
Beyond Party Colours: Rediscovering Nkrumah’s Moral Compass
As has been the case since President Atta-Mills made it a national holiday via an Executive Instrument in 2009, every September 21, Ghana pauses to remember Dr Kwame Nkrumah, our first President and the main architect of our independence.
President Atta-Mills, himself a devoted Nkrumahist, rightly institutionalised this day, understanding that nations survive by honouring their moral foundations, not just their political rituals.
As President Atta-Mills oft said, “A nation that does not honour its heroes, is not a nation worth dying for”.
Question: As we mark this year’s celebration, have we stayed true to the moral compass Nkrumah left us?
A dream bigger than partisanship
When Nkrumah stood at the Old Polo Grounds on March 6, 1957, lowering the Union Jack and hoisting the Red, Gold, Green with Black Star Flag of newly-born Ghana, he was not saluting a party.
He was saluting a people. Independence was won not on a silver platter, but through deep sacrifices of a People.
The Akosombo Dam, the Tema Motorway, the harbours, factories and schools were not partisan trophies.
They were national monuments to what could be achieved when leadership placed country above party.
Nkrumah’s philosophy was clear: “Nation before self, people before party”.
The fracture of a dream
Sixty-eight years on, the Ghanaian reality tells a harsher story.
Unemployed graduates wander city streets with CVs that never get read.
Fishermen risk the rough seas only to compete with imported fish.
Factories that once hummed with productivity now stand bleakly in ruins.
Meanwhile, politics has been reduced to partisan warfare.
Election victories are treated as spoils of war, not mandates to serve.
Parliament often echoes with “politricks” rather than sober debate.
Convoys with blaring sirens race through traffic, while poverty is etched menacingly on the faces of the majority.
This is not the Ghana Nkrumah envisioned.
Nor is it the Ghana Atta-Mills sought to remind us of when he enshrined this day of remembrance.
Atta-Mills’ quiet lesson
President Atta-Mills, though soft-spoken, embodied principle.
By designating September 21 as Founder’s Day, he anchored Ghana’s conscience in a man whose vision reached far beyond partisan quarrels.
Atta-Mills himself resisted vengeance; He understood that leadership without morality is hollow, and politics without conscience is dangerous.
His legacy was a quiet but firm insistence that unity and morality must guide our national journey.
A crisis of conscience
Ghana’s challenge today is not a lack of brains or plans—it is a crisis of conscience.
We draft endless manifestos but lack the moral clarity to place nation above party.
To move forward, we must return to Nkrumah’s moral compass:
* Service over Selfishness – Leadership is sacrifice, not entitlement.
* Truth over Expediency – Even when politically costly, truth builds nations.
* Unity over Division – Ghana cannot progress if fragmented by tribe and party.
* Legacy over Power – Greatness is measured not in years in office but in generations transformed.
Why This Matters Now
Our democracy, though admired abroad, feels fragile at home.
The growing cynicism among our youth, the corrosive culture of party foot soldiers, and the widening gap between leaders and citizens threaten the very idea of Ghana.
Nkrumah once urged us to “seek first the political kingdom.”
However, politics stripped of morality cannot deliver jobs, dignity or justice. It only deepens despair.
A call to conscience
On this September 21, let us ask: what kind of Ghana do we want to leave behind?
A Ghana remembered for partisan squabbles, or one that strove to rediscover her moral compass and rose again as the Black Star of Africa?
The answer does not lie in the next election but in the choices we make now - in governance, in service, in truth-telling and in honouring sacrifice.
Without strong values, we cannot build the identity Nkrumah wanted for Ghana.
As the waves crash against the shores of Ghana and the Black Star still flutters proudly in our flag, let us not forget: nations are not remembered for partisan victories.
Nations are remembered for the courage of their moral convictions.
This is the Ghana Nkrumah dreamed of.
This is the Ghana Atta-Mills reminded us to honour.
This is the Ghana we must now rebuild together with a strong common sense of purpose.
Nkrumah never dies!
God bless our Homeland Ghana and make us great and strong.
The writer is the Founder & CEO, MILLS Institute For Transformational Leadership Development)
Email:Sitsoanyidoho1@yahoo.com