Ancestors II;
Afahye
by Phil Bartle
La version française de ce document.A versão portuguesa deste documento
Following the path of least resistance makes all rivers -- and some men -- crooked.
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Chiefs and Elders in Public
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There are two Adae days on the 42 day calendar.   When one is declared an Adae Kese, it means there will be an outdoor festival (afahye) where the chiefs and elders sit in state.  They are greeted (in an anti clockwise direction) by other chiefs and elders, members of the community, and by the priests and their gods.  The word afahye means a public festival.   The British, with their colonial experience in India, introduced the Hindi term "durbar" to label the event.
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My adoptive father, Nana Asiamah II, Obohene and Nifahene of Kwawu

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Obohene sitting in state at Ohantrase outside the Obo palace during an Adae Kese in Obo

Nana Noah Adofo, Kontihene of Obo, dancing a war dance..
War dances (by elder and ahenkwa) and Adowa (by a little girl) at Adae Kese

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The Obo Kontihene, Nana Noah Adofo II, dances a war dance above left.   He was my main teacher and guide in my doing my PhD research for the University of Ghana, Legon.
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The man in the right photo is an ahenkwa, servant of the stool. He wears his cloth wrapped under his arms as a sign of respect.  Even a chief or elder, when greeting a more senior chief, will temporarily bare his left shoulder (when wearing cloth) as a sign of respect.
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The dance of the little girl is called "adowa" (deer). and is seen only for its beauty, and not as a war dance.
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War Dances from European Traditions

My military friends are not too happy when I describe a formal military parade as choreography.  It is.  The precision stepping, the rhythm of the marching, with or without a band playing, the practice needed to keep in sync, all put marching into the category of dancing.  I believe that I did well in my own Canadian RCAF military training, on parade, because of my participation in square dancing as a teenager.
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Part of my participant observation was to be the horn blower in the Obo court
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Paramount Chief, Omanhene
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Kwawu is politically organized like any Akan oman, with a paramount chief, a chief of the interior, and four wings (Forward, Left, Right, and Rear).  Obo is head of the Right Division.  Here are a few pictures of the Omanhene or Paramount Chief of Kwawu.
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Daasebre Akuamoah Boateng II, Omanhene (Paramount chief) of Kwawu
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Linguists
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The akyeame (poorly translated into English as "linguists") are identified by their staffs. Each linguist position is an office owned corporately by a matrilineage.  Obo has seven linguists, including a Chief Linguist.
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For a description of my discovery of the sacred black linguist staff ritual, see Apoma.
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Obo linguists at a Kwawu Adae Kese (Afahye) held at Mpraeso
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On the right side of the right photo, second person from the talking drum, one of the seven Obo linguists is a woman.
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Mpraeso; Kwawu Chiefs
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Obohene (right)  and Queen Mother at an Adae Kese held at Mpraeso
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Talking Drums

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The shortest distance is not always a straight line
––»«––
Akan Religion; Introduction
The Spirit in Us; Overview.
Gods I; Tutelary Spirits;
Gods II; Nansing;
Gods III; Health and Fertility;
Gods IV; Ohantrase;
Ancestors I; Death and Beyond;
Ancestors II; Afahye;
Three Souls;
Black Linguist Staff;
Geographic Taboos;
Forty Days;
Swiss Missionaries;
Gyenyame.
Akan Religion - Introduction
 
Introduction; The Spirits In Us
Local Gods are Rivers, Mountains and Caves
Nansin, A River Inside a Cave
Health and Fertility, the Job of Gods
Afahye (Festival) in Ohantrase, Obo
Ancestors Were Once Elders
Festival at Ohantrase, Outside the Chief's Palace
   Three Souls
Linguist with Staff
Geographic Food Taboos
Forty Days 
Swiss Missionaries
Gyenyame = Unless God
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Religion
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