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Entertainment of Saturday, 19 August 2017

Source: mynewsgh.com

New book on Nkrumah launches on September 21

Dr Kwame Nkrumah Dr Kwame Nkrumah

A new biography of Ghana’s first president, Death of an Empire - Kwame Nkrumah in Ghana and Africa, will be released on September 21 as the country marks the national holiday of his birth.

It is written by the last of his All African Cabinet Ministers and the youngest-Kwame Sanaa-Poku Jantuah who also served as his Ambassador to France, Brazi, and the United Kingdom.

The book is published in the United States by the African World Press in Trenton, New Jersey and in Ghana by Digibooks Limited. Advertisement

Mr Jantuah worked on the 200-page book with his nephew-Ivor Agyeman-Duah, who is currently a Visiting Associate Professor and Director of the Wole Soyinka Foundation at the University of Johannesburg before he passed on at 89 in 2011.

The book also reflects on the dawn of Ghana’s Fourth Republic and the consequences of democratic progress.

A news release by the Heritage and Cultural Society of Africa and the Centre for Intellectual Renewal in Accra said, it would be launched at the Christiansburg Castle Gardens where Nkrumah started his Prime Ministerial work.

The keynote speaker will be the Deputy Chairperson of the African Union in Addis Ababa, Ambassador Kwesi Quartey previously Ghana’s Ambassador to Ethiopia and the African Union, and before then at the Ghana Permanent Mission to the United Nations in New York among others.

Other speakers include David Owusu –Ansah, an eminent Professor of African History at James Madison University in Virginia, United States.

He is also the former Lester Martin Associate of the Harry S. Truman Institute for International Peace of the Hebrew University in Jerusalem and editor of the authoritative, Historical Dictionary of Ghana.

He will speak on the topic, “Still Contested After All these Years: Nkrumah in the Context of the National History.”

Mr. Agyeman-Duah who also wrote a detailed Introduction to the book has explained that it goes beyond the contemporary conversation of the founding history to the sophistry of the Gold Coast diplomatic service.

It also speaks to the Nkrumah-Jantuah roles in for instance, the Algerian War of Independence and Ghana’s contribution to the Anti-Apartheid Movement in South Africa, he added.

Nkrumah once wrote to Jantuah saying, “I need not emphasise the importance of this assignment to represent me as Ambassador to Monrovia at this interesting stage of Ghana’s history and I have full confidence in your ability to represent the interest of the government and the people of Ghana in a matter that will be a credit to you and the country.”