From the Noise of Political Power to the Quiet Truths of Our Shared Humanity

The Noise of the Marketplace vs. The Silence of Truth

In the bustling traffic of Madina, the crowded lanes of Makola, the corporate boardrooms of Ridge, and the loud political rallies across our regions, human ambition is deafening. We spend our lives chasing wealth (sika, ligidi, korba), power, and status, often forgetting the fragile thread upon which human life hangs. As the legendary Dagomba philosopher Alhaji ABA Fuseini wisely observed, "The person who dances in the afternoon must remember that the evening will surely come with its own rhythm."

Too often, we get consumed by the rhythm of our "afternoon." We live as if tomorrow is guaranteed and as if our earthly acquisitions make us superior to our neighbors. Yet, life has a quiet way of humbling the proudest heart. To truly understand our purpose, anchor our character, and find true peace, we do not need to attend elite universities. We simply need to observe the profound, silent lectures delivered daily in three universal classrooms: the hospital, the prison, and the graveyard.

1. The Hospital: The Classroom of Ultimate Value

At the hospital, we quickly realize that absolutely no treasure in the world is greater than your health.

2. The Prison: The Classroom of Choices and Freedom

In prison, we learn that simple freedom is the soul’s greatest desire.

3. The Graveyard: The Classroom of Ultimate Equality

At the graveyard, the ultimate truth is revealed: all our pride, wealth, and ego mean absolutely nothing in the end.

A Direct Word of Advice to Ghanaian Politicians: The Fallacy of Power

To our Honorable Ministers, Members of Parliament, Metropolitan, Municipal, and District Chief Executives (MMDCEs), and political appointees: Remember the source of your breath.

When you ride through our broken roads in heavily tinted, air-conditioned V8 convoys, pushing ordinary, tax-paying citizens into gutters with your blaring sirens, remember that power is a borrowed garment. You stand on podiums making grand promises to fix schools under trees, resolve the dumsor (electricity instability) hurting small barbers and seamstresses, and clean up our toxic rivers ruined by galamsey. Yet, once power is secured, arrogance often takes the driver's seat.

Be humble. Serve the people as you promised. Do not convert public funds into personal empires, buying houses in Dubai or Accra while your local constituency lacks a functioning ambulance. The heavy title of "Honorable" will not follow you into the earth. As it is written in Job 1:21, "Naked I came from my mother's womb, and naked shall I return."

In the ultimate end, you will be made completely equal to the poorest citizen who voted for you. The dirt will not respect your political party colors, nor will the maggots care about your executive status. Let your leadership be defined by selfless service, not sovereign pride.

A Sovereign Intercession: A Powerful Plea for Ken Ofori-Atta and Restorative Justice

As we call on our politicians to look beyond the transient nature of power, we cannot ignore the deep wounds of our nation. We are forced to look at those who held the keys to our collective destiny and now face the absolute weight of legal accountability. In this moment of national reflection, as our former Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta, remains overseas while facing 78 criminal charges from the Office of the Special Prosecutor (OSP) regarding the SML scandal and financial malfeasance, we raise a powerful, pleading cry to Heaven:

Almighty God, You are the Searcher of all hearts and the Ultimate Judge of nations. We lift up a deeply pleading prayer for Ken Ofori-Atta. Lord, we pray that Your Holy Spirit pierces through any wall of denial, legal insulation, or political shielding that distances him from the cries of the Ghanaian people. If there have been criminal acts, broken trusts, and deliberate actions that caused financial loss and economic agony to this state, we plead for absolute repentance.

Touch his conscience, Oh Lord. Grant him the radical humility to look past immigration maneuvers or top-tier international lawyers, and give him the courage to step onto a plane, return home, and face the courts of Ghana. Let him stand before the justice system like the ordinary Ghanaian worker who pays for his decisions every single day. We pray not for malice, but for the restoration of truth. Let his heart break for the broken economy, and let this become a terrifying lesson to every sitting leader that accountability cannot be outrun. Grant our institutions the unshakeable fortitude to demand justice without fear or favor. Amen.

Strengthened Governance Recommendations for Ghana

To move beyond rhetoric and build a nation that respects human dignity, our governance systems must transform drastically:

Driving the Final Nail of Wisdom Home

Life is beautifully short. Why waste our precious, limited time on anger, hate, political animosity, or insatiable greed? The next time you find your heart swelling with pride, arrogance, or self-importance, take a quiet walk through a hospital hallway, peer past a prison gate, or stand silently at a cemetery.

As our elders say, "When a bird sits on a tree branch for too long, it forgets that the ground is its ultimate resting place." Let us fly with humility, serve with integrity, and live with love. Ghana will only become a better place when we realize that our titles are temporary, but our humanity is eternal. Let us build a nation grounded in gratitude, equity, and true compassion.

✍️ Retired Senior Citizen
For and on behalf of all Senior Citizens of the Republic of Ghana 🇬🇭

Teshie-Nungua
akpaluck@gmail.com

A Voice for Accountability and Reform in Governance

Disclaimer: "The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect ModernGhana official position. ModernGhana will not be responsible or liable for any inaccurate or incorrect statements in the contributions or columns here."

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