Tuesday, 8 March 2016

The Kwahu Easter Festival:One Of Ghana’s Greatest Tourist Attractions

All tribes in Ghana have their own traditional festivals. The Nzemas have Kundum, the Ewes have Hogbetsotso, the Asantes and Vumes have Akwasidae, and the Gas have Homowo.
All tribes in Ghana have their own traditional festivals. The Nzemas have Kundum, the Ewes have Hogbetsotso, the Asantes and Vumes have Akwasidae, and the Gas have Homowo.
As for the Kwahus, they have Easter.  But Easter isn’t a traditional African festival.
Over the years, the Kwahus have put so much into celebrating their adopted festival that it now forms part of the national calendar.  People travel from around Ghana at Easter to see and participate in the Kwahu Easter celebrations.
The Kwahu Easter Festival showcases the tourism potential of the forested plateau region of eastern Ghana. In addition to the famous Easter festivities, foreign tourists are attracted to the area to partake in its annual paragliding festival. 

Marking the death and resurrection of Christ, Easter is deeply rooted in Christian teachings and traditions; all the same, the Kwahus have adopted it as their bona fide festival to the extent that it has overshadowed any traditional festival they once had. 
Worthy of note is their style of celebration, which is totally different from that of other followers of Christ who commemorate and drive home the significance of Easter with various church activities like Bible studies, church conventions, eating of communion and the reenactment of the story of Christ’s death.
To the Kwahus, the Easter festival means something more than Christ dying to save mankind and rising from the dead. It is a special homecoming celebration of its people, a time when families unite to reflect on the year gone by and to plan for the future. 
Traditional authorities of Kwahuman are the ones who kick off the celebrations by pouring libation on behalf of the Kwahu people and performing various rituals to purify the land and to remember their ancestors. It is also a time when community members gather to celebrate their culture and raise funds for developmental projects. 

Of course, the Kwahus seize the Easter moment to recommit to their Christian faith, but that is just a tiny aspect of the whole festival, which seems to have a different meaning and significance for the youth.
They celebrate Easter on the streets with jams, eating, drinking and dancing. One thing that doesn’t escape even the idlest eye is the way most of the youth who participate in the festivities dress. To be charitable, it can be described as offensive. The traditional authorities have shown grave concern at the negative message such dressing casts over the festival. They believe the youth have missed the essence of Easter celebrations and are gradually turning the Easter festival into something that Kwahuman never imagined. 
Before the adoption of Easter, the Kwahus marked festivals like Adae and 3to piti3. Although some communities still mark these celebrations, they do not have the same popularity as the Easter festival. Elders of the land are making efforts, however, to remind the people to acknowledge and respect their traditions. 
Until that’s achieved, Easter remains the central point of the culture of the Kwahus and the “traditional” festival they are most known for.

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