Prof. Delle speaks after receiving donation of books from the legacy Project |
Professor
Edmund Delle, the National Chairman and leader of the Convention Peoples Party
(CPP) has made a solemn pledge to restore the works of Osagyefo Dr Kwame
Nkrumah and to make the party a viable organ of the masses.
He
said “we have a responsibility to reorganize the CPP as the main vehicle for
achieving the dreams of the Osagyefo of African unity and for ending under
development.”
Professor
Delle was speaking at a ceremony at which he received books by and about
Osagyefo Dr Kwame Nkrumah, First President of the Republic of Ghana.
The
books were donated to the CPP by the Legacy Project of the 8th Pan African
Congress.
The
project is distributing more than 2000 such books to tertiary institutions,
mass organizations, political parties and regional libraries across the
country.
Professor
Delle commended the Freedom Bookshop for bringing Nkrumah’s books into the
country and the Legacy Project for circulating the ideas of Nkrumah in all
corners of the country.
He
said the ideas of Nkrumah are as relevant today as they were in the past.
In
making the presentation, Comrade Kwesi Pratt, Jnr said Africa has no
alternative to ensuring that its huge resources are owned by its people and are
exploited for their own benefit.
He
said the Legacy Project decided on the distribution of books by and about
Nkrumah because they point to the path of development and prosperity for all
oppressed peoples.
He
said “the CPP can rise again and that is only possible if we correctly apply
the ideas of Osagyefo Dr Kwame Nkrumah.”
Editorial
Making the legacy count
He
is counted as a foremost liberation thinker and leader and he wrote of his time
and for posterity, but Osagyefo Dr. Kwame Nkrumah’s books have been rather
difficult to find in the bookshops.
So,
following from this year’s 8th Pan African Congress recommendation to promote
the ideals of great Pan Africanists through the distribution of books and
literature, the Legacy Project of the 8th PAC has acquired a number of books
written by Dr. Kwame Nkrumah and other pan-African writers.
Copies
of the books, comprising of 19 titles and others have already been presented to
the Kwame Nkrumah Memorial Park, the Balme Library at Legon and the Convention
Peoples Party, CPP.
Other
organisations which would soon benefit from the Legacy Project include the
Flagstaff House, Parliament House, Trades Union Congress, the Department of African
Studies of the University of Ghana, Kofi Annan Peace Keeping Centre and others.
In
all, 48 organisations, including 25 tertiary institutions spread throughout the
10 regions of the country have been selected as beneficiaries.
Already,
positive feedback has been received from the first few recipients, especially
with regard to the latter’s ability to satisfy their patrons’ to see the books.
So
the Legacy Project’s aim of providing a forum and an engagement platform for
issues relating to Africa to remain alive through the dissemination of books
and works of leading pan- Africanists are on course by making the books
accessible to as many people as possible.
It
is the expectation of the Legacy Project that the books can easily be accessed
as reference material by all. Some people have also expressed interest in
owning personal copies. As of now, individual copies can be purchased at the
Freedom Bookshop at Asylum Down.
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