Ama G(h)ana
on August 16, 2024
ASANTE
Kumasi, your name, a tree with millions
of golden branches,
a border of origin from which your mother
was missing until
she flickered on the ghostly lane, & again
in the city under Oboase.
Your children, named after historical wars of
a stranger who intruded your
territory. In their manhood might have met a man
inscribed as a stomach leader or
a greedy caucus who owned them money,
perhaps, he partners with crime
You, mother & father did not foretell your children
not to drink black tea from the man
AKUSIKA
In the past, you wanted to stitch students to fit
the class quo, little did you
know you were spelled to only imagine the world
of riches. In the present, you are
being traded. The country pressing in on you
until it feels like a faux sperm.
You are crumbled on the land of captors. You have
fought for your part of liberty.
You have dwindled the tricks of the man . But who
will stay with you?
Who will bring you food from the above? I know you
are a mother beyond everlasting
yet you are defaced by boat sails. You said you are
mightier than the fists of God.
What should your children's children eat when you are
nothing but invisible fog in thin air?
You still want to challenge the wind that sits with your
children after you died? You still won't retreat?
DEMOCRACY
Named after the dictators from 1844 who signed the
oath of death. Named for the
heroes in your heart. A name like Ananse, whose origin
you said embarrasses you.
On treasure island you are mentioned in the days
of the storms. Whichever stance—
I endure with you, the worst. I will be a parsimony, a tool
to save you. If they don't want you,
turn back the books of nineteen ninety two. If allowed,
they believe,
you will gauge them from your back eyes & stab the one who
made you the subject of the kingdom.
IBRAHIM MAHAMAH
Any chariot which rode for protection in the years of the
cattle is peaceful. Any activity
referring to a slave master's name is political. Take one or
deem it opposing.
To reject is to accept, when exactly it is you lost your way home?
My grandmother
said if you fight for peace, you fight for life. When you break
a norm, you raze your home.
Here, everything unfair is overlooked, how much more a
child dying from penury given a name to
hail in politics. I want an answer from a council, if you claim
you sit to think about people, how many
of the homeless have been sheltered under the busy bridge?
KWAME NKRUMAH
It is said you never died. God never wanted you to depart
from the people. They made us believe,
brethren of lies. I walk passed an abandoned building
with debris of your legacies shrewd
on the green-coated wall. For sixty eight years of rain,
I have parked your works
into prayers that keep me during crisis. I have named
you after the deities in the soil.
Any person who survived slavery's lash with you knows
how to produce vision.
Despite the forces you fought like a trojan. I have
plastered a statue as a liturgy
to mourn your living on every twenty first.
I mean to say Nkrumah,
you never die. Stoop, stoop & rage like a god.
JB DANQUAH
Father JB served to the last breath of his people in
the name of patriotism.
I want him undead & freed. I want him to be a fog
in his mansion & hover those
who sacrificed their fears for his life. I want his hands
away from their pocket. They made
him bite more than he could chew.
His selfless contribution was accounted
ungrateful. I want to ask if that is
how a political figure is being paid in the west? I
want to meet the ancestors for
stocks. I want to say, father JB, reincarnates as Anokye.
STRAND
There are no roses for the custodians of death
ravaged by election—
Taadi girls, 2016 & 2020, so many that can’t buy life.
So many graves for dead children. I can now worship
friends among the dead
more than the living. Boy, breathe air into your body
once again— come witness the
burial of your soul. To die is to relive everything—
What is death on
the skin of a gagged body? A torso's testimony
becomes a burning sensation,
such that he falls in love with the devil to overshadow
his throat. He is exhausted.
She has taken sufficient poison to kill her. He dies to live.
Albert Asare Kweku, writing as K. Asare-Bediako is a Ghanaian writer and poet. He chose writing as a therapy to aid him breath away the thoughts of his unseen father. He is featured in both local and international magazines. He was a shortlist of the SBL prize, 2023.
You can connect with him on:
X; @Asarewrites
IG; @asarewrites
FACEBOOK; Phaa K. Asare-Bediako