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         Ghana Culture:     more books (105)
  1. Ghanaian Society: Culture of Ghana, Women in Ghana, Social Conduct in Ghana, Volunteer Partnerships for West Africa, Public Holidays in Ghana
  2. GHANA: An entry from Macmillan Reference USA's <i>Countries and Their Cultures</i> by BRIAN SCHWIMMER, 2001
  3. Ghana. The land, the people, and the culture. A tourist guide. by Ghana Tourist Development Co, 1989-01-01
  4. Ghanaian Culture: Culture of Ghana
  5. Myths and Legends from Ghana for African-American Cultures by Rute Larungu, 1992-09
  6. The Culture of Ghana, A Bibliography by E. Y. Amedekey, 1970
  7. Ghana's New Christianity, New Edition: Pentecostalism in a Globalising African Economy by Paul Gifford, 2004-06-23
  8. The Culture of Ghana: A Bibliography. by E.Y. Amedekey, 1970
  9. Ghana: An entry from UXL's <i>Junior Worldmark Encyclopedia of Foods and Recipes of the World</i>
  10. Ghanas Heritage of Culture by Kofi (1922-) Antubam, 1963-01-01
  11. Earn-a-Bike in Africa: a grassroots international solidarity program brings bicycles, repair classes, and resources to Ghana.(active culture): An article from: Dollars & Sense by Esther Cervantes, 2005-03-01
  12. Panoply of Ghana;: Ornamental art in Ghanaian tradition and culture by A. A. Y Kyerematen, 1964
  13. Dealing with difference: ethnicity and gender in the context of schooling in Ghana [An article from: International Journal of Educational Development] by G.J. Dei, 2004-07-01
  14. Ghana - Culture Smart!: a quick guide to customs and culture by Ian Utley, 2009-01-01

21. Dynamic Directory - Regional - Africa - Ghana - Society And Culture
medicines, medical equipment and personnel. ghana Arts, culture and History - Lots of information on ghana from a
http://www.maximumedge.com/cgi/dir/index.cgi/Regional/Africa/Ghana/Society_and_C
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Dynamic Directory Top Regional Africa Ghana :Society and Culture Description

22. Chocolate By Jamieson - Ghana's Culture
ghana'S VIBRANT CULTURES The modern country of ghana gained its independencein 1957. ghana's craft traditions have an international audience.
http://www.chocolatebyjamieson.com/culture/ghanaindex.shtml
GHANA'S VIBRANT CULTURES:
The modern country of Ghana gained its independence in 1957. It takes its name from an ancient African kingdom.
The territory that makes up modern Ghana includes areas that were part of the old British Gold Coast Colony on the coast, parts of German Togoland to the east, parts of the former Ashanti Empire in the middle, and the predominantly Muslim Northern Territories to the north. Ghana has a democratically elected parliament and president, a market-oriented economy, and an active press.
Ghana is a multiethnic society whose citizens speak many languages like Twi, Fante, Ga, Ewe, and Dagbani. English is the country's official language.
Though the early states like the Fante on the coast, the Dagomba in the north, and the Ashanti Empire are gone, many chiefly traditions continue. Modern Chiefs and Queen Mothers have new roles in promoting the welfare of their people within the larger context of the modern country of Ghana.
Ghana's craft traditions have an international audience. The Ashanti Kente cloth woven in Bonwire, a village near Kumasi, the former chiefly city of the Ashanti Empire, has been adopted by many people of African descent the world over. It sometimes appears as an element in high fashion. Kente comes in many patterns; each distinct geometric element has its own individual meaning. We've used one of these patterns for our wrappers.
Other fabrics like Adinkra cloth are created for special occasions. Adinkra is produced by block printing special designs arranged in meaningful patterns. We adopted one of the Adinkra designs for our chocolate molds.

23. Chocolate By Jamieson - Ghana's Culture
Home Ruth Hunt Candy, HISTORY OF COCOA IN ghana Cocoa has been grownin ghana at least since the 1870s. The first documented evidence
http://www.chocolatebyjamieson.com/culture/ghanaindex2.shtml
HISTORY OF COCOA IN GHANA
Cocoa has been grown in Ghana at least since the 1870s. The first documented evidence is that of the Basel Missionaries from Switzerland who began experimenting with the crop.
There is also evidence that Ghanaians began experimenting with the crop at the same time.
We also know that Tetteh Quarshie, a Ghanaian goldsmith or blacksmith, brought cocoa seeds from Spanish-controlled Fernando Po to continue further experimentation in cocoa growing during the later part of the 19th century. He encouraged other Ghanaians to grow the crop.
British government officials also experimented with cocoa in Ghana. No one, however, proved as successful at growing this imported crop as the indigenous Ghanaians. They understood much better than Europeans how to farm in tropical rain forests. Europeans often insisted on using techniques better suited to their home countries the result was failure.
Many Ghanaians made fortunes in cocoa in the early decades of this century.
To this day, cocoa is produced primarily by independent local farmers with small to moderate-sized holdings, not on the large plantations used in many parts of the world.

24. AFSANI: Asomdwee Fie, Shrine Of The Abosom And Nsamanfo, Inc.
The Shrine of the Abosom and Nsamanfo is a nonprofit religious organization promoting Akan spirituality, traditional religion, and culture. This project is designed to impart information regarding the practice of the Akan Akom Tradition in America, as well as to explore other aspects of an ancient culture indigenous to ghana, Senegal, Ivory Coast, and other parts of West Africa and the Congo.
http://members.aol.com/afsani
W elcome to the AFSANI site of enlightenment and healing. This project is designed to impart information regarding the practice of the Akan Akom Tradition in America. We will also explore other aspects of an ancient culture which is indigenous to Ghana, West Africa and is practiced in other parts of West Africa and the Congo. W e are Africans born in the Diaspora who have willingly and excitedly chosen to follow in the footsteps of our ancestors. We know that our ancestors were brought to the Americas and Caribbean from the West Coast of Africa. We have visited the dungeons in Ghana, Senegal, Ivory Coast and witnessed the inhumane holding conditions of our royal ancestors who were captured and enslaved. Nevertheless they were able to reach these shores thus we, the members of AFSANI, are here honoring them by following the cultural and spiritual traditions as we are taught from the various Palaces and Shrines in Ghana. W e invite you to explore with us the many possibilities and probabilities inherent in your participation in Sankofa!

25. The Culture Of Ghana - Akan History And Asanti People
ghana's culture Rooted in Ancient Akan Society. Akan, a pure heritage,is one of the most ancient cultures in Africa. These African
http://www.globalvolunteers.org/1main/ghana/ghanaculture.htm
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Ghana's Culture
Rooted in Ancient Akan Society

Akan, a "pure" heritage, is one of the most ancient cultures in Africa. These African people live predominately in the countries of Ghana and Ivory Coast with many descendants now living in Europe and the USA.
Before the 13th century, the Akan peoples (ancestors of the Asante Tribe) migrated from other parts of Africa into the forest belt of present-day Ghana. Family bands established small states in the hilly country in the neighborhood of modern Kumasi. This early migration was likely related to the opening of trade routes established to move gold throughout the region. It was not until the end of the 17th century, however, that the grand Asante Kingdom emerged in the central forest region of Ghana, when several small states united under the Chief of Kumasi.
Much of what is known about ancient Akan customs was passed on in oral histories, which have survived for several hundred years. Many of the objects that have been recovered through archaeological excavations are still produced in modified form among contemporary Akan peoples. In 1957, after a period of internal self-government, the Gold Coast became the first African colony to achieve independence under the charismatic leadership of Kwame Nkrumah.

26. Ghana - Holiday, Tours, Roundtrips And Hotels
Specialists in nature and culture trips throughout West Africa. Worpswede, Germany.
http://www.ghana-travel.com
G H A N A - W E S T A F R I C A GHANA PEOPLE, NATURE AND OCEAN Travels in another Africa Africa is more than just lions and safari. Here culture and history are vividly contrasted with wild beaches, green landscapes and people full of the joy of living. Whether you choose a hotel in a natural setting, take part in an organised expedition or wish to plan an individual journey, we will make the multifaceted beauty and unvarnished reality of West Africa an unforgettable experience for you. - Car - Hires in AFRICA E- Cards Further travel offers (german Website) for Kenya, Tanzania, Ivory Coast (Elfenbeinküste) Madagascar, Zanzibar, Senegal, Gambie (Gambia), Mali, Cape Verde (Kapverden), Burkina Faso, South Africa (Südafrika) you will find under www.cobra-verde.de Email about us Contact Cobra Verde Ghana Travel, Im Wrockmoor 25, D-27726 Worpswede, Germany Tel: +49 4792 - 952124, Fax: + 49 4792 -952125, E-mail: kontakt@cobra-verde.de

27. Ghana Related Websites: Culture
ghana Related Links/Sites. TopCulture Arts and Crafts Food Music and Dance TraditionalVarious Register your site for free, Advertize here Availaible for
http://www.ghanaweb.com/GhanaHomePage/directory/cat64.html
GhanaHomePage Contents Famous Ghanaians Email/Phone Directory Dictionary External Links Alphabetical Index Business Culture Education ... Various Sponsor Link Africa DialTone Card
The smart way to phone Accra, Kumasi, Tema and anywhere in Africa. Only 18 c/min Ghana. Instant pin. No connection fee. Re-chargable.
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28. Ghana -- Culture Overview
ghana culture Overview. The Republic of ghana evokes both the ancientEmpire of ghana and the riches of the Gold Coast, as the
http://expedition.bensenville.lib.il.us/Africa/ghana/culture.htm
Ghana - Culture Overview The Republic of Ghana evokes both the ancient Empire of Ghana and the riches of the "Gold Coast," as the area was called by the British. The historical abundance of Ghana's gold, timber, and kola nuts drew Europeans to its shores first to trade these goods and then to buy slaves. Ghanaians remain proud of the armed might with which the Ashanti people resisted the British until 1900. In 1957, Ghana became the first sub-Saharan nation to achieve independence, and its first president, Kwame Nkrumah, funneled state resources into the expansion of traditional arts and culture. Nkrumah also introduced strong support for pan-African ideas, and Ghana has been a leader in researching and celebrating African culture in its largest sense as well as in its most local traditions.
As in most West African countries, local tradition varies among the nation's distinctive ethnic groups. The Akan (which include the Ashanti) constitute the largest group in Ghana. Other major societies are the Dagomba, who reside primarily in the north; the Ewe, who live mostly in the east; the Ga and Adangbe, who populate the south; and the Guan, who are northeastern dwellers. Each of these groups speaks one or more languages. The Akan, for example, comprise both Twi and Fanti speakers. English is the nation's official language. Nearly 40% of Ghanaians practice animist forms of worship, and even among Christians and Muslims people retain respect for the traditional beliefs of their ancestors. Accra, Ghana is home to a unique faith called Zetaheal, which claims a growing number of several thousand adherents. Established in the mid-1970s, Zetaheal combines the teachings of the Koran and the Bible into a single service led by both a pastor and an Imam.

29. Collectif Asah : Ressources : ASAH > RESSOURCES PAR PAYS > Afrique > Ghana > Cul
RESSOURCES PAR PAYS Afrique ghana culture générale . Niveau Supérieur.
http://www.collectif-asah.org/ressources.php?node=2651&

30. People And Culture Of Ghana
Bernard Woma, master xylophonist and drummer of the ghana National Theatre, and hisDagara Bewaa culture Group perform West African xylophone music and dance.
http://www.africaguide.com/country/ghana/culture.htm
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PEOPLE

Ghanians come from six main ethnic groups: the Akan (Ashanti and Fanti), the Ewe, the Ga-Adangbe, the Mole-Dagbani, the Guan, and the Gurma.
Ashanti Tribe
The Ashanti tribe of the Akan are the largest tribe in Ghana and one of the few matrilineal societies in West Africa. Once renown for the splendour and wealth of their rulers, they are most famous today for their craft work, particularly their hand-carved stools and fertility dolls and their colourful kente cloth. Kente cloth is woven in bright, narrow strips with complex patterns; it's usually made from cotton and is always woven outdoors, exclusively by men.
The village is a social as well as an economic unit. Everyone participates in the major ceremonies, the most frequent of which are funeral celebrations which typically last several days. Attendance at funerals is normally expected from everyone in the village and expenditure on funerals is a substantial part of the household budget. (

31. A Culture Of Change In Africa
A culture of Change in Africa Boston Globe Editorial Notebook - April 1999. byRenee Loth. ACCRA, ghana It isn't far from this bustling capital with its
http://www.unfpa.org/modules/focus/ghana/culture.htm

32. Ghana Search Engine – For Map Of Ghana, History Of Ghana, Picture Of Ghana, Tra
For ghana flag map news ghana history culture map flag news hotel Accra historynews travel flag hotel airways ancient culture travel hotel ghana empire
http://www.ghanasearch.info/
Search Engine.Search for map of Ghana, history of Ghana, picture of Ghana news, Ghana web site, Accra map, Accra picture, Accra news. For information on a map of Ghana history, map, picture, Ghana history, news, web site, Accra news, Ghana map, Accra map, Ghana history, Ghana map. Search the world with Planet Search Search Engine Query Select Country Search Engine Search The World Algeria Argentina Australia Austria Bahamas Bangladesh Barbados Belgium Bolivia Brazil Bulgaria Cameroon Canada Caribbean Chile China Columbia Croatia Cuba Cyprus Czech Republic Denmark Dominican Republic Ecuador Egypt England Estonia Fiji Finland France Germany Ghana Greece Hong Kong Hungary Iceland India Indonesia Iran Iraq Ireland Israel Italy Jamaica Japan Jordan Kenya Korea Kuwait Latvia Lithuania Luxembourg Madagascar Malaysia Malta Mexico Monaco Morocco Mozambique Nepal Netherlands New Zealand Nicaragua Nigeria Northern Ireland North Korea Norway Pakistan Panama Paraguay Peru Philippines Poland Portugal Qatar Romania Russia Saudi Arabia Scotland Senegal Singapore Slovakia Slovenia South Africa South Korea Spain Sri Lanka Sweden Switzerland Taiwan Tanzania Thailand Tunisia Turkey Ukraine UK United Arab Emirates Uruguay USA Venezuela Vietnam Wales Yemen Yugoslavia Zambia Zimbabwe Search The World 'Any Country' plus search.info

33. Ghana & Sénégal Roots & Culture Tour Spector Travel
Spector Travel of Boston Roots and culture Tour. ghana Sénégal.From $1899.00 pp dbl + tax Wednesday to Saturday. Sénégal and
http://www.spectortravel.com/Pages/roots_gs.html
Spector Travel of Boston
Roots and Culture Tour
From: pp dbl + tax
Wednesday to Saturday
Tour Includes:
  • Round trip economy airfare New York-Dakar-Accra-New York on Air Afrique
  • Round trip airport transfers, hotel taxes and service charges
  • 4 nights first class hotel
  • Meals: 4 breakfasts
  • Goree Island's infamous Slave House with a lecture
  • 1/2 day city tour of Dakar
Ghana
  • 4 nights first class hotel
  • Meals: 4 breakfasts
  • 1/2 day city tour of Accra
  • Full day tour of Cape Coast World Heritage Slave Forts and Castles
  • Lecture on the Slave Castles
  • Two Days Kumasi viewing the National Cultural Center, Prempreh II Museum, Manhyia Palace and a visit to the wood carver and Kente weaving villages
Home Africa Discount Airfares
Meetings and Conferences

Who is Spector Travel
Spector Travel of Boston, Inc.
2 Park Plaza, Boston, Massachusetts 02116, USA
Phone: 617-338-0111 or 800-TRY-AFRICA (879-2374)
Fax: 617-338-0110
Email: africa@spectortravel.com
Spector Travel of Boston , Inc.

34. African Music And African Culture @ Web62.com Internet Television
Real Video and photos from the ghana Reggae Sunsplash, Ampofo Acquah and Oboja Adu.Category Arts Music Styles World Reggae...... Unique videos from Burkina Faso reveal the beauty of African spirit, music, joyand culture. 56k 100k 256k. ghana Masterdrummer Aja Addy, Ampofo Acquah and
http://www.web62.com/africanmusic.html
Free Greeting Cards Free Webhosting about agency African Music Music News @ web62.com Welcome @ Internet Television with 600 Real Videos and 4000 Full Screen pages with Sports, Music, Fashion, Travel, Media, Graffiti. German Edition Search the Web Prime Music Links Jennifer Lopez moby.com blastro.com Alicia Keys ... NME 4 Musicians mh20.com MP3.com iuma Music Videos Ccult is back. 30 years ago Kalacakra had even been visited by Beatles inspirator Moondog Kalacakra heads forward with a new CD, exclusively introduced at web62.com on special videos featuring designer fashion from Sonja Kiefer, who provides outfits for Janet Jackson and other musicians. Video 1 Video 2 Video 3 Musicians with an interest in putting their own music clips on the Internet will enjoy lots of clues inside the internetvideomag MP3 file sharing Morpheus and musiccity report over 1 Million visitors per day.

35. Www.ghana.co.uk - History & Culture
Ancient ghana. Ancient ghana Time Line , Empire of Ancient ghana. Majorityof the knowledge of ghana comes from the Arab writers.
http://www.ghana.co.uk/history/history/ancient_ghana.htm

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Ancient Ghana
Empire of Ancient Ghana

Despite its name, the old empire of Ghana is not geographically, ethnically or in any way related to modern Ghana. Ancient Ghana lies 400 miles north-west of modern Ghana, it encompasses what is now modern Northern Senegal and Southern Mauritania. The origins of Ghana are not certain, but at the start of the first millennium AD a number of clans of the Soninke people, a Mande speaking people living in the region bordering the Sahara, came together under the leadership of Dinga Cisse.
There are different narration's of who he was but history establishes the fact that he was a stranger from afar. It has been said that it is likely that the Soninke was formed in response to the attacks from nomadic raiders suffering from drought and seeking new territory. Further west was the state of Takrur in the Senegal valley. It was linked to the north via a coastal route leading to Morocco via Sjilmasa.
Ancient Ghana derived power and wealth from gold and the introduction of the camel during the Trans-Saharan trade increased the quantity of goods that were transported. Majority of the knowledge of Ghana comes from the Arab writers. Al-Hamdani, for example, describes Ghana as having the richest gold mines on earth. These mines were situated at Bambuk, on the upper Senegal river. The Soninke people also sold slaves, salt and copper in exchange for textiles, beads and finished goods. They built their capital city, Kumbi Saleh, right on the edge of the Sahara and the city quickly became the most dynamic and important southern terminus of the Saharan trade routes. Kumbi Saleh became the focus of all trade, with a systematic form of taxation. Later on Audaghust became another commercial centre.

36. Www.ghana.co.uk - History & Culture
Further opposition came from the ghana Bar Association (GBA), which criticized the whichforced the country, especially the press, into a culture of silence
http://www.ghana.co.uk/history/history/ghana_1982_1987.htm

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Ghana between 1982 - 1987
The Second Coming of Rawlings: The First Six Years, 1982- 87

The new government that took power on December 31, 1981, was the eighth in the fifteen years since the fall of Nkrumah. Calling itself the Provisional National Defense Council (PNDC), its membership included Rawlings as Chairman, Brigadier Joseph Nunoo-Mensah (whom Limann had dismissed as Army Commander), two other officers, and three civilians. Despite its military connections, the PNDC made it clear that it was unlike other soldier-led governments. This was immediately proved by the appointment of fifteen civilians to cabinet positions.
Opposition to the PNDC administration developed nonetheless in different sectors of the political spectrum. The most obvious groups opposing the government were former PNP and PFP members. They argued that the Third Republic had not been given time to prove itself and that the PNDC administration was unconstitutional. Further opposition came from the Ghana Bar Association (GBA), which criticized the government's use of people's tribunals in the administration of justice. Members of the Trade Union Congress were also angered when the PNDC ordered them to withdraw demands for increased wages. The National Union of Ghanaian Students (NUGS) went even farther, calling on the government to hand over power to the attorney general, who would supervise new elections.

37. The Republic Of Ghana Art Culture
The Republic of ghana Art culture. Chains Chains - ghana Arts and culture- ghana Arts and culture -, ~ Maps Of ghana - Including City Maps ~.
http://www.escapeartist.com/Ghana/art.html
Living in Ghana
Index for Ghana
Index for Africa Escape from America Magazine Adasa Drama Troupe -
Adasa Drama Troupe Theatre Companies.
Adinkrah Symbols - Adinkrah Symbols
AfricanCraft.com - AfricanCraft.com Dedicated to bringing the arts and the artisans of Africa online. Craftspeople, product designers and shops. Artisan web pages, retailers offering a wide selection of traditional and contemporary artifacts, arts and clothing.
Ancient Africa - Ancient Africa
Bakoji Paintyard - Bakoji Paintyard Beautiful and unusual abstract art from the renowned Ghanian artist Bakoji.
Cadet and Junior Auxilliary of the Knights of St. John - Cadet and Junior Auxilliary of the Knights of St. John Part of an international semi-military Order in the Catholic Church.
Catholic Action for Street children (CAS) - Catholic Action for Street children (CAS) A Ghanaian NGO which helps street children who live in the streets of Accra, Ashaiman, and Tema metropolis.
Chains - Chains
Ghana Arts and Culture - Ghana Arts and Culture ~ Maps Of Ghana - Including City Maps ~ Maps of Ghana ~ A large number of differing Ghana maps including city maps ~ Books About Ghana ~ West African Religious Traditions : Focus on the Akan of Ghana (Faith Meets Faith Series) by Robert B. Fisher

38. AllAfrica.com -- Ghana [opinion]: Our Evolving Borrowing Culture
Our Evolving Borrowing culture,
http://allafrica.com/stories/200212210146.html
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Our Evolving Borrowing Culture
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The Publisher's Site Ghanaian Chronicle (Accra) OPINION
December 20, 2002
Posted to the web December 21, 2002 Kwame Nsiah
We have been in the borrowing culture for some time now. It looks as if we are not going to go out of it in the foreseeable future. It is to borrow to manage borrowing for the management of the Economy. We are in the process evolving a borrowing culture. When we go out to borrow, we look for lending institutions, and look for lending nations. We call them Development Partners, which is quite a beautiful name for all their good intentions. They come down indeed as partners to co-manage the loans with us, which appears a little superfluous in the lending and borrowing business we are acquainted with locally. But here they come as Country Representatives, not as Ambassadors or High Commissioners, but representatives in fact to manage the targets set for the borrower who should accept the loan on set conditions we call as conditionalities. The conditionalities are hardly negotiable. The borrower should accept them to have the loan, or refuse them and miss the loan facility

39. AllAfrica.com -- Ghana: Media Deepens Democratic Culture
Accra. Mr Isaac Osei, ghana's High Commissioner to the UK has praised themedia in ghana for helping to deepen democratic culture in the country.
http://allafrica.com/stories/200303030555.html
Algeria Angola Benin Botswana Burkina Faso Burundi Cameroon Cape Verde Central African Republic Chad Comoros Congo-Brazzaville Congo-Kinshasa Côte d'Ivoire Djibouti Egypt Equatorial Guinea Eritrea Ethiopia Gabon Gambia Ghana Guinea Guinea Bissau Kenya Lesotho Liberia Libya Madagascar Malawi Mali Mauritania Mauritius Morocco Mozambique Namibia Niger Nigeria Rwanda Sao Tomé and Principé Senegal Seychelles Sierra Leone Somalia South Africa Sudan Swaziland Tanzania Togo Tunisia Uganda Western Sahara Zambia Zimbabwe
Media Deepens Democratic Culture
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The Publisher's Site Accra Mail (Accra) March 4, 2003
Posted to the web March 3, 2003 Accra Mr Isaac Osei, Ghana's High Commissioner to the UK has praised the media in Ghana for helping to deepen democratic culture in the country. He said despite the apparent excesses on the part of a section of the media, the overall performance has been encouraging and positive. High Commissioner Osei said the Government would do everything possible to ensure that the foundation which had been laid for the smooth operations of the media during the NPP administration, would remain undisturbed. He, however, called on all media to endeavour to cross-check every piece of information before going to the press.

40. GRi Arts & Culture - Ghana
experience at the School of Performing Arts , University of ghana , Legon, had madeher to believe that ghana had sophisticated and advanced forms of culture.
http://www.ghanareview.com/narts.php
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President Kufuor opens 10th edition of NAFAC
Ghanaians to examine all aspects of their culture
President Kufuor opens 10th edition of NAFAC Sekondi (Western Region) 07 April 2003- The 10th edition of the National Festival of Arts and Culture (NAFAC) opened at the Sekondi Methodist Park with a grand durbar of chiefs and people from all the country's 10 regions. The 10-day festival is under the theme: "Culture, Development and Ghanaian Identity". The chiefs, who were dressed in rich kente cloths, velvet, smocks and flowing gowns and adorned with gold ornaments and expensive beads around their necks, elbows, wrists and ankles, they walked gorgeously from the Western Regional House of Chiefs through the principal streets of Sekondi to the durbar grounds. The Paramount chiefs were carried in palanquins, while the divisional chiefs walked amid drumming, dancing and firing of musketry. The festival, scheduled for last year, had to be postponed on two occasions due to lack of funds to complete the Western Regional Culture Theatre to host the festival. The official opening of the festival that would portray the rich cultural heritage of Ghana , drumming, dancing, poetry recitals and other cultural activities, originally scheduled for 1000 hours was delayed until 1600 hours.

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