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 Nkonya descendants coming home from Diaspora

 From the ancestral hills of Nkonya, a global call to remembrance is rising.

This October, the quiet village of Kromo (now Tepo) will become the epicenter of a transcontinental memorial as Ghana and the United States jointly launch African Holocaust Month-a solemn tribute to the millions of African lives lost to the transatlantic slave trade.

Held annually on the sec­ond Saturday of October, the ceremony this time will un­fold simultaneously in Kromo, Ghana, and Kentucky, USA, with commemorative benches placed facing each other across the Atlantic.

At exactly 4pm Ghana time, li­bations will be poured, wreaths laid, and names of the departed read aloud—restoring dignity to those whose stories were silenced by history.

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But this is more than ritual. It is prophecy fulfilled. Kromo, once a thriving community along the slave route from Salaga, bears the scars of betrayal.

Oral history recounts a trag­ic moment when slave trad­ers raided the village during a hunting absence, capturing youth aged 16 to 20—including a revered Queen mother and her attendants.

The grief-stricken community relocated, giving birth to pres­ent-day Tepo.

For generations, the people of Nkonya prayed that the Queen mother’s descendants would return—not just in body, but in royalty.

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That prayer was answered in 2007, when Ur Aua Hehimetu Ra Enkamit, Paramount King of the Ausar Auset Society in Wash­ington, D.C, USA, returned to Nkonya following a DNA test.

He was formerly known as Dr Lee Cook Jr.

A direct descendant of David Cook (e) of Kentucky, his lin­eage traces back through five generations to Edmon Cooke, whose roots are believed to pass through Kromo.

“This is not just a memorial— it’s a restoration of ancestral ties,” said Ur Aua Enkamit in a chat with The Spectator.

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“Kromo is both literal and symbolic. Even if your ances­tors didn’t pass through here, it represents every nameless place Africans were captured and marched toward the coast,” he emphasised.

The initiative invites all peo­ple of African descent—whether from Ghana, Jamaica, the U.S., or beyond—to participate.

He encouraged families to identify ancestral land for bench placement, submit names of de­ceased relatives for the reading, coordinate with diaspora kin for simultaneous ceremonies, and arrive in Nkonya before the event.

Benches, he stressed, would be provided in Kromo, with wreaths available upon request. Once placed, families need only return each year with names and offerings.

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African Holocaust Month draws inspiration from Ida B. Wells, the pioneering journalist who in 1909 used the term “holocaust” to describe atrocities against African people—decades before its association with World War II.

This October, her words echo across oceans, as descendants reclaim memory, identity, and sacred ground.

 From Kingsley E. Hope Kumasi


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