Ghana to Host Maiden ‘Back to Africa’ Festival

Ghana map

Accra, February 22, 2018//-Ghana will host the maiden ‘Back to Africa’ Festival which forms part of an aggressive drive to encourage Africans in the Diaspora to visit the country to reconnect with their roots, become citizens and as well as invest towards national development.

The Ghana Tourism Authority (GTA) which is collaborating  with the Adinkra Group of the United States of America (USA) would organise the pilgrimage under the dabbed: ‘Two cultures; One Foundation’.

This, the Chief Executive Officer of  GTA,  Akwasi Agyemang, said is an initiative which forms part of the strategies adopted in the African Diaspora Heritage trail, which would be organised every year in October.

Other events are PANAFEST, Emancipation Day and the Right to Return Festival, which would be held in December every year.

According to him, these were the three-key initiatives targeting the American Diaspora back into Ghana, which fitted into the “Our Birth Right Pilgrimage’ Initiative and the Cultural Connections and would help Ghana see a significant growth in the numbers of visitors to Ghana.

“The USA, as we are aware is the number one outbound destination for Ghana, and we want to grow those numbers significantly,” he noted.

Diallo Sumbry, Chief Executive Officer of Adinkra Group, (USA) said this was the time to talk about a lot of different things in terms of building the bridge between Africans in the Diaspora and Africans on the continent.

The Adinkra group is an African cultural resource company that helps to teach, enrich and show people how to celebrate the different African cultures, in Washington DC, promote African culture through dances, songs, programmes, among others.

He said one of the most powerful elements of the African culture was the arts, the vibrancy of the colours, the variety of the people and the talent and the skills, hence the need to form the group to portray the beauty of Africa.

Mr Sumbry added that, the festival was aimed at bringing groups of African American citizens back to Ghana, every year during the last week of the Black History month of October.

“This year we are coming from Washington DC with a band, called the Backyard Band, which has an African root and plays indigenous music of Washington DC ‘Gogo’ music, which is very much related to Ghanaian music and culture,” he said.

He further said, the initiative was the beginning of a continuation of building the bridge of Africans in the Diaspora and Africans on the continent, and expressed the hope that everyone would understand the significance and the importance of the time of now.

Mr Sumbry said it was a serious opportunity for Africans to seize to be able to own their own future, which was what the festival was all about.

“We are doing this in the power of music, arts and culture. The Band is coming home, and would be performing around Ghana, to show everyone how the Band is connected to African culture,” he revealed.

He said 75 people would be flying in for one week, while the festival would start from February 27 to March 5.

Some programmes lined up for the festival are a welcome reception, performance at the Cape Coast Castle, an ancestry reveal through DNA testing, and a jam performance at the Accra Tourists Information Centre.

According to him, “These would precede the re-launch of PANAFEST, then Emancipation and the Right to Return Festival, where African-American citizens who visit would be offered the chance to have a streamline process to be able to gain their citizenship.”

By Sammy Adjei, African Eye Report

 

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