Kodzo Ayeke
Member of the Ghana Parliament
for Ho West
In office
1954–1960
Preceded byNew Constituency
Succeeded byHans Kofi Boni
Personal details
Born(1923-05-22)22 May 1923
Taviefe
Died20 May 1985(1985-05-20) (aged 61)
Hohoe, Ghana
Cause of deathIllness
NationalityGhanaian
EducationAccra Academy
Alma materUniversity of London
Gray’s Inn

Kodzo Afelete Ayeke (22 May 1923 - 20 May 1985)[1] was a Ghanaian politician, teacher, journalist, lawyer, and author. He was a member of parliament for Ho West, getting twice elected into parliament in 1954 and 1956 as a Togoland Congress member before joining the United Party on the ban of the Togoland Congress in 1958. As a journalist, he founded the Togoland Vanguard the first ever newspaper in the then Trans-Volta Togoland. An ethnic Ewe, he published two novels in the Ewe language, Asitsu Atoawo and Hlobiabia.

Early life and education

Kodzo Ayeke was born in Taviefe on 22 May 1923, the son of Augustus Ayeke and Ella Kafe Ayeke. His father, Augustus, was a carpenter and farmer at Taviefe. Kodzo was the grandson of Bele Komla, a famed local priest of Taviefe.[2]

Ayeke started schooling at Taviefe in 1931 before continuing at the middle school at Amedzofe, graduating in 1940. He entered the Accra Academy in 1942 as one of the first two people to acquire secondary education in his home town, Taviefe. At the Accra Academy, he obtained the Cambridge School Certificate with exemption in 1946.[2] In June 1959, he received the Inter LLB of the University of London after studying as a private candidate. In exile from Ghana, he continued his law studies in England, achieving the call to the bar at Gray’s Inn in 1973, when he was fifty years. He graduated in law from the University of London in 1975.[2]

Civil service, teaching and journalism

After his secondary education, he joined the Gold Coast Civil Service in 1947. He was stationed at the Head Office of the Customs and Excise Department (now the Customs Excise and Preventive Service).[3] In 1950, Ayeke left the civil service and joined an Ewe Christian minister at Ve-Koloenu. There, he became a teacher at a newly founded school, Togo Academy, and taught at the school until 1953.[4]

In 1953, Ayeke founded and became editor of the Togoland Vanguard, a newspaper he operated from Hohoe. The Togoland Vanguard was the first ever newspaper in the Trans-Volta Togoland a UN trust territory under British trusteeship. Through his paper, he became an advocate of the Togoland Unification Movement, which sought for the Trans-Volta to be one country with French Togoland.[4]

Member of Parliament and political life

In 1954, Ayeke stood for parliament at Ho West on the Togoland Congress ticket. Ayeke was elected as a Member of Parliament (MP) and was one of three Togoland Congress members to make it to parliament that year.[5] In 1956, Ayeke got re-elected into parliament as MP for Ho West.[6] This time, he was one of two members of the Togoland Congress to be elected into parliament.[7][8]

In parliament, Ayeke continued his advocacy for the reunification of Trans-Volta with French Togoland. He led the Togoland Congress during the 1956 British Togoland status plebiscite to campaign for votes against unification with the Gold Coast.[9] Ayeke also sought for the Togoland Academy to be placed on the government-assisted school list.[10] In 1959, Ayeke argued against the renaming of Trans-Volta/Togoland Region as Volta Region.[11] He criticised Nkrumah’s spending on the creation of an office to advise on African Affairs and his appointment of George Padmore to that office.[12]

In November 1957, Ayeke and S. G. Antor, the two Togoland Congress parliamentarians, were arrested and charged with riots in Alanvanyo, a town in the then Trans-Volta Togoland. In March 1958, both men were sentenced to six years imprisonment by a High Court in Ho which ruled them guilty, but on a further hearing by the Court of Appeal in June 1958, they were released to re-join parliament.[13][14]

In 1960, Ayeke resigned as member of parliament for the Ho West constituency and was succeeded by Hans Kofi Boni through a bye-election.[15] In 1961, Ayeke left Ghana for Togo where he became a political refugee. In October 1965, he left Togo for West Germany and thereafter settled in England in 1966. There, Ayeke was chairman of the London branch of the Progress Party formed to contest elections in Ghana during Ghana's Second Republic from 1969 to 1972.

In Ghana's Third Republic, Ayeke was the chairman of the Volta Regional Branch of the Popular Front Party from 1979 to 1981.[16] Following his legal studies in England, Ayeke returned to Ghana in 1979 to practise privately. He underwent pupilage with Alfred Kpodonu of Alfredo Chambers and subsequently set up his own private practise, Tomefa Chambers. He set up his practise in the offices that became the Volta Regional Branch of the Popular Front Party after the lifting of the ban on party politics in 1979. His private law firm, Tomefa Chambers, initially at Ho-Bakoe, was subsequently relocated to his hometown, Taviefe, with an annex at Hohoe. Ayeke was a member of the Volta Region branch of the Ghana Bar Association.[2]

Authorship

Ayeke authored and published two books in the Ewe language, Asitsu Atoawo (1998) and Hlobiabia (1998).[17][18][19][20][21][22] He published a third book in English, a collection of his poems titled Blackman's Image.[23] He also left behind two unpublished political manuscripts, Africa Looks Ahead and The Ugly Side, and an unpublished novel, The Divine Mission. The Five Rivals, his English rendition of his Ewe-written book Asitsu Atoawo, was also left behind to be published posthumously.[22]

Personal life and death

Ayeke died on 20 May 1985 after being on admission for fever for five days at the Hohoe Government Hospital. Ayeke was sixty-one years old at his death. He left behind seventeen children. His funeral was attended by Victor Owusu, who had been presidential candidate of the Popular Front Party in Ghana’s Third Republic.[16]

References

  1. Sam Clegg, ed. (20 May 1992). Daily Graphic. Graphic Communications Group. p. 12.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Ayeke, Kodzo Afelete (Funeral pamphlet). Taviefe, 1985.
  3. Kofi Kodzi. Worse than South Africa: Hypocrisy in African Politics. London: Moreto Publishers, 1991. p. 125.
  4. 1 2 Katherine Alexandra Collier Skinner. The Fruits of Freedom in British Togoland: Literacy, Politics and Nationalism (1914 - 2014). Cambridge University Press, 2015.
  5. Office, Great Britain Colonial (1954). Gold Coast. H.M. Stationery Office.
  6. Office, Great Britain Colonial (1966). Colonial Regulations. H.M. Stationery Office.
  7. Why CMB/CPC Probe!: Petitions. 1959.
  8. Beckman, Björn (1976). Organising the Farmers: Cocoa Politics and National Development in Ghana. Scandinavian Institute of African Studies. ISBN 978-91-7106-101-0.
  9. "Togo Problem is Alive - MP". Daily Graphic: 12. 4 May 1957.
  10. Debates. Gold Coast Legislative Assembly. 1956. p. 39.
  11. Parliamentary Debates; Official Report. Ghana National Assmebly, 1959. p. 1303.
  12. The Economic Bulletin of Ghana. Vol. 10–12. Economic Society of Ghana. 1966. p. 43.
  13. Obed Asamoah (2014). The Political History of Ghana (1950 - 2013), The Experience of a Non-Conformist. p. 24.
  14. Thomas A. Howell. Ghana and Nkrumah. Facts on File Inc, 1972. p. 40.
  15. West Africa. West Africa Publishing Company, July 1960. p. 858.
  16. 1 2 Talking Drums Volume 2, Issues 26 - 47. West Africa Publishing Company. 1985. p. 25.
  17. Ayeke, Kodzo Afelete (1998). Asitsu at ̳õawo (in Ewe). Bureau of Ghana Languages. ISBN 978-9964-2-0262-0.
  18. Edwards, Elizabeth; Gosden, Chris; Phillips, Ruth (2006-07-01). Sensible Objects: Colonialism, Museums and Material Culture. Berg. ISBN 978-1-84788-315-5.
  19. Kenya, Library of Congress Library of Congress Office, Nairobi (1999). Accessions List of the Library of Congress Office, Nairobi, Kenya. Library of Congress Office, Nairobi.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  20. Ayeke, Kodzo Afelete (1989). Hlõ̳biabia (in Ewe). Bureau of Ghana Languages. ISBN 978-9964-2-0263-7.
  21. Ayeke, Kodzo Afelete (1969). Asitsu Atoawo (in Ewe). Bureau of Ghana Languages.
  22. 1 2 Himmelmann, Nikolaus; Schultze-Berndt, Eva (2005). Secondary Predication and Adverbial Modification: The Typology of Depictives. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-153411-9.
  23. Ayeke, Kodzo Afelete (1977). The Blackman's Image: (proud to be Black). The author.
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