Posted on 10 July 2011. Tags: Africa, Asante-Mampong, Boston University, Church, Commentary, Ghana, Health Services, journalist, politician, President Mills, Time magazine, University of Ghana

Otumfuo Osei Tutu 11
Commentary/Ghana/Africa : Ghanaians appear to be under the clench of prophetic spell. It is as if Ghanaians are hooked on some prophetic drug and find it difficult to rehabilitate them. This has put Ghanaians are on some sort of permanent prophetic high. It has become a real development threat, making the prophetic genie hard to be put back in the bottle. Read the full story
Posted in Opinion/Comment
Posted on 24 October 2009. Tags: Africa, Afro News, Armed Conflict, Bite of the Mango, CANADA, Children, communities, Education, Helena Kaufman, Ishmael Beah, journalist, Mariatu Kamara, Sierra Leone, Susan McClelland, Toronto, UNICEF, Vancouver

Susan McClelland Journalist
Helena Kaufman The Afro News Vancouver small to carry the weight of her experience and the story that results from it. Unlike many of the child victims of war, the horrors Kamara saw, the assaults on her spirit and the brutality she experienced from age 12, are now being read and discussed by young people the world over. Her book, The Bite of the Mango, was begun before she even spoke English and not long after her arrival in Canada, still in her teens. With the support and story telling skill of journalist Susan McClelland, the engaging book offers well crafted characters and plot. The twist of course, is that Mariatu Kamara is very real – as are all the details of her story. On a recent stop on a North America wide tour to promote the book, she and Susan brought the reality to her generation. The duo, now more than writer and source, and more like family than friends, spoke to three schools in the Lower Mainland. Kamara contrasts life before the war, “Things were nice before, we lived in the village. We respected and helped each other. She muses on the difference between the earthy calm of her early years and the culture she now lives in. “All we value is life. The ability to live each day. Here people take little things very seriously and it causes them anxiety. At home we learned to respect everyone and take them for who they are.”
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Posted in Editorials