2007.09.01: September 1, 2007: Headlines: COS - Ghana: Return to our Country of Service - Ghana: Journalism: The Fredericksburg Free Lance-Star: Ghana RPCV Frank Delano writes: Money, alcohol and machete help send slain Ghanaian on to the next life as whole town turns out for farewell
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2007.09.01: September 1, 2007: Headlines: COS - Ghana: Return to our Country of Service - Ghana: Journalism: The Fredericksburg Free Lance-Star: Ghana RPCV Frank Delano writes: Money, alcohol and machete help send slain Ghanaian on to the next life as whole town turns out for farewell
Ghana RPCV Frank Delano writes: Money, alcohol and machete help send slain Ghanaian on to the next life as whole town turns out for farewell
Quayson's pallbearers were all women. Surrounded by the crowd, the women first took his coffin from the funeral hall to his mother's house nearby for a final farewell. The throng then marched through town to the cemetery by the sea. Young men, some of them bare-chested and white-faced, tried to stop the procession of their friend's body to his grave. The women pallbearers beat them away with sticks. The ritual repeated itself as the women rushed on to the cemetery. The women cheered when the coffin was lowered into the grave beneath the coconut trees. The women and most of the mourners returned to town immediately. A dozen or so men stayed at the open grave to perform the final obsequies. The people believe that the souls of the dead must cross a river. A man poured a libation of gin into the grave, asking the spirits of dead ancestors to welcome Quayson among them.
Ghana RPCV Frank Delano writes: Money, alcohol and machete help send slain Ghanaian on to the next life as whole town turns out for farewell
LAST RITES
Money, alcohol and machete help send slain Ghanaian on to the next life as whole town turns out for farewell
Caption: Images from the funeral of Seth Quayson
Money, alcohol and machete help send slain Ghanaian on to the next life as whole town turns out for farewell
Date published: 9/1/2007
BY FRANK DELANO
PRINCE'S TOWN, Ghana--Seth Quayson, 28, died in July at Axim, eight miles away from his home at Prince's Town.
His broken body was found on the rocks below the walls of Fort St. Anthony. The Portuguese built the fort in 1515. Quay-son had been staying there with his father, the fort's caretaker.
Quayson's family believed he was murdered, pushed or thrown to his death over the fort's high parapet in the middle of the night.
While police in Axim investigated his death, Quayson was buried in Prince's Town on July 14.
His was a traditional funeral without benefit of clergy. A relative said Quayson had once belonged to the Seventh-day Adventist Church, but had been excommunicated for drinking.
Nobody in Prince's Town went to work the day of Quayson's last rites. Hundreds of people wearing mourning colors of black and red turned out for the funeral. Some of them had daubed their faces with white clay.
Quayson's body lay in the biggest hall in town. The place was packed. The men sat apart from the women. The crowd filled the streets outside.
Family members recorded cash donations in a notebook. On display was a large, color, close-up photograph of Quayson's head on the rocks.
The Reno Spot bar next door to the funeral hall did a brisk business. A wall of loudspeakers in the street blasted highlife tunes, Ghana's popular music. The mourners danced.
Quayson's pallbearers were all women. Surrounded by the crowd, the women first took his coffin from the funeral hall to his mother's house nearby for a final farewell.
Ritual procession
The throng then marched through town to the cemetery by the sea.
Young men, some of them bare-chested and white-faced, tried to stop the procession of their friend's body to his grave. The women pallbearers beat them away with sticks. The ritual repeated itself as the women rushed on to the cemetery.
The women cheered when the coffin was lowered into the grave beneath the coconut trees. The women and most of the mourners returned to town immediately.
A dozen or so men stayed at the open grave to perform the final obsequies.
The people believe that the souls of the dead must cross a river. A man poured a libation of gin into the grave, asking the spirits of dead ancestors to welcome Quayson among them.
The men opened the coffin. The corpse was clothed in a coat and tie. One man used a handkerchief to brush flies from the dead man's face.
The men tucked money in his lapels to pay for his ferry across the river. Another man placed a machete in the coffin for Quayson's spirit to use in revenge.
"Seth, Seth, do not sleep here," one man lamented. "Oh, Sethie, my brother, I will never see you again."
The men screwed down the top of the coffin. They threw handfuls of sand into the grave and then picked up their spades.
The sea thundered on the beach.
Frank Delano is a staff writer with The Free Lance-Star. Contact him at 804/333-3834 or
Email: fpdelano@gmail.com.
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Headlines: September, 2007; Peace Corps Ghana; Directory of Ghana RPCVs; Messages and Announcements for Ghana RPCVs; Return to our Country of Service - Ghana; Journalism
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Story Source: The Fredericksburg Free Lance-Star
This story has been posted in the following forums: : Headlines; COS - Ghana; Return to our Country of Service - Ghana; Journalism
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