Adjetey Zion

Adjetey Zion

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Nii Adjetey Adjei, known as Zion, is an ethnomusicologist, TV presenter, and Ga language teacher.

A specialist in Ga language, music, and culture, he helps the Ga diaspora reconnect through learning, storytelling, and heritage preservation.

31/12/2025

My great sister goes again. It is in our blood

30/12/2025

Let's organize a kɔmi party oooo

Jan 1st is World Komi Day. Who will be joining us?

14/11/2025

Do you know the origin of the word miikpa ofai? Well we are here to explain

27/10/2025

*FOOD FOR THOUGHT*

Do not regret growing older, it is a privilege denied to many.

GOOD MORNING AND HAVE A BLESSED WEEK

*GA*
*YIŊSHWIEMƆ*

Kaashwa ohe akɛ ooda. Eji hegbɛ ni ona ni mɛi babaoo naaa.

*OJEKOO ANYƐMI NI ASUMƆƆ*

11/10/2025

GHANA – a nation that led Africa’s independence wave with pride in 1957. We sang, “Freedom!” and became the Black Star of hope for the continent. But decades later, where are we? Begging, borrowing, and bowing.

A Ghanaian living in Japan for over a year noticed something strange. Though the people were polite and helpful, no one ever invited him into their home, not even for a cup of tea.

Perplexed and hurt, he finally asked a Japanese acquaintance why.
After a long pause, the friend replied,
“We are taught Ghanaian history… not for inspiration, but as a warning.”

Confused, the Ghanaian man asked, “A warning?”

“Tell me,” the Japanese friend continued, “how many British ruled your Gold Coast?”
The Ghanaian thought, “Perhaps a few thousand?”
The Japanese man nodded grimly. “And how many Ghanaians lived there by 1957? Over 6 million, right?”
“Then who oppressed your people? Who carried out the orders to whip, beat, and shoot them?” he pressed.

“When the colonial governor gave the command ‘Fire!’ at Christiansborg or Saltpond, who pulled the trigger? The soldiers weren’t British; they were Black Ghanaians.”
“Not one turned his rifle on the tyrant. Not one,” he said.
“You talk of colonial oppression. But the deeper chains were not on your hands — they were on your soul.”

The Ghanaian stood frozen, silent, and ashamed.

The Japanese friend went on,
“Did the British bring millions of troops to control you? No. They ruled because your own chiefs signed treaties. Your own brothers betrayed your warriors. Yaa Asantewaa was left to fight almost alone. Nii Kwabena Bonne was betrayed. Kwame Nkrumah was overthrown with the help of his own people.”

“You don’t need foreign enemies. YOUR OWN PEOPLE BETRAY YOU AGAIN AND AGAIN — for power, for position, for personal gain. That is why we keep our distance.”

“When the British came to Hong Kong and Singapore, not one native man fought beside them. But in Ghana, you didn’t just join the enemy. You served them. Worshipped them. Killed your own brothers to please them.”

“Even today, you haven’t changed. Offer some free fertilizer, a bag of rice, a piece of cloth — and your vote, your conscience, your future are all sold without a second thought. YOUR LOYALTY LIES NOT WITH GHANA, BUT WITH YOUR STOMACH,” he said.
“You chant slogans. You wear party T-shirts. You line up for rallies. But when the nation needs your honesty and your discipline, where are you? YOUR FIRST LOYALTY IS STILL TO YOURSELF AND YOUR FAMILY. EVERYTHING ELSE — SOCIETY, JUSTICE, FREEDOM, GHANA — CAN BURN.”

He ended with one final statement:
“If your nation is not strong, your home will never be safe. If your character is weak, no flag can protect you.”

This is not mockery. It is a mirror.
Perhaps the time has come for us to stop looking away, because Ghana doesn’t need more patriots in words. IT NEEDS CITIZENS OF UNSHAKEABLE CHARACTER. NOT JUST FREEDOM FIGHTERS, BUT FREEDOM KEEPERS. NOT JUST THE BLACK STAR ON OUR FLAG, BUT LOYALTY IN OUR HEARTS.

It is bitter. But it is true.

HOPE it shakes your conscience. Please spread the word. 🙏 One person at a time, it can do wonders for our country.

Copied from a friend's post

08/10/2025

Shout out to my newest followers! Excited to have you onboard!

Lisa Naa Okaikor Armah, Cynthia Ofori, Joseph Quaye Blankson, Awula Naa Kwarley, Emmanuel Peter Nunoo Lartey, Nathaniel Bossman, Belinda Bortey, Gideon Tettey Agbesi, Muniru Sebre, Erasmus Tetteh, Emmanuel Ashong, Christopher Nii Kwartei Quartey, Awete Grand, Nii Oblie Lomotey

25/09/2025

I got over 40 reactions on one of my posts last week! Thanks everyone for your support! 🎉

23/09/2025

Do you know the origin of the word ofaine?
Let Nii Adjetey Adjei explain it to you.

15/09/2025

Do you know the origin of the words ‘Awa Awa Atuu’ and why Ooobakɛ is preferred? Let’s hear from Adjetey Zion

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