Opinions of Monday, 3 December 2018

Columnist: Etse Sikanku

The Presecan dream, my experience with Mrs Charlotte S. Akyeampong

Mrs. Charlotte Akyeampong Mrs. Charlotte Akyeampong

“You conf or what?” This was the half-jovial, half-mocking reaction I got from a friend when I switched from French to Literature in the term before my final year at the Presby Boys High School, Legon.
The year was 1999.

I was in the third term of my second year. This was a three year programme.

Many said it was academically risky, others said it was unnecessary, while for some, it showed a “lack of clear direction or focus.”

Not Mrs Akyeampong.

I will spare you details of what went into that decision except to say it was necessary for my academic survival.

The Senior Secondary School Certificate Examination (SSSCE), that killer of an exam, was due the following year.

Although I had an idea of what I wanted to do, I was still a bit doubtful. However, my worries were practically over by the time I finished speaking with Mrs Akyeampong.

She didn’t dismiss my late change of mind as the indecisiveness of a teenager. She didn’t berate me for toying with my future.

She didn’t try to impose her own vision, life-plan or ideologies on me.

In a most calming manner, she listened to me; she really listened to my heart and once she caught wind of my dream, she was unrelenting in her support.

And that was vintage Mrs Akyeampong: patient, open, understanding, warm, humane and empathetic.

Her true genius was that sublime ability to unearth gold in her students no matter where they stood, who they were or where they came from.

She was a remarkable teacher with a great penchant for bringing out the best in everyone.

Together with Mr Kofi Allotey, a teacher who himself had played no less a role in building my self-confidence (when he urged my participation in GTV’s flagship “Talking Point” programme in SSS 2), she inspired us to produce the school magazine and Yearbook in an era where few secondary schools in the country could even manage one of these.

At the time, she would laboriously go through the articles for the publication, editing and guiding us, while providing a much needed link between the board and the school administration.

The editorial board, though exciting, was extremely demanding and we would never have been successful without her hands-on support.

Personally, though I wasn’t conscious of it at the time, Presec was the first place I learned to report and write.

I finally found my calling in journalism after graduating from college but it was under Mrs Akyeampong’s tutelage that l learned to write my first leads, nut graphs and features.

It was at the Presbyterian Boys that I conducted my first interview with a high profile personality, Kwaku Sintim-Misa, for the school magazine.

I filed reports on the National Science and Maths Quiz, wrote profiles on stand-out students and reported on some school activities or events.

I don’t know why but “A trip to Kokrobite” immediately comes to mind.

I also conducted interviews for a column titled “Geizi eyeball to eyeball” for a weekly production by the editorial board called “Fila Column”.

All of this was under the direct supervision and guidance of Mrs Charlotte Akyeampong as the Editorial Board Chairperson.

Looking back now, it is impossible to overstate the importance of Mrs Akyeampong’s mentorship in my life.

On the issue of my change of subject, she became personally involved in getting me up to speed for the looming SSSCE Literature-in-English exam.

In her free time, she taught me everything I’d missed in the past year and a half, tested, graded and helped me in areas that I was struggling with.

Sometimes, she opened the doors to her house for more tutoring.

At home, her family was nothing but warm, receptive and hospitable.

And so it was till the day of the mighty exam. All this was free of charge.

Mrs Akyeampong is one of the warmest and most kind-hearted people I have ever known and I, like most of my friends admired her contributions, impact, spirit and character.

My encounter with her was as a result of my interest in literary activities, but in the end, she was just like a mother to me.

I graduated from Presec and went on to other things in life but none of that self-confidence and the skills she taught me has ever left.

For this and so much more, I remain eternally grateful.

I’m also thankful to all the other teachers and staff at Presec who made my time there memorable.

We are also grateful to her husband, the late Professor Akyeampong, her children (Angelo Akyeampong, Adrian Akyeampong and Adeline Akyeampong) for being kind enough to share their mother with Presec and the world.

The fact that she wasn’t an old student didn’t matter to her. The fact that she wasn’t Presbyterian did not matter. The fact that she didn’t always reap financial rewards for her efforts didn’t matter to her.

No, you didn’t need to be a relative or a family friend or even to be her student.

C.S Akyeampong’s legacy in Presec was that of selflessness.

Here was a woman who took the Presbyterian dream, the one laid down by the likes of Engmann and the early missionaries and truly made it her own.

The awards, which coincided with the 90th anniversary of the Ghana Chamber of Mines, recognised and celebrated individuals and companies for their outstanding achievement and excellence in the mining industry.

The Asanko Gold Ghana Limited was adjudged the Mining Company of the Year 2018, while Mr Alwyn Pretorius, the Regional Senior Vice-President of Newmont Africa and Latif Iddrissu, a reporter with Multi Media, received the Mining Personality and Best Mining Reporter of the year respectively.

Trade surpluses

Dr Addison said the data available at the BoG had suggested that mining currently provided more than 10, 000 jobs annually in spite of the various disruptions, such as power generation and fluctuation in the price of the metal, which impacted on the industry.

He also said due to improvement in the country’s export performance in 2018, Ghana had swung from being a country that recorded trade deficit to one that was currently recording trade surpluses.

He attributed such major turnaround in the country’s microeconomic fundamentals to the stability of the cedis against major foreign currencies.

On the importance of diversification and adding value to the country’s mineral resources to improve forward and backward linkages associated with the mining industry, Dr Addison said “I think that this is the best way in which the Ghanaian economy can indeed enjoy the benefit of gold to our local economies.”

Robust financial sector

The governor said that there had been an improvement in the country’s economic activity, with major export commodities—gold, oil and cocoa—doing so well and inflation rate reducing to 9.5 per cent.

He, however, expressed worry about the influence of the external environment on the domestic economy, particularly, changes in monetary policy in the US and its impact on the exchange rate.

He indicated that by restoring sanity and trust in the financial sector, the central bank was optimistic that by the end of December “we will have a financial sector that is very robust and well-capitalised with better corporate governance which should inure to the benefit of all us.”

‘We’ll inaugurate board’

In a speech read on his behalf, the Minister of Lands and Natural Resources, Mr Kwaku Asomah-Cheremeh, said the government was committed to promoting sustainable extraction and optimising the use of mineral resources in the country.

He disclosed that the government would soon put in place a governing board of the Minerals Develop Fund as stipulated in Act 192 to enhance community participation in the mining resources.”

Unexplored potential

The Chief Executive Officer of the Ghana Chamber of Mines, Mr Sulemanu Koney, said the mining industry still had immense unexplored potential to significantly create sustainable livelihoods for the people and contribute more to the socio-economic development of the country.

Harnessing such potential, he said, would require the ingenuity, commitment, diligence of stakeholders within the mining industry to address challenges facing the sector.