Festivals & Events
From Records to Roots: Discover Your Family Story in This Global Webinar
There’s something quietly powerful about hearing a name from the past and realising it belongs to you. Next week, an online event hosted by The National Archives invites participants to step into that moment—offering a guided journey into the lives of their 20th-century ancestors.
Titled Researching Your 20th Century Ancestors, the webinar forms part of a broader genealogy series designed to help people trace their family roots with clarity and confidence.
Led by family history specialist Jessamy Carlson, the session explores key historical records including the 1911 and 1921 censuses and the 1939 register—documents that capture everyday lives in remarkable detail.
Though rooted in British archives, the event resonates far beyond the UK, especially for audiences in places like Ghana, where questions of lineage, migration, and identity remain deeply meaningful.
For many Ghanaians—whether at home or in the diaspora—family history is not just about names on paper. It lives in oral traditions, clan systems, and the stories passed down at gatherings.
This webinar offers a complementary perspective: a structured, archival approach that can enrich those inherited narratives with dates, occupations, addresses, and personal histories that might otherwise be lost to time.
Participants can expect more than a lecture. The session begins with a pre-recorded presentation that breaks down how to navigate these historical sources effectively, followed by a live Q&A where attendees can pose their own questions. It’s an interactive experience, designed for beginners and seasoned researchers alike. The digital format—accessible via a simple browser—means that whether you’re in Accra, Kumasi, London, or New York, the journey into your past is only a click away.
What makes this event particularly compelling is its ability to bridge worlds. For international visitors curious about African heritage, it highlights the universal human desire to understand where we come from.
For locals, it offers tools to document and preserve family stories in ways that future generations can revisit and trust.
In a time when identities are constantly evolving, reconnecting with one’s roots can feel grounding, even transformative.
This webinar doesn’t just teach research techniques—it opens a door to rediscovery.
As the date approaches, those with even the faintest curiosity about their ancestry may find this an opportunity worth taking. After all, the past has a way of waiting patiently—until someone decides to look.
Festivals & Events
Rooftop Market — The Studio Edition Brings Accra’s Young Creative Scene to Life
As the afternoon sun softens over Accra on June 28, a rooftop in the city will transform into something more than a market.
Music will spill through the air, artists will paint live before a crowd, young entrepreneurs will showcase their work, and strangers will leave as collaborators.
Rooftop Market — The Studio Edition is shaping up to be one of the city’s most vibrant creative gatherings this season.
Hosted at Glaze Art Studio in Accra, the one-day event reflects a growing cultural movement in Ghana where art, fashion, music, and entrepreneurship are no longer separated into different corners.

Instead, they exist together in the same energetic space, driven largely by young creatives redefining what modern Ghanaian culture looks and feels like.
In recent years, Accra has earned international attention for its creative scene. From fashion pop-ups and art exhibitions to music festivals and photography collectives, the city has become a hub for emerging African talent.
Rooftop Market taps directly into that spirit by creating a relaxed but stylish environment where local brands and artists can connect with audiences face-to-face.
Visitors can expect far more than shopping stalls. Live DJs will keep the atmosphere lively throughout the evening while guests move between curated fashion, beauty, lifestyle, and service-based brands.
One of the biggest attractions is the Sip & Paint experience, where attendees can join guided canvas painting sessions while enjoying music and conversation in an open studio setting.
The event also offers something many modern city dwellers quietly crave: genuine connection. Young entrepreneurs network with photographers and designers. Artists meet future clients.

Visitors discover handmade products and creative services they may never encounter in traditional retail spaces.
For tourists visiting Ghana, the experience offers a close look at Accra’s youthful cultural pulse beyond the beaches and historic landmarks. For locals, it is a reminder that creativity continues to shape the city in exciting ways.
With limited capacity and free RSVP access, Rooftop Market — The Studio Edition promises an evening where art, music, and community meet above the city skyline.
Festivals & Events
Karaoke, Dominoes and Connection: A Night Out That Captures Modern Accra
On a warm Friday evening in Accra, the sound of karaoke vocals, domino tiles snapping against wooden tables, and laughter drifting across a crowded restaurant will signal the start of something more meaningful than just a night out.
“Social Meet Up: Party & Game Night,” organised by SV GH in collaboration with The Goodcute Restaurant & Bar, is bringing together a mix of entrepreneurs, couples, creatives, and young professionals for an evening built around connection.
Set for May 29 at Towneast Centre, the event reflects a growing social culture in Ghana where nightlife is becoming less about exclusivity and more about community.
In cities like Accra, social gatherings have evolved into spaces where networking, friendship, business conversations, and entertainment comfortably exist side by side.
That blend is central to the appeal of the event. Guests can move from a competitive round of cards or dominoes to karaoke performances and casual conversations over drinks.
https://ghananewsglobal.com/business-culture-and-connection-collide-at-the-signet-hour-conference-2026/ing it especially attractive for people attending alone or visiting Ghana for the first time.
Game nights themselves hold a familiar place in Ghanaian social life. Across homes, bars, and roadside hangout spots, games like cards, draughts, and dominoes often become unofficial community rituals where storytelling, humour, and debate naturally unfold. This event modernises that spirit for a younger urban crowd while keeping the same sense of togetherness alive.
For tourists, the gathering offers something travel guides rarely capture — the rhythm of everyday social life in Accra.
Beyond beaches and landmarks, Ghana’s personality often reveals itself in shared tables, playful competition, spontaneous music, and conversations with strangers who quickly stop feeling like strangers.
Food and drinks will be available throughout the evening, adding another layer to the experience.
Ghanaian nightlife thrives on atmosphere, and venues like The Goodcute Restaurant & Bar increasingly serve as cultural meeting points where music, food, business, and friendship intersect.
With an entry fee of GHS100, including a complimentary drink, the night promises more than entertainment.
It offers visitors and locals alike a chance to experience Accra the way many residents know it best — social, energetic, and deeply communal.
Festivals & Events
Where the Fishing Season Begins With Celebration: The Story of Ghana’s Bakatue Festival
Before sunrise, Elmina is already moving. Fishermen gather near the shoreline, children weave through crowded streets wrapped in bright cloth, and the steady rhythm of drums rolls across the old coastal town.
The sea breeze carries the scent of salt, smoked fish and fresh paint from decorated canoes lined carefully along the harbour.
Then the procession begins. Chiefs dressed in rich kente are carried through the streets in palanquins while warriors fire muskets into the air. Women dance to the beat of fontomfrom drums, and thousands of residents and visitors follow behind in celebration.
For the people of Elmina in Ghana’s Central Region, this is not simply a festival. It is the spiritual opening of a new fishing season and one of the oldest surviving traditions in the country.
A Tradition Older Than Colonial Elmina
Celebrated on the first Tuesday of July each year, the Bakatue Festival is believed to predate the arrival of the Portuguese in Elmina more than 500 years ago.
The name “Bakatue” loosely translates as “opening of the lagoon” or “draining of the lagoon,” reflecting the community’s deep historical connection to fishing and the sea.
At the centre of the festival is the Benya Lagoon, which has sustained generations of fishermen and traders. Before the celebrations begin, there is a temporary ban on fishing activities, observed as a sacred period of rest and preparation.
The lifting of that ban during Bakatue symbolises renewal, abundance and hope for a successful fishing season ahead.
One of the festival’s most anticipated moments is the ceremonial regatta on the lagoon. Colourfully decorated canoes race across the water as crowds cheer from the banks.
Traditional Asafo companies, known for their historic warrior heritage, perform elaborate displays filled with music, chanting and symbolic pageantry.
More Than Celebration
Bakatue remains deeply important to Elmina not only as a cultural event, but also as a source of identity and unity.
Families return home from across Ghana and abroad, streets fill with reunion and storytelling, and younger generations witness traditions that have survived centuries of political and social change.
For visitors, the festival offers something difficult to replicate elsewhere: the chance to experience a living tradition rather than a staged performance. Every drumbeat, canoe procession, and ritual carries meaning shaped by history, spirituality, and community memory.
To stand in Elmina during Bakatue is to feel the town breathing as one — through music, movement, and the enduring relationship between its people and the sea.
For anyone exploring Ghana’s cultural heritage, it is an experience that lingers long after the drums fade into the night.
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