Nan Yartel III was born on the 15th of an unmentioned month in 1965 in a village called Amatsou in the West African nation of Ghana. He attended primary school from 1971 until 1981. He is a member of the Fanti ethnic groups, one of the many different ethnic groups found in Ghana. As a member of the Fanti people, he was able to obtain the position of chief, which enabled him the opportunity to finish his secondary education and thus came to the United States to do such that. He completed his education back in his homeland of Ghana specializing in Social Studies and Geography in 2005. As a Fanti chief, it is an important position, his main responsibility is to ensure that the families that live in his communities are kept united and suppor...
As the first prime minister and president of the West African state of Ghana, Kwame Nkrumah helped s...
TaddÃsà BÃyyÃnà was born in Addis AbÃba in 1936 to his father ato BÃyyÃnà GÃbrà Hiwot and his mother...
In the summer of 2000, we were part of a three-week faculty development seminar that travelled to th...
Mohammed Mardah is the head of the Ghanaian Association of New York, and is heavily involved in the ...
Kojo Ampah is the head of a student organization at Fordham University called the African Cultural E...
The Bronx African-American History Project conducted this interview with an entourage representing t...
A western based education system that is used throughout Ghana\u27s school system. Education is defi...
The Gold Coast was renamed Ghana by the political leadership on the attainment of Independence. But ...
Born September 16, 1985, Wallace grew up with his family in Tarkwa, Ghana. In 1988, his father immig...
After gaining independence from England, Kwame Nkrumah, the first President of Ghana, was transparen...
Kofi Awoonor in conversation with Hein Willemse [English] [First paragraph] Kofi Awoonor was born on...
After Ghana had attained its independence in 1957, Nkrumah’s greatest domestic challenge became the ...
It is gratifying to note that a vast majority of Ghanaians especially the rural dwellers relate more...
Sponsored by the Marjorie J. and Richard L.D. Morse Family and Community Public Policy ScholarshipCi...
American and Ghanaian culture have worked together to form my identity. My first introduction to fam...
As the first prime minister and president of the West African state of Ghana, Kwame Nkrumah helped s...
TaddÃsà BÃyyÃnà was born in Addis AbÃba in 1936 to his father ato BÃyyÃnà GÃbrà Hiwot and his mother...
In the summer of 2000, we were part of a three-week faculty development seminar that travelled to th...
Mohammed Mardah is the head of the Ghanaian Association of New York, and is heavily involved in the ...
Kojo Ampah is the head of a student organization at Fordham University called the African Cultural E...
The Bronx African-American History Project conducted this interview with an entourage representing t...
A western based education system that is used throughout Ghana\u27s school system. Education is defi...
The Gold Coast was renamed Ghana by the political leadership on the attainment of Independence. But ...
Born September 16, 1985, Wallace grew up with his family in Tarkwa, Ghana. In 1988, his father immig...
After gaining independence from England, Kwame Nkrumah, the first President of Ghana, was transparen...
Kofi Awoonor in conversation with Hein Willemse [English] [First paragraph] Kofi Awoonor was born on...
After Ghana had attained its independence in 1957, Nkrumah’s greatest domestic challenge became the ...
It is gratifying to note that a vast majority of Ghanaians especially the rural dwellers relate more...
Sponsored by the Marjorie J. and Richard L.D. Morse Family and Community Public Policy ScholarshipCi...
American and Ghanaian culture have worked together to form my identity. My first introduction to fam...
As the first prime minister and president of the West African state of Ghana, Kwame Nkrumah helped s...
TaddÃsà BÃyyÃnà was born in Addis AbÃba in 1936 to his father ato BÃyyÃnà GÃbrà Hiwot and his mother...
In the summer of 2000, we were part of a three-week faculty development seminar that travelled to th...