Posts

#WaakyeWednesday - Whither Waakye Wednesdays?

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Waakye ooo waakye! Where from this whole #WaakyeWednesday business? I could eat waakye every day. In fact, I used to eat waakye every day for lunch at a point in time. I like waakye so much that while in the US I had to learn to prepare & cook it just so I could have it whenever I wanted. I learnt how to do so from my friend and eventually learnt how to make shito too via my Mum. I once cooked a waakye meal for like 23 people at Stanford and they loved it. I will never forget one statement a friend made. She said " Ato, you've been single for too long, you should not know how to cook this good ". Yes, I can cook. At least, I can make delicious waakye that you might mistake for that from Auntie Muni. Waakye is just so all around me in Accra and Ghana that I don't have to bother making it. I'm not complaining. I will do a blog post about places to eat waakye in Accra later. Waakye is the fastest selling food in the whole wide world. There are many t...

Participate in Barcamp Tema 2013 #bctema

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Below is the press release for Barcamp Tema 2013. Register to attend this august event at http://barcamptema13.eventbrite.com. It will be happening at the Rotary Centre in Tema on Saturday, August 10. The hashtag for the event is #bctema. _________________________________________________________________________________ BarCamp Tema 2013 is a free networking forum bringing people together for a day of discussion, demos and dialogue on Tema, Ghana and beyond. It takes place on August 10, 2013 at the Rotary Centre in Tema. The theme is “Building new industries for our communities” . This Barcamp will be the 21st organized by the GhanaThink Foundation as it builds a netowrk of young change makers, doers and entrepreneurs in Ghana. It's being organized in conjunction with the Rotaract Club of Tema. Tema is well known for its music and entertainment stars which is supporting a local music industry. This Barcamp would focus on how to grow more industries for various entreprising c...

Shaping what Barcamp Tema 2013 will be #bctema

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The very first  +Barcamp Tema  happened on October 27, 2012 at the Central University College (CUC) campus, just outside Tema . Some students from CUC had attended Barcamp Ghana 2011 and were enthused about the event. So their wish to have a Barcamp at their school and the GhanaThink Foundation 's want to have a Barcamp for Tema gave birth to this event. The Barcamp went well, we had over 150 attendees who networked and continue to build together. 31 students from Keta Secondary Technical School (Ketasco) attended the event and their experience led to us partnering on a mentoring event at their school and the start of the Junior Camp Ghana initiative. We wanted to do some work around Tema's communities but that never took off. I'm believing Barcamp Tema 2013 would ensure this starts after August. It was very important to have  Barcamp Tema  happen in Tema proper this time. The Tema-based tertiary institutions are not big enough to host the numbers we want...

How I wrote a 233 word poem on... not Ghana but... Zouk

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I had not written a full poem in over 2 years. Every time I started to write one, I would stop at some point thinking it's not as good as the last few poems I had written. However, over the course of this year, I've had this idea of writing a poem to celebrate zouk . Over hiplife . Let's be real. I've been listening to zouk (and kizomba ) music much more than Ghanaian music - hiplife, highlife, raglife, poplife , etc - recently. I still love Ghana, if you ever doubt it, study how much I use the number 233 . If you can't figure out and understand the significance of the number 233 like that lady teller at UBA bank yesterday or the other GT bank teller in East Legon, then become aware. Everywhere. So I went ahead to write a poem tonight. I intentionally put on a Zouk music playlist to get me in the mood. Not in the mood for ' you know what ' but in the mood for inspiration to zouk the board by the keys and type up a Zouk poem . The idea was to write ...

A look into my zouk hook (poem)

I used to live life from the hip And then something came and really zouked me The familiar got different The life on a change The peculiar got consistent The thing don't change So I got into a relationship By then, the something had already hooked me Elles demandent attention to give, we know L's provident affection to give, follow Ma cherie as we demonstrate one love, that Is telepathy of doves above, phat Together, we are melodies that make music With another, we’re diversities tryna sync Danced to every cranny and nook Still got the naivety of a rook Lifes still contained in book after book Versus high-fives as open as zouk I stayed true to the homegrown beat I swayed anew to the exotic rhythm True, the outer enjoyment got hipper and livelier But the inner excitement got deeper and deeper The high life was all over amiss, true The zouk made me say I miss you I yearned for more Amor amor amor What I knew intoto was hip What was new was at my h...

Inspiration coming from Lira and Nelson Mandela

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Due to Nelson Mandela's 95th birthday falling on Thursday, July 18, I started listening to South African music a lot. I even changed my Twitter name to that of my South African alter-ego, Siyabonga Mthimkhulu . I listened to some house, kwaito, hip hop, jazz, R&B and gospel music from Mzansi. Heavy on the rotation was music from Lira. Yeap, the one I met in South Africa . She's simply the rockas. My father is also in town and he's been listening to me rock Lira in the car all the time. Yesterday, I made him watch Tsotsi , my favorite movie of all time. But these occurrences didn't drive me to write this blog post quite like what happened this morning. I was listening to Lira's Captured Tour CD along with my father on the way to work. And then the song started --- "I have a dream, a dream that lives in me. A gift that is given to the uniqueness of me. There is a path, a path made just for me and I walk it faithfully, though not certain where it leads...

Learning more about Lagos, the state of

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I had gone to, or err... travelled to, Ikeja from VI and upon arrival, I was seeing all these "Welcome to Lagos" signboards. So I wondered and then it finally dawned on me that Lagos was actually a state. We know it as the biggest city in Africa, but Lagos is also the name of a state . Did you know Ikeja was the capital of Lagos State? I didn't know until this week, my fifth time in Lagos. I am beginning to know more about Lagos. Ayooluwaato Eze is becoming more comfortable with his true home . While in Lagos, a friend took me on a small driveby tour of Ikeja. I had been to Ikeja a couple of times before, once to go chill and party when I had " point and kill " for the first time. The second time, I visited the Shrine . I need to go check out Computer Village the next time though. In Ikeja, we drove past the Ikeja mall which had a Shoprite and looked pretty big, bigger than the Accra Mall. We'd see what West Hills Mall does when it arrives. The Lago...