President to propose legislation to establish Founders Day
President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has issued an Executive Instrument to commemorateThursday, September 21, 2017 as a public holiday titled Kwame Nkrumah Memorial Day.
This is a departure from the celebration of the day, which hitherto was titled Founder’s Day.
According to a release by the Flagstaff House over the weekend, signed by Eugene Arhin, Director of Communications, the President has decided to propose legislation to Parliament to designate August 4 as Founders Day and September 21 to be marked as Kwame Nkrumah Memorial Day, both of which will be observed as public holidays.
The release said it was unfortunate that, 60 years after independence, the history of the events leading to it “continued to be embroiled in unnecessary controversy, due largely to partisan political considerations of the moment.”
“It is clear that successive generations of Ghanaians made vital contributions to the liberation of our country from imperialism and colonialism. It is, therefore, fitting that we honour them, as those who contributed to the founding of our nation,” the release said.
It added that “the most appropriate way to honour them is to commemorate the day on which the two most significant events in our colonial political history, that led us to independence, occurred – 4th August.”
“On that day, in 1897, the Aborigines Rights Protection Society (ARPS) was formed in Cape Coast. The Society did a great job to mobilise the chiefs and people to ward off the greedy hands of British imperialism to ensure that control of Ghanaian lands remained in Ghanaian hands.
It represented the first monumental step towards the making of modern Ghana, enabling us to avoid the quagmire of land inheritance that our brothers and sisters in Southern and Eastern Africa continue to suffer, from the seizures of their lands by white minorities.
“In a deliberate act in the continuum of Ghanaian history, exactly fifty years later, on 4th August, 1947, at Saltpond, the great nationalists of the time gathered to inaugurate the United Gold Coast Convention (UGCC), the first truly nationalist party of the Gold Coast, to demand the independence of our nation from British rule, at a gathering which included “paramount chiefs, clergymen, lawyers, entrepreneurs, teachers, traders and men and women from all walks of life in the Gold Coast.”
The inauguration set the ball rolling for our nation’s attainment of independence, and for the dramatic events, including the birth in 1949 of the Convention Peoples Party (CPP), that ushered us into freedom.
“That day, 4th August, is, thus, obviously the most appropriate day to signify our recognition and appreciation of the collective efforts of our forebears towards the founding of a free, independent Ghana,” the release said.
It added “it is equally clear that the first leader of independent Ghana, and the nation’s 1st President, Dr. Kwame Nkrumah, played an outstanding role in helping to bring to fruition the works of the earlier generations, and leading us to the promised land of national freedom and independence. It is entirely appropriate that we commemorate him for that role, by designating his birthday as the permanent day of his remembrance.
Source: GNA