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“Help Change Ghana” becomes “Keep Ghana Beautiful”

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“Help Change Ghana”, a non-governmental organisation (NGO) focused on greening communities and empowering citizens to take actions to protect the environment has changed its name to “Keep Ghana Beautiful (KGB).”

This follows its certification and affiliation to “Keep America Beautiful”, a leading community improvement NGO in the United States thence, making it Africa’s first organisation to gain such recognition.

KGB also joins more than 650 “Keep America Beautiful” affiliates across the world.

Executive Director, Elijah Mensah told The Spectator that the affiliation marks another milestone in shaping the organisations projects in the country.

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“We are proud to belong to the Keep America Beautiful family of affiliates. With this certification, we look to working together to contribute to creating clean, green and vibrant communities in Ghana.”

Mr Mensah believed the country’s increasing population coupled with the high levels of waste generation called for more sustainable approach in ridding communities of filth and saving the environment.

“All over the country, the lack of environmental consciousness further elevates the waste generation crisis. There is incessant littering and indiscriminate illegal dumping in public spaces without regard to the dangers it poses to the human health and environment,” he noted.

According to the Director, improper management of the country’s solid waste and recycling could further destroy the natural beauty of various communities and “I hope that this affiliation will help us accomplish our goals as an NGO and contribute our quota to solving this problem.”

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KGB hitherto known as Help Change Ghana has since its establishment trained over 300 volunteers on litter prevention techniques through its “Litter Prevention Initiative” as well as coordinated the formation of eco-clubs in 96 schools across the country.

By Abigail Annoh

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Fruitful Living

Sanitation, Hygiene, and the Morality of Public Space: Reclaiming Ghana’s Civic Virtue through Faith and Policy (Final Part)

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A. The Role of Religious Leaders and Counsellors

Religious leaders wield immense influence in shaping public values. Every mosque, church, and shrine should integrate environmental stewardship into its doctrine. Islam views the earth as a masjid—a place of prostration (Sahih Bukhari, 335). Polluting it is akin to defiling a sacred space. Monthly khutbahs should focus on amanah and tahārah, connecting spiritual purity to environmental discipline.

As a counsellor, I affirm that behavioural reform requires both moral teaching and psychological reinforcement. When believers internalise that cleaning a drain is an act of ʿibādah (worship), they transform routine labour into sacred service. The Prophet (peace be upon him) taught: “Removing harmful things from the path is a branch of faith.” (Sahih Muslim, 35). This hadith perfectly captures the theology of civic virtue.


B. Individual and Community Pledge

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Moral renewal begins with personal accountability. Every household must adopt responsible waste practices—segregating recyclables, composting, and cooperating with collection services. Citizens must also exercise al-amr bi-l-maʿrūf wan-nahy ʿani-l-munkar (enjoining good and forbidding evil) by correcting neighbours who litter or misuse public spaces, with gentleness and wisdom (Qur’an 16:125).

Communities should establish local sanitation committees under mosque and church leadership, creating faith-driven accountability structures. Supporting local enforcement, rather than resisting it, must be seen as a contribution to maslahah—the public interest that the Sharia seeks to protect.

This collective moral reawakening must integrate faith, governance, and citizenship into one moral project: cleanliness as worship, sanitation as patriotism.


C. Conclusion: Cleanliness, Dignity, and the Maqāṣid al-Sharīʿah

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Ghana’s destiny as a great nation is inseparable from the cleanliness of its environment and the conscience of its citizens. The choked gutters, polluted rivers, and scattered waste are not only environmental failures but spiritual wounds upon our collective soul. The Prophet (peace be upon him) said: “Allah is pure and accepts only what is pure.” (Sahih Muslim, 1015). A nation that aspires to divine favour must first reflect divine purity in its public spaces.

To achieve this, we must view sanitation through the lens of the Maqāṣid al-Sharīʿah—the higher objectives of Islamic law—which aim to preserve life (ḥifẓ al-nafs), faith (ḥifẓ al-dīn), intellect (ḥifẓ al-ʿaql), wealth (ḥifẓ al-māl), and posterity (ḥifẓ al-nasl). Clean environments are essential for all five objectives:

  • Preservation of Life (ḥifẓ al-nafs): Proper sanitation prevents disease and death. Protecting human health is a divine imperative. Allah says, “And do not throw yourselves with your own hands into destruction.” (Qur’an 2:195).
  • Preservation of Faith (ḥifẓ al-dīn): Islam equates purity with faith. An unclean environment obstructs worship and spiritual growth, violating the believer’s covenant of cleanliness.
  • Preservation of Intellect (ḥifẓ al-ʿaql): Healthy surroundings promote clarity of thought, while pollution and disease diminish cognitive vitality and learning.
  • Preservation of Wealth (ḥifẓ al-māl): Waste management safeguards public funds, prevents costly health crises, and preserves natural resources.
  • Preservation of Posterity (ḥifẓ al-nasl): Environmental care ensures a habitable planet for future generations, fulfilling our amanah to the unborn.

By aligning sanitation with these higher objectives, we transform a civic duty into a sacred mission. Achieving the Maqāṣid requires cooperation between policy and piety—laws enforced justly, education grounded in values, and citizens inspired by faith.

Let every believer remember that a clean street is a silent dhikr (remembrance of Allah), a purified drain is a fulfilled amanah, and a healthy neighbour is a protected trust. When our gutters run clear and our air smells fresh, it will signify not merely progress but piety—proof that Ghana has reclaimed its moral and civic virtue under the gaze of the Almighty Allah.

Thank you.

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  • By Imam Alhaji SaeedBAbdulai, the Author

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Fruitful Living

Being a Channel of Truth and Hope (Part III – Final)

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B. Instead, walk in righteousness and true holiness … (20–24)

1. This is how you learned Christ

  • As you heard Him and were taught by Him (through His apostles, of course – Matt. 28:19-20)
  • In Whom is the truth – John 8:31; 14:6

2. For you were taught to “put off” the “old man”

  • That is, your “former conduct,” how you behaved before you were saved – Col. 3:5-9
  • Putting off the old man is needed because it is never content, but grows corrupt according to the deceitful lusts (like addictive drugs, you always need more).

3. And to “be renewed in the spirit of your mind”

  • Which is the key to true “transformation” – Rom. 12:1-2
  • You “renew your mind” only as you “set your mind on things above” – Col. 3:1-2

4. And to “put on the new man”

  • A new man “which was created according to God” – Col. 3:10
  • A new man, “in righteousness and true holiness” – Col. 3:12-17

In giving the admonition “No longer walk as the rest of the Gentiles,” Paul has made it clear that it involves both a “putting off” and a “putting on.” That is, our “Walking in Truth and Holiness” is not just a bunch of “Thou Shalt Not’s,” there are also some “Thou Shalt’s.”

To illustrate further the difference between the “old man” (how the rest of the Gentiles walk) and the “new man” (how Christians are to walk), we find Paul making…


II. The Application – (25–32)

Case in point: lying (25)

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  • The “old man” thinks nothing of lying
  • The “new man” puts away lying, and in its place speaks truth with his neighbor (especially to those who are members of the same body)

Case in point: anger (26–27)

  • The “old man” gets angry and lets it linger, or get out of control
  • The “new man” may get angry, but does not…
    • Let it linger (“do not let the sun go down on your wrath”)
    • Allow it to prompt sinful behavior (“nor give place to the devil”)

Case in point: stealing (28)

  • The “old man” is willing to steal
  • The “new man” not only stops stealing, but works so he can help others in need!

Case in point: corrupt communication (29)

  • The “old man” doesn’t worry or care what comes out of his mouth
  • The “new man” not only avoids “corrupt communication,” but seeks to speak that which is uplifting to those who hear

Summary (30–32)
Why be concerned about putting off the “old man” and putting on the “new man?”

When Christians act like the “old man,” it grieves the Holy Spirit. By the Holy Spirit we were sealed for the day of redemption – Eph. 1:13-14.

Therefore, we ought to put away those things befitting the “old man” (bitterness, wrath, anger, clamor, evil speaking, malice). And in its place, we need to put on those things befitting the “new man” (being kind, tenderhearted, forgiving one another just as God forgives us in Christ).


Conclusion

What a contrast there would be if all those in the church truly carried out the admonition to “Walk in Truth and Holiness!” The church would stand out like “a city that is set on a hill” – Matt. 5:14-16.

And the world, though it now has “their understanding darkened,” would be more likely to come to see the truth that is in Jesus. But what hope is there if the church is more like the world than the “holy temple” it is to be?

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Brethren, are we “grieving the Holy Spirit of God?” – Ephesians 4:30. While the increasing worldliness in our society naturally concerns us, let us be careful not to react with attitudes that reveal our old characteristic when we were in the world.

BY Rev. Dr Joyce Aryee,
the author

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