Will ye Ghanaian hypocrites, both men and women, married and unmarried, leave out the name of decedent Daddy Lumba from your daily gossips that will not bring food to your table?
Is it not said by our wise ancestors that we should not talk ill of the dead?
Why then is it that many Ghanaians, having nothing to do with their empty lives, constantly keep lambasting the late Daddy Lumba because he had married two wives?
Is it a taboo, if I may ask, for a Ghanaian man to marry more than one wife?
Does Ghanaian culture, cutting across all tribal lines, not permit polygamy in the country?
If yes, what is the crime that Lumba committed for marrying two wives?
Yes, it is a crime of bigamy to marry more than one wife in the white man's land; they can have as many girlfriends as they want without officially attempting to marry these secret concubines.
The Ghanaian women and some of their holier-than-thou men insist on copying the white man's culture of "one man, one wife", yet they frown on their culture of inclusivity, giving equal rights to, and embracement of, gay marriages.
If everything about white man's culture is perfectly meriting their copy and patronisation by us as black Ghanaians, why should we run away when they forcefully ask us to adopt LGBTQ+ rights in Africa in general and Ghana in particular?
One hears all over social media, TikTok especially, bloggers, both men and women, discussing the late Daddy Lumba in unprintable words because he married two wives, and on his death, the wives are aggressively battling over his estate, and addressing the issue of which of them was his legal wife.
Had he not had children by both women?
If the public and the extended family of Lumba would butt out of his private and marriage affairs, the two wives may be able to come to an amicable agreement regarding who was his genuine wife, how his estate is to be shared, and so on.
Hypocrite Ghanaians, have something better to do with your lives and stop dragging the name and integrity of late Daddy Lumba through the mud.
The bloggers are making money out of the demise of Lumba by discussing him all the time, although his remains have yet to be interred.
I shall, by this publication, plead with both wives of Daddy Lumba to seek of court settlement to help speed up his burial and to cut out the gossiping public from his, and your, private affairs.
The public and the social media bloggers are advised not to tarnish the reputation of Daddy Lumba in their quest to make money out of him.











