse helped to document the visual history of the political leadership and
development of the country. He also worked for the United Nations, serving as a
photographer, documenting the Congo crisis in 1960.
·
Atukwei John Okai (15 March 1941 – 13 July 2018) was a
poet, cultural activist, and an academic. He was Secretary-General of the Pan
African Writers' Association, and a President of the Ghana Association of
Writers. His early work was published under the name John Okai. With his poems
rooted in the oral tradition, he is generally acknowledged to have been the
first real performance poet to emerge from Africa, and his work has been called
"also politically radical and socially conscious, one of his great
concerns being Pan-Africanism". His performances on radio and television
worldwide include an acclaimed 1975 appearance at Poetry International at Queen
Elizabeth Hall in London, where he shared the stage with US poets Stanley
Kunitz and Robert Lowell, and Nicolás Guillén of Cuba.
·
Justice Jacob Hackenburg Griffiths-Randolph (6 September 1914 – 25 July 1986) was a
judge and also the Speaker of the Parliament of Ghana during the Third
Republic. In 1959, during the First Republic of Ghana, President Kwame Nkrumah
appointed him as Commissioner of Income Tax, the first African to hold that
position. In 1966, he was appointed a Superior Court judge by the new government
and served in Bolgatanga, Cape Coast, Tamale and finally Accra, where he was
until he retired from the Bench in 1979. In September 1979, the 3rd Republic
was born, and he was unanimously selected to be Speaker of Parliament. He
served as Speaker of the Parliament of Ghana from 24 September 1979 – 31
December 1981
·
Ernestina Naadu Mills (née Botchway) is an educator and a
First Lady of Ghana. She was the wife of President John Atta Mills (21 July 1944 – 24 July 2012) and is the
recipient of a humanitarian award from the Health Legend Foundation.
·
Rebecca Akufo-Addo (née Griffiths-Randolph) is a public
figure and a First Lady of Ghana. She is the wife of President Nana Akufo-Addo.
·
Ayi Kwei Armah, writer (b. 1939)
·
Nii Ayikwei Parkes (born 1 April 1974), is a performance
poet, writer, publisher, and sociocultural commentator. He is one of 39 writers
aged under 40 from sub-Saharan Africa who in April 2014 were named as part of
the Hay Festival's prestigious Africa39 project
·
Emmanuel Tettey Mensah aka E. T. Mensah, musician (1919-1996)
who was regarded as the "King of Highlife" music. He led the band
"The Tempos", a group that toured widely in West Africa
·
Warren Gamaliel Kpakpo
Akwei, also known as Guy Warren or Kofi Ghanaba (4 May 1923 – 22 December 2008) was a
musician, best known as the inventor of Afro-jazz — "the reuniting of
African-American jazz with its African roots"[1] — and as a member of The
Tempos, alongside E. T. Mensah. He also inspired musicians such as Fela Kuti.
Warren's virtuosity on the African drums earned him the appellation "The
Divine Drummer". At different stages of his life, he also worked as a
journalist, DJ and broadcaster.
·
John William Hansen, a
singer, a composer, an arranger, a saxophonist, and a pioneer of highlife
music. He was the founder of Ramblers International
Band
·
King Bruce, (3 June 1922 – 12 September 1997), a composer, band leader,
musician, arranger, band leader, and multi-instrumentalist who made his mark on
Ghana's dance band highlife tradition in a variety of ways.
·
Saka Acquaye (2 November 1923 – 27 February 2007), a musician,
playwright, sculptor and textile designer. He founded the African Ensemble
while in the US and as its leader, recorded an album under the ELEKTRA label.
He was a member of Ramblers International
Band
·
Grace Nortey is an actress who played multi-character lead roles on
Ghanaian television in the 1990s.
·
Mac Jordan Amartey (1936–2018) was a popular actor.
·
Emmanuel Armah (born 22 April 1968) is a retired
football defender. He played for Hearts of Oak in Ghana, except for the 1994–95
season at Sportul Studențesc București in Romania. He represented Ghana at
the 1992
Africa Cup of Nations.
·
Augustine Abbey, also known as Idikoko, is an actor and movie maker known for
comedy. He is also known for his main roles as a house boy or gate man. He has
produced and starred in a BBC documentary and also directed and produced a film
on HIV and AIDS in partnership with UNESCO and Esi Sutherland-Addy's MMOFRA
Foundation.
·
Theresa Amerley Tagoe, Minister of Parliament (1943-2010)
·
Azumah "The Professor" Nelson, boxer (b. 1958)
·
Neville Alexander Odartey-Wellington, army commander
·
Nii Amaa Ollennu, former Interim President of Ghana
(1906-1986)
·
Ike "Bazooka" Quartey, boxer (b. 1969)
·
Ben Tackie, boxer (b. 1973)
·
Justice Daniel Francis Annan, first Speaker of the Parliament of Ghana in
the Fourth Republic. (b. 1928)
·
George
Commey Mills-Odoi, first Ghanaian Attorney
General of Ghana; Justice of Supreme
Court of Ghana (1962-1966)
·
Justice E.N.P. Sowah, Chief Justice of Supreme Court of Ghana (1986-1990)
·
Ebenezer Akuete, former diplomat
·
Joshua Clottey, boxer, Former IBF Welterweight Champion.
·
Richard Commey, boxer, International Boxing Federation (IBF)
Lightweight World Champion
·
Frank Gibbs Torto, chemist
·
Daniel McKorley, the founder and chief executive officer
of McDan Group of
Companies
·
Lesley Naa Norle Lokko is a Ghanaian-Scottish architect,
academic, and novelist. She says: "I live almost simultaneously in
Johannesburg, London, Accra and Edinburgh.
·
Adjetey Anang, actor, popularly known as
"Pusher", which was his screen name in the television series 'Things
We Do for Love, and most recentry, Yolo'
·
Nii Addo Quaynor, better known by his stage name Tinny, a rapper
·
Boris Frederic Cecil Tay-Natey Ofuatey-Kodjoe (born 8 March 1973), better known as
Boris Kodjoe, is an Austrian-born actor of German and Ghanaian descent known
for his roles as Kelby in the 2002 film Brown Sugar, the sports-courier agent
Damon Carter on the Showtime drama series Soul
Food and was a
recurring character on FOX's The Last Man on Earth. He currently co-stars on BET's Real
Husbands of Hollywood and
the Grey's Anatomy spin-off, Station 19.
·
Abraham Nii Attah (born 2 July 2001). He made his feature
film debut in Beasts of No Nation (2015). For his leading role of child
soldier Agu, Attah was awarded the Marcello Mastroianni Award for Best Young
Actor at the 72nd Venice International Film Festival. He was made an ambassador
for the Free Education Policy in Ghana, after having supported the policy with a
picture endorsement. In 2017, he appeared in the Marvel Studios film Spider-Man:
Homecoming. He has joined the
ensemble cast of Shane Carruth's third film, The Modern Ocean.
·
Joselyn Dumas, television show host and actress
·
Berla Addardey Mundi
aka Berla Mundi, media personality, women's
advocate and voice artist
·
Naa Ashorkor Mensah-Doku, actress, radio/TV broadcaster and public
relations professional
·
Charles Nii Armah
Mensah Jr. aka Shatta Wale,
formerly known as Bandana, music producer and reggae-dancehall artiste
·
Yvonne Nelson, actress, model, film producer and
entrepreneur
·
Chris Attoh (born Christopher Keith Nii Attoh; 17 May 1974) is an
actor, on-air personality, television presenter and producer. He is best known
as "Kwame Mensah" in Nigerian soap opera Tinsel.
·
Odartei Mills Lamptey,
popularly known as Gasmilla or
International Fisherman, is a hiplife artist.
·
Theophilus Tagoe (born 1 May 1982, disappeared 6 July
2014), popularly known as Castro or Castro Under Fire is a hiplife recording
artist and musician.
·
Nii Kwate Owoo, (born 1944) is an academic and filmmaker,
described by Variety as "one of the first Ghanaians to make a 35mm
film". His name has also appeared in film credits as Kwate Nee-Owoo.
·
Eddie Nartey, (born 6 November 1984) is an actor, director, and film
producer. His supporting role in Frank Rajah's "Somewhere In Africa"
earned him a nomination at the Nollywood and African Film Critics Awards
(NAFCA), and Ghana movie awards. He was nominated in the best actor category
for Kiss Me If You Can.
·
The Tagoe Sisters is the name of a musical
duo consisting of twins Lydia Dedei Yawson Nee Tagoe and Elizabeth
Korkoi Tagoe. They have been
singing in the gospel music industry since 1983
·
Nii Okai (Ernest Nii-Okai Okai, born 19 September
1977) is a contemporary gospel singer and choir leader.
·
Danny Nettey (19 September 1968 – 15 July 2016) was a musician and
songwriter. He was best described as one of the pioneers of Contemporary Gospel
music in Ghana.
·
Virgil Abloh (/ˈæbloʊ/; born 30 September 1980) is a Ghanaian-American fashion designer, entrepreneur, artist, and DJ who has been
the artistic director of Louis Vuitton's men's wear collection since March 2018.
Abloh is also the CEO of Milan-based label Off-White, a fashion house he founded in 2013. A
trained architect, Abloh, who also worked in Chicago street fashion, entered the world of international fashion
with an internship at Fendi in 2009 alongside
rapper Kanye West. The two then began an artistic collaboration
that would launch Abloh's career into founding Off-White. The first American of
African descent to be artistic director at a French luxury fashion house,[17] he was named by Time magazine as one of the 100 most influential people in the world in 2018.[18]
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