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A 12 Year Old Writes to The President

Sat, 10 Mar 2012 Source: Ofosu-Appiah, Ben

Attn:

H.E. President John Attah Mills,

The Castle Osu, Accra.

A LETTER TO THE PRESIDENT:

CAN WE HAVE A NATIONAL

MUSEUM OF MODERN GHANA HISTORY? A 12 year old pleads.

My name is Prince Ben Ofosu

–Appiah. I am 12 years of age and a sixth grader at the Morning Glory

Montessori Child Development Center, Teshie Nungua. I have a question that I would

like to ask;

WHY ARE THERE NO MUSEUMS IN GHANA?

When I was about 4 years old, my parents and I

visited the United States. We went to Maryland, Virginia, Boston Massachusetts,

New York and Washington DC area. We visited many national monuments, galleries,

museums, etc and learned a lot about American history.

Back home in Ghana, I realized we don’t have many national monuments, and apart

from the Kwame Nkrumah mausoleum where I had the privilege of visiting in a

school excursion recently, there are no national museums of note in the

country. The National Cultural Center in Kumasi and the Arts Center in Accra are

the only exceptions. Why can’t we have a

National Musuem of Modern History of Ghana? My father said “a country that does

not preserve its past has no future”.

Where is the pen that Osagyefo

Dr. Kwame Nkrumah used to sign the declaration of independence? Where is the

original document of Ghana’s declaration of independence and a change of name

from The Gold Coast to Ghana? I recently watched the film of Nkrumah’s

declaration of independence on Youtube and after that I wanted to see in person

the smock Nkrumah wore and the white handkerchief he waved and I asked my

father where that is preserved. I

couldn’t find them in the Kwame Nkrumah mausoleum, so where are they? Where is

the open car Nkrumah rode in after declaring Ghana our beloved country is free

forever? If we can’t preserve these very important aspects of our modern

history for our children and for future generations then as my father says we

may have no future.

My family and I drove around

Kotoka International Airport last week after a school event and I saw a Ghana

Airways DC 10 aircraft sitting in a bushy part of the airport covered with

dust, dirt and bush. Since my Mum used to work for Ghana Airways I asked why is

the airplane abandoned at the mercy of the weather? I know that Ghana has no

national airline anymore but why can’t we put this airplane in a museum and

kids can visit there as part of their school excursion so that they will know

that once upon a time Ghana had a national airline but we ran it down just like

we did to the Black Star Line and many other national assets. I believe there’s

educational value in preserving this aircraft in a museum than to let it rot

away in the sun and in the bush. When we visited the Washington DC area, one

place I loved most was the Smithsonian Institute and all the aeronautical

exhibits I saw there.

Another thing my father said is that we are very bad at

keeping records as a nation. I study ICT in school and I know it is more

efficient and easier to keep records in digital form rather than in paper form.

In the era of ICT, why do we still keep records in files and paper form? Many

countries have gone digital long time and all records are kept in a data base

which is well protected and easily accessible. Every now and then I see in the news

fire has gutted this office or that

office and has destroyed all records. A case in point is the fire that

destroyed the Lands Commission Office in Accra destroying records. These

records can be protected and preserved if they are kept in a central data base

that links all government departments and Ministries.

When I was 6 years old I spent

one year in Japan because my father is resided there. Japan is a child friendly

country. In my school, Montessori Child Development Center( MCDC), our

motto/our slogan is “MCDC : where children matter’. In Japan there are many parks

everywhere for

children to play equipped with the facilities for children and their parents to

have a fun and relaxing time. Children’s parks with amusement park facilities,

parks for picnics, parks for all kinds of sporting activities etc. When I

returned to Ghana a year later, I remembered realizing for the first time there

are no parks in Ghana and asking my parents why. If a tiny and overcrowded

country like Japan can set aside space to develop parks why can’t we do the

same in Ghana where land isn’t a big problem? DO CHILDREN REALLY MATTER IN

GHANA, Mr. President? Can we build Ghana into a country where children

matter? I think my father will say a

country that does not invest in its children has no future, and I agree.

Mr. President, I would like to

appeal to you to build a NATIONAL MUSEUM OF MODERN GHANA HISTORY and also BUILD

MORE CHILDREN’s PARKS across the country to promote the healthy well being and

development

of children; places where children can run around and play freely since

childhood obesity is increasingly becoming a big problem in our society too.

I would be honoured to read from

you, sir.

Thank you very much.

Sincerely yours,

Prince Ben Ofosu-Appiah (12

years)

Morning Glory Montessori Child

Development Center

Primary Department, Grade 6A

Teshie Nungua.

Accra – Ghana.

Columnist: Ofosu-Appiah, Ben