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Arts and GH Heritage

New ‘Live in Ghana’ Program Helps Diasporans Experience Life in Ghana Before Relocation

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A new initiative aimed at members of the African diaspora considering a move to Ghana has officially launched, offering an immersive alternative to short-term visits and heritage tours.

The Live in Ghana Program is designed for diasporans who want to experience everyday life in Ghana before making the decision to relocate. Organizers say the program provides structured housing, cultural grounding, and practical relocation support to help participants make informed, intentional choices about resettlement.

Participants are housed at Megbɔ Aƒe [I’m back home], a transitional living space created specifically for returnees.

The accommodation serves as a base for cultural immersion, community engagement, and hands-on guidance tailored to the needs of those exploring long-term relocation.

The program offers three options based on individual readiness and goals:

  • Two-Week Exploratory Stay, designed for those seeking clarity through firsthand exposure to daily life in Ghana
  • One-Month Immersion Stay, focused on deeper cultural integration, networking, and relocation preparation
  • Three-Month Reintegration Stay, a comprehensive transition experience for participants preparing to permanently relocate

Organizers explain that the program is not a tour package but a lived experience. Participants engage in cultural orientation sessions, Ghanaian language lessons, local excursions, and networking opportunities with fellow returnees and community leaders. Each participant also receives personalized support from a Travel and Reintegration Specialist, who helps navigate housing, logistics, and cultural adjustment.

The initiative arrives as interest in returning to Ghana continues to grow among African-descended communities in North America, Europe, the Caribbean, and beyond—driven by cultural reconnection, economic opportunities, and a desire for a stronger sense of belonging.

“This is about giving people the space to live, learn, and decide,” organizers say, positioning the program as a bridge between curiosity and commitment. “If Ghana has been calling, this is an opportunity to answer intentionally.”

Diasporans interested in learning more can schedule a free discovery call through the program’s official platforms, including @diasporaresource.gh, or visit live-in-ghana to begin the process.

As Ghana continues to position itself as a welcoming home for the global African family, initiatives like Live in Ghana are reshaping how return migration is approached—moving beyond symbolic visits toward sustainable reintegration.

Arts and GH Heritage

Poetra Asantewa and the Beautiful Contradictions of Accra

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By the time a trotro rattles from a quiet Accra suburb into the dense energy of Jamestown, an entire theatre of human experience has already unfolded.

Hawkers negotiate through traffic with impossible grace, passengers exchange sharp political commentary between stops, and handwritten slogans on taxis preach survival, faith, and hustle.

For spoken word artist Ama Asantewa Diaka, these fleeting encounters are not background noise; they are raw creative material.

The poet, widely known as Poetra Asantewa, describes Accra as “trying to kill me and save me at the same time” — a line that captures the uneasy rhythm of Ghana’s capital more accurately than any tourism brochure could.

It is a city where frustration and invention exist side by side. The same traffic congestion, unstable electricity, and overcrowded transport systems that exhaust residents also shape one of West Africa’s most vibrant contemporary art scenes.

That contradiction has become central to a generation of Accra’s artists, many of whom transform social pressure into performance, fashion, film, and music.

In neighbourhoods like Jamestown, murals climb colonial-era walls while poets perform beside fishermen’s canoes and experimental musicians rehearse through power cuts. Creativity here is rarely detached from daily struggle.

Poetra’s reflections, shared during conversations around the documentary Accra Power, reveal a city constantly remixing itself. Her inspiration does not emerge from isolation or silence, but from movement — from overheard conversations, crowded buses, and the emotional tension of urban life.

In Accra, art is not merely produced. It is survived, negotiated, and carried home through traffic at dusk.

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Arts and GH Heritage

How Johana Malédon Turned Movement Into Resistance

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The words arrived before the movement did—cold, clinical, almost accusatory—flashing across an LED screen as if attempting to pin a living body into fixed meaning.

Then Johana Malédon stepped into the light and quietly dismantled every label in sight.

At the 2026 Market for African Performing Arts, Malédon’s conceptual solo became one of the festival’s most unsettling and memorable interventions, not because it shouted, but because it resisted.

Her body moved in fragments and spirals, sometimes surrendering to the language projected beside her, sometimes rebelling against it with startling precision.

The LED screen behaved like an authority figure—naming, interrupting, categorising. The dancer answered with ambiguity.

In many African societies, identity is often negotiated publicly: through language, tribe, nationality, gender, class, and even accent. Ghana is no exception. From everyday assumptions tied to surnames and ethnicity to social expectations around womanhood and respectability, labels shape how people are seen long before they speak for themselves. Malédon’s performance exposed that tension with rare clarity.

What made the work compelling was its refusal to offer resolution. Instead, it suggested that liberation may exist in remaining undefined. The body, constantly shifting, became evidence against permanence itself.

The technology never overwhelmed the performance. If anything, the glowing screen mirrored the modern world—social media feeds, bureaucratic forms, algorithmic identities—all demanding instant definition. Malédon responded with something stubbornly human: contradiction, vulnerability, and movement that could not be neatly translated.

In that refusal lay the performance’s deepest provocation.

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Arts and GH Heritage

Akunu Dake and the Case for Treating Culture as National Infrastructure

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Long before “creative economy” became a fashionable policy phrase, Ghana was already staging a cultural experiment that filled hotels, packed concert grounds and brought Africans from across the world to one stage.

In 1992, under the blazing lights of Independence Square in Accra, crowds gathered for an 18-hour concert during the first edition of PANAFEST.

Musicians performed through the night, intellectuals debated Pan-African identity, and visitors from the diaspora encountered Ghana not as a postcard destination but as a living cultural force.

For Mr. Akunu Dake, one of the young organisers behind the festival, the experience revealed something Ghana still struggles to fully embrace: culture is not decoration. It is infrastructure.

Today, conversations around national development in Ghana still lean heavily toward roads, housing and technology. Yet Dake argues that language, traditional knowledge, music, storytelling and local cuisine are equally powerful economic tools.

His point feels especially urgent at a time when global audiences are consuming African fashion, film and music at unprecedented levels while many local cultural institutions remain underfunded.

The legacy of PANAFEST offers a reminder of what happens when culture is treated seriously. The festival did not only celebrate heritage; it created movement. Tourists travelled, artisans sold their work, performers gained international exposure and Ghana strengthened its reputation as a gateway to Pan-African connection.

There is also a deeper question beneath Dake’s reflections: what does a nation lose when it consumes more foreign identity than its own? In cities where younger generations increasingly measure success through imported tastes and trends, preserving culture becomes more than nostalgia. It becomes an act of confidence.

For Ghana, the challenge may no longer be whether culture has value. It is whether the country is prepared to invest in it as boldly as it speaks about it.

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