By Adama Fuseini
I remember my Social Studies classes vividly, sitting there as a child, learning Ghana’s history not as distant events but as living moments. I learned how we were colonized, how our dignity was stripped, and how Osagyefo Dr. Kwame Nkrumah stood before the world and declared:
“At long last, Ghana is free forever.”
That stayed with me. It still does.
What shaped me even more was his conviction that Ghana’s independence was incomplete if other African countries remained under colonial rule. That belief stretched my imagination beyond borders. It taught me that freedom is collective, not selfish. His rallying cry for self-government now was not impatience—it was urgency rooted in history.
I loved this story deeply. My ideal, almost utopian mind embraced Nkrumah not just as a leader, but as a vision.
Years later, in Level 200, I studied the history of the media. The tone changed. Nkrumah was now framed differently: as an authoritarian, controlling and intolerant of press freedom. We debated intensely in class. Almost everyone, including my lecturer, disagreed with my defence of him. The argument was simple: he did many things right but failed the media.
I disagreed then.
I still disagree now.
Nkrumah understood the power of the media in ways many of us only acknowledge today. He knew narratives could build nations or break them. Ghana was young, fragile and vulnerable—internally divided and externally threatened. In such a moment, media freedom without direction was not neutrality; it was risk.
He used the media strategically to push the national agenda: unity, discipline, development and Pan-African consciousness. That choice may appear authoritarian in hindsight but, in context, it was deliberate and protective. Nation-building was never meant to be comfortable or gentle.
Under his leadership, Ghana experienced rapid development across multiple sectors: education, infrastructure, industry and diplomacy. For a newly independent country, the speed and scale of progress were extraordinary. To this day, no government has attempted transformation with that level of boldness and ideological clarity.
A friend once said Nkrumah did his best.
Another said he was forced into decisions that appeared dictatorial.
Both are true.
I say this: we are fortunate. Fortunate that Ghana’s first leader was not timid. Fortunate that he understood power, communication and timing. Fortunate that our independence began with vision, courage and an unwavering belief in Africa.
If I were to walk back into that classroom today, I would still defend him, more firmly, more clearly—not because I deny his flaws, but because I understand his context.
This is not blind admiration.
It is reverence.
And above all, gratitude.
As we celebrate Ghana’s independence, may we remember that freedom was hard-won, leadership was complex, and history deserves to be understood, not simplified.




































































