
Accra, Ghana//-On the fertile grounds of Tamale, a visionary was born. Dr Ibrahim Mahama’s journey from the classrooms of Tamale Senior High School to the halls of the College of North West London was just the prologue to an extraordinary story of grit, vision, and nation-building.
Returning home, he planted the seeds of a dream. He founded Engineers & Planners Limited, a heavy equipment rental and civil engineering firm.
The naysayers scoffed. They said a Ghanaian company could never compete with multinational giants. But Dr Mahama, with the unwavering persistence of a man who, as a boy, would dismantle toys just to understand their soul, refused to listen.
Today, Engineers & Planners is the largest wholly Ghanaian-owned mining and construction firm in West Africa, employing thousands of our people and proving that the African spirit is indomitable.
Conquering the Walls of African Rock with Dzata Cement
You rightly call him a philosophist, for his business is not just commerce; it is a philosophy of self-reliance.
When he ventured to build Dzata Cement, he did more than just build a factory. He gave Ghana its first fully locally-owned cement brand—a solid fortress that has truly begun to conquer the walls of African rock.
This multi-million dollar plant near the Tema Port, with a capacity to produce millions of tonnes of cement, is a testament to his belief that we can build our own nation with our own hands.
A New Dawn at Damang: Real Talk, Not Political Talk
And just days ago, the history books were opened to a new chapter. Through a competitive tender process, Dr Mahama’s company took over the Damang Gold Mine in the Western Region from Gold Fields.
At the handover ceremony, he stood not as a politician, but as a proud Ghanaian. He pledged to build a mini airport in six months and a concrete road to Cape Coast in two years, proclaiming, “This is not political talk, this is real talk.”
He plans to build modern schools, major hospitals, and sports infrastructure, vowing to reinvest every cedi of profit back into the host communities. This, dear Dr Mahama, is the blueprint of true leadership.
The Bedrock of Generosity: Transforming Lives, One Heart at a Time
His generosity has flowed across our land like a mighty river, touching thousands of Ghanaians and non-Ghanaians alike.
He is a perfect example of encouragement for our youth, investing in countless young men and women who dream of becoming engineers.
Just recently, he gave a full scholarship to a teenage KNUST prodigy, even giving him a tour of his jet’s cockpit to fuel his passion for aerospace engineering.
His heart is not made of gold; it is made of pure compassion. You spoke of his commitment to health, and I can tell you, he has made healing his life’s bedrock.
Inspired by the memory of his late mother, he co-founded the Joyce Tamakloe Cancer Foundation, which has provided free mammograms for over a thousand women and helped ensure cancer treatment is covered by the National Health Insurance Scheme.
Beyond the foundation, his hand of mercy is swift. He has funded life-saving surgeries for countless souls—a teenage girl in Tamale, a young kidney patient, a child battling leukaemia.
In a country where the cry of the sick is often met with silence, Dr Mahama has become a first responder, a guardian angel in a business suit.
The Quiet Majesty of Humility
But let me tell you what makes his gold truly pure. Despite his towering status—owning mines, a cement giant, and employing thousands—Dr Ibrahim Mahama walks among the people as if he were one of them.
His humility and approachable nature say it all. You will never hear a story of him frowning at a desperate soul or turning his back on a needy person who crosses his path.
The security guard at his factory, the market woman who stops him on the street, the sick child’s mother who writes him a letter—all of them will tell you the same thing: he listens.
He looks you in the eye. He does not wear his wealth as a wall. That, dear reader, is the mark of a man who has not forgotten where he came from.
The Noise of Naysayers vs. The Verdict of History
Yet, despite all these, the naysayers have sharpened their tongues. They try to diminish his light by pointing to his brother, the President, and whispering that he has willed the country’s gold to him.
We say to them: Silence!
You cannot explain away a hundred-million-dollar investment in a cement factory by political connection.
You cannot explain away the creation of thousands of jobs by a presidential surname. You cannot explain away the countless lives he has personally saved by a family tree. And you certainly cannot fake a humble heart that bows to no one but God and serves every human being equally.
President Mahama himself has affirmed, “I have cut him no advantages; every achievement is the result of his own dedication.”
Dr Mahama was denied manganese concessions by past governments, yet he refused to be broken. He took his company across West Africa—to Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Guinea—and returned stronger. That is not privilege. That is the resilience of a lion.
Our Message to Dr Ibrahim Mahama
Dr Mahama, on this day, we, the good people of Ghana and the world with pure hearts, want you to know: We see you. We see the sleepless nights, the immense risks, the quiet prayers, the open hands, and the gentle spirit that never turns away a crying child.
While the critics talk, you build. While they sow seeds of discord, you sow seeds of hope.
Your reward is not in the cheap praise of politicians. It is in the grateful tears of a mother whose child can now see, in the bright eyes of a young scholar who now has a future, in the smiling face of a worker who calls you “brother,” and in the booming voice of a chief who says, “A Black man is capable of managing his own affairs.”
You have said, “True wealth is measured by what we give away, by the lives we touch, and the opportunities we create for others.” By that measure, you are one of the wealthiest men to ever walk this land. We know your gratitude is stored in heaven, but while you are still with us, we choose to gratify you, celebrate you, and glorify you.
We pray for you. We pray that Allah grants you long life, good health, and boundless wisdom. Continue to touch lives, continue to break grounds, and continue to prove that the African dream is alive and well.
God bless you, Dr Ibrahim Mahama, beyond your wildest expectations.


