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Back from the edge: hate of his father pushed Kofi Bassaw Quartey to crime. Now he campaigns for integrity in Africa.


'NEARLY everyone has been hurt in some way or other, either by members of their family or by people close to them,' observes Clean Africa campaigner Kofi Bassaw Quartey. For him the biggest hurt was the feeling that his father had abandoned him.

He grew up in the small industrial town of Tema, about 20 miles from Accra, the capital of Ghana. His father, a businessman who had been politically active with the ruling party, was forced into exile exile, in politics and government
exile, removal of a national from his or her country, or the civilized parts of it, for a long period of time or for life.
 in the UK when a coup overthrew the government just before Quartey was born.

'Life was not easy for my mother as a teacher bringing up four children without a father around to help.' His brother used to taunt him for being 'the bad luck' member of the family because his birth had coincided with the loss of their father. 'This and other insults made me feel inferior INFERIOR. One who in relation to another has less power and is below him; one who is bound to obey another. He who makes the law is the superior; he who is bound to obey it, the inferior. 1 Bouv. Inst. n. 8. . At school I would pick fights and find people to turn my anger towards.' The discovery that his father had remarried in Britain and was raising a new family made him even more furious. 'I asked myself how he could do this when I was going through such a hard time?'

Shortly after finishing secondary school he left home. A few months later he started at Accra Polytechnic and things went rapidly downhill. 'I decided I would live life on the edge. I hung out with friends who were dealing in drugs. I myself got into dealing with illegal passports The following is a list of passports: By country and territory
  • Australian passport
  • Austrian passport
  • Argentine passport
  • Armenian passport
  • Belarusian passport
  • Belgian passport
  • Belizean Passport
  • Brazilian passport
  • British passport
.'

For four years, he cut off all contact with his family. 'I felt my father had abandoned me. I no longer wanted to have anything to do with my mother and I hated my stepmother because I blamed her for taking away my father.'

One day at college he got into a confrontation with a lecturer whom he felt had not given him the marks he deserved. To his surprise the lecturer invited him into his office and apologized for his part in the incident. When the lecturer asked him to a meeting being organized by Initiatives of Change, he found himself saying yes--and later arranging a programme at the Polytechnic for a group from IofC.

'It was during this programme that my life was challenged,' he recalls. 'As one who talked a lot about the change needed in society, I asked myself if I was part of the disease or part of the cure.' He started with an apology apology [Gr.,=defense], literary work that defends, justifies, or clarifies an author's ideas or point of view. Unlike the ordinary use of the word, the literary use neither implies that wrong has been done nor expresses regret.  to his immediate family for the way he had treated them. He spoke for the first time ever to his stepmother who was visiting Ghana. He decided to stop the illegal passport passport

Document issued by a national government identifying a traveler as a citizen with a right to protection while abroad and a right to return to the country of citizenship. It is normally a small booklet containing a description and photograph of the bearer.
 traffic; and he returned money, which he had siphoned off, to a company where he had worked as an engineer.

Feeling new life and hope stirring in him, he joined a leadership training programme being offered by IofC. 'It gave me the opportunity to share my story in schools. Often, after these presentations, students would come up to me and share their struggles. Many of these concerned relationships with their families and especially their fathers.' Eventually he found himself asking, 'Am I living myself what I am advising others to do? How can I build this new world I am talking about when I still have resentment Resentment is an emotion of anger felt as a result of a real or imagined wrong done. Etymologically from "ressentir", French re-, intensive prefix, and sentir "to feel"; from the latin "sentire". The English word has become synonymous with anger and bitterness.  towards my father and no peace in my heart?'

But it was only some months later, when he was travelling in Asia with the IofC training and outreach Outreach is an effort by an organization or group to connect its ideas or practices to the efforts of other organizations, groups, specific audiences or the general public.  programme Action for Life, that this was resolved. 'To forgive my father was very difficult because of my feeling that, if someone had been around to take care of me, I would not have gone down the path of self-destruction after leaving school. But one afternoon in India, I gathered up all my courage and talked to him long distance on the telephone. I told him of my hurt and apologized for the way I had felt towards him. It was such a thrill thrill (thril) a vibration felt by the examiner on palpation.

diastolic thrill  one felt over the precordium during ventricular diastole in advanced aortic insufficiency.
 when he phoned me, for the first time ever, while I was in Taiwan. We have still not met face to face, but we have enjoyed all our telephone conversations since then.'

Kofi Bassaw Quartey now works for IofC in Ghana and is currently helping to organize a leadership training programme as part the continent-wide Clean Africa Campaign. It will take place in October and gather young leaders The Young Leaders' Programme is run alongside the main Explorer Scout Programme. It is a formalisation of what was happening in many Groups and Districts across the country where older Scouts were returning to help the younger sections.  from all over West Africa West Africa

A region of western Africa between the Sahara Desert and the Gulf of Guinea. It was largely controlled by colonial powers until the 20th century.



West African adj. & n.
. Of the Clean Africa Campaign, he says, 'It is a new hope rising in our continent. It is only through developing and training a more selfless self·less  
adj.
Having, exhibiting, or motivated by no concern for oneself; unselfish: "Volunteers need both selfish and selfless motives to sustain their interest" Natalie de Combray.
 leadership, that has integrity at its core, that we will see Africa's problems resolved.'

You can help someone like Kofi Bassaw Quartey to take part in the third Action for Life programme which begins in November in India. Send your donation, marked FAC FAC - Functional Array Calculator. An APL-like language, but purely functional and lazy. It allows infinite arrays.

["FAC: A Functional APL Language", H.-C. Tu and A.J. Perlis, IEEE Trans Soft Eng 3(1):36-45 (Jan 1986)].
 Action for Life appeal, made payable to Initiatives of Change, 24 Greencoat Place, London SW1P 1RD or donate online at www.afl.iofc.org
COPYRIGHT 2005 For A Change
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2005, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Title Annotation:TURNING POINT
Author:Williams, Paul
Publication:For A Change
Article Type:Biography
Geographic Code:6GHAN
Date:Aug 1, 2005
Words:824
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