William Jacob Paatii
Ofosu-Amaah – Goodbye!
Ade Sawyerr
April 27, 2016
Good bye – Ruby Tuesday
She would never say where she came from Yesterday
don’t matter if it’s gone While the sun is bright
Or on the darkest night No-one knows She comes and
goes Goodbye Ruby Tuesday Who could hang a name on
you? When you change with every new day Still I’m
gonna miss you.
Most will attest that Paatii
was easily and undeniably one of the most accomplished
sons of Adedainkpo and Jamestown who rose to great
heights in his professional life. Indeed, whenever
anyone mentioned the World Bank in any conversation with
me, I always made it a point to let it be known that I
also know somebody “important” who worked there, someone
I had grown up with and in whose achievements I take
great pride. I enjoyed basking in the compliments,
acknowledgements and of course the heart warming praise
about how good he was at his job. He was a coach and a
mentor to many, often offering sound advice to several
younger people in their professions. He made Ghana proud
by rising to the top position of a Vice President, and
in recent years making his mark as a diplomat and lawyer
helping to solve some of the intractable political
problems in Africa at large.
I have not quite got
over the shock of his passing and painful as it is for
me, I must say goodbye to my ‘older brother’ by
remembering those good old childhood and teen years.
Paatii was christened William Jacob to my Jacob
Williamson, three and a half months older than me, a
fact he never failed to remind me of during our
formative years. We were closest in age within the
larger Mould family and we were inseparable as children.
He insisted that I should always obey his every command
if he was to get me out of the many sticky situations
that I landed in as we walked around the streets and
alleyways of Adedainkpo – playing at Gbonbon, Awusa
Gormli and other ‘areas’ around the lagoon that were out
of bounds to us. We played with lorry tyres and played
football down the park from Bartholomew and even created
a game of sorts out of the tote cards that Dad would
bring home on Saturdays after his work at the turf club.
We made our own toys as was the fashion in those days of
the early 1950s, the sardine tins with agbomi wheels and
playing alokoto out of snail shells. But our pre-school
childhood was also about studying. With all his older
siblings around there were always books around and
somebody to teach us the ABC and 123. Also because
Mother was a teacher we could always lay our hands on
some play dough and even crayons to draw with on real
paper instead of learning to write on the concrete
floors with charcoal. Those were our competitive years.
Oddly enough we never attended the same schools. He
started at Class Two and then went on to Class Four at
Jamestown Government Primary School, the famous school
of choice for most males in our family and then to Rowe
Road, to Adisadel, the school for “tough” boys and then
to sixth form at Labone.
Holidays were always
great, I got to know many of Billy Jefferson’s friends
(the name he went by during his Adisco days); the
Avalons, Burghers, Bobos, Sellers etc. – it would seem
that all Adisco boys of the time had ‘guy’ names – and
they also became my friends as we planned our holiday
activities from parties to student dances and from the
movies at Opera and Orion and pop chains at Ringway
hotel. The music of the time was just fantastic; he knew
all the lyrics and really showed off then, he had this
book that had all the lyrics of songs such as Melody
Amour, Take this Message to my Lover, songs by Nina and
Frederick and such like. Billy Jefferson was also very
stylish, he loved to dress smart, colour coding his
attire, knew which shirt materials to get at Super, the
shop that sold the materials of our time, and which
tailors were the best for the styles of the day. Even
now I can still remember him in some cool polo neck
shirt of our times with his bell bottoms. He cut a very
dashing figure as a handsome young teenager, the toast
of the many parties we attended and he was also so well
behaved that he was appreciated by all the older people
in the area.
By the time we got to university my
older cousin still had the responsibility for advising
me on my errant ways and curbing my penchant for
outrageous behaviour. I continued to barge into his room
whenever I was hungry and started calling him Kwesi
Anamia, this despite the fact that he was born on
Thursday, and then changed it to Kojo Nam because I felt
that he must have been named after a grandfather or
great grandfather with such a name! He really took all
these antics in his stride and just thought of me as
being troublesome. But he always turned these situations
around – he would offer me whatever I wanted so long as
he could have my plantain when it was served at the
cafeteria. I mean the guy just loved his amadan: cooked,
smoked, fried, braised, baked, mashed, whatever –
ashamomo, ablongo, tatale, kakro, kelewele and no matter
how much of it he ate, he never put on any weight.
He matured at University much faster than I did,
acquiring along with it some sophistication in his
dressing, check shirts, relearning the different
varieties of the necktie, Dad always did a good knot,
even experimenting with a cravat at times, drinking the
afternoon tea and scones that we were served and even
inviting several of us to tea in his room when all I
wanted was Gari and some sardines to go with it.
His friends called him Struggle because he had said that
there was no need to struggle in doing mundane chores
when he could have someone else to do those for him.
University for him was about studying and he rose to the
occasion, going to the library almost every day after
super and easily coming top of his class, inspired very
much by KA, our mentor, who had made us a promise that
he would strive to get us scholarships if we did well.
But coming from a family of high achievers it was
not surprising that Paatii attained such success in his
professional life. Dad, his father, always talked to us
about excellence; that through hard work and
determination, he had risen from the position of a lowly
clerk to become a company director. He encouraged us to
strive for excellence in whatever professional path we
took. Paatii listened well and acted on this sound piece
of advice.
I visited Paatii when he was at
Harvard, he showed me around the campus and I felt so
proud that my brother had made it to such an Ivy League
University and was destined to higher things. He took me
around Boston and found time to come to New York to also
show me the sights and introduce me to the other
Ghanaian folks around the place to make my short stay
enjoyable.
I also had the opportunity to visit
him at the World Bank and at his home in Maryland but
his very busy life in America and the rest of the world
meant that we had fewer and fewer opportunities to meet.
Anytime that he came through London though, I always
made sure that I would treat him to a meal of ‘red red’
in one of the Black restaurants around Brixton where I
worked. We called each other every birthday and learnt
to use social media to keep abreast of news; the last
time we communicated, he said that he was involved in
some project or the other about the rehabilitation of
Old Accra and was going to get back to me about any
information I had about the Tabon people. I commended
him on the fact that he had also started taking an
interest in our heritage.
And so it was whenever
we spoke or met – reminiscing about the fun and the good
old days of our formative years in a Ghana of yesteryear
and the strong and desirable cultural values that has
seen as through the years. We both agreed that the best
period for us was between our sixth form and university
days. It was a holiday to last a lifetime – the summer
of 1968, peak of the student revolts across the world
and height of Flower Power and how fortunate we were to
have the privilege of house-sitting at the Folly,
Achimota for Bra Kofi Ansah. We had his car, driver,
houseboy, freezer stocked with food to last us for a
whole summer at our disposal, we even learnt how to cook
jollof rice and corned beef without a recipe with
unintended results. This was our preparation for
independence and the responsible life ahead of us at
university and what a blast we had!. We both learnt how
to drive and it was one party after another and we all
became very popular during that holiday period meaning
that we went to university with the confidence to face
new challenges of life and perhaps to more studies.
Rambling on has become my style so I will end here
by extending my heartfelt sympathy to Waafas, Nii Amaah
and Naa Abia hoping that you will stay strong in the
knowledge that this affable gentleman made his
contribution to the world at large in the many tasks
that he undertook in serving and advocating for Africa.
Ahinae and Olumide join me in offering you our
condolences
So Paatii, Billy Jefferson, Anamia,
Struggle, my handsome older brother of many names, you
were a guy too and we did have fun, this is my goodbye
song, one that we learnt and which became the defining
song of our teenage years again in the summer of 1968.
Though the words are about someone else perhaps they
reflect how I feel about you, and remind me of my big
brother…
There’s no time to lose, I heard her
say Catch your breaths before they slip away Dying
all the time Lose your dreams And you will lose
your mind Ain’t life unkind? Goodbye Ruby Tuesday
Who could hang a name on you? When you change with
every new day Still I’m gonna miss you….
Paatii yaa wɔ ojobaŋŋ yɛ o nuntsɔ ŋɔɔ
Your little
brother Ade.
Ade Sawyerr
http://adesawyerr.wordpress.com
April 27, 2016
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