3/18/2014

Names of names



Names of names rings in names
Names of names whistles names
Names of names voices names

You own one, I own one
Everybody owns one
It is the identity in ownership that matters
It has a connectivity with its owner
It is your recognition that counts
It is the pride in it that feels good

Whatever the name tag
There is reality in it

However the name sings
The good name stands
The goodwill in name lives  

There is a burden on the bearer
It resonates responsibility on the carrier

Names evokes sad, happy memories
Names recounts good, bad omen
Names whispers hope, despair
Names brings persons, places to mind
Names extract tears from the eyes
Names arouse a sense of belonging
Names breeds unity, disunity

A name symbolizes acceptance
A name expresses gratitude
A name describes attitude
A name extends divinity
A name creates continuity
A name instigates reliability
A name articulates success
A name sings our praise
A name is all I have

There is courage in a name
There is faith in a name
There is power in a name
There is reputation in a name
There is greatness in a name
There is mischief in a name
There is virtue in a name
There is fullness in a name

What is your name?
They asked?
And what is its meaning?
They want to know?
They are names you know
They are names that you don’t know
They are names you hate to love
They are just names of names

    KYB signs
17/1/14
@ Gbawe-Bulemin, Accra 

   






     

Flogging the Saints



They spend days spewing words
Recalling words wove in silence
Contesting their basis and testing their truth

Some affirm the potency of actions
While others discount their veracity

They spoke with effortless effrontery
And a comfortable zeal
Challenging the very memory bed

Speeches fraught with incisive noisy interjections
Sometimes to confuse and discredit truth

They go back and forth
Drilling facts, overviews and counter-views
Seeking the falsehood in the truth

Served in precious hours
Precious hours on count
Flogging the saintly truth of time

The litigants flog and over floor
The good in their words of claims
And denials
Just to prove themselves
Before mortal arbiters
While the immortal King
Admires these lively theatres
 
    KYB signs
17/1/14
@ Gbawe-Bulemin, Accra 

   

The Friendly Octopus



Many doors of discomfort
Many doors of infighting
Many doors of struggling
The liberation banner is on
The battle is on.

But the friendly octopus
Tightens its grips
With firm tentacles
On the dusty treasures
It suffocates its prey
The helpless prey is whimpering
 Falling and yet worshiping this deadly traps
Yet the octopus like a spider
Spins intricate webs for this weak poor prey.

With infested wounds the prey
Yells for uncomfortable partnership
From this friendly octopus of yesteryear

Hmmm! This prey must rethink of rebirth
It must rejuvenate and revive the liberation breeze
For a happy destiny.
The prey must betray its betrayers
And renew its eternal baptism
For its eminent salvation.

KYB signs
17/1/14
@ Gbawe Bulemin, Accra 

   



3/05/2014

Preserve your sights

Preserve your sights-Ghanaians urged
A call has gone to Ghanaians to take good care of their eyes to preserve their sights and help in early detection and treatment of eye diseases.
Dr.Oscar Debrah, of the Eye Care Unit of the Ghana Health Service, entreated Ghanaians to go for regular eye checks ones a year or ones in two years, adding that though Glaucoma cannot be prevented early detection could help manage the situation.
He made the appeal at the 10th Anniversary Celebration of the Rübsam Eye Clinic at the St. Dominic Hospital at Akwatia in the Koforidua Diocese, on the theme: Sight; Is A Gift to Preserve.
Dr.Dabrah who commended the Clinic for its feet, charged it to embark upon outreach programmes to screen and sensitise the public on eye, adding that 80 per cent of blindness was preventable.
Most Rev. Joseph Afrifah-Agyekum, Bishop of Koforidua Diocese and Chairman for the occasion underscored the need for people to protect their sights because the eyes are important organs of the human beings.  
He commended the Dominican Sisters of Speyer; the German Rotary Voluntary Doctors, the management and Staff of the Clinic for their efforts and achievement over the years.
Dr. Mercy Dawson, Medical Superintendent of the Hospital and head of the Eye Clinic in an overview said the Clinic was established as a result of over 25 per cent of clients at the Out Patient Department (OPD) presented eye problems.
She said through the efforts of the Dominican Sisters of Speyer, the Rotarians of Germany including Prof.Schuette, Prof.Sprandel, with Mr. and Mrs. Erhard Ruebsam offering financial support to construct the Eye Clinic, which was commissioned on August 16, 2003 by Most Rev. Charles Palmer-Buckle, then Bishop of Koforidua Diocese.
Since its inception, Dr. Dawson noted the Hospital recorded 172, 522 OPD attendance of which 21,760 reporting for Glaucoma; 17,938, Refractive Error; 16,055 Cataract; 9,965 spectacles dispensed and 106,804 accounting for other conditions.
She said 221 outreach programmes were undertaken during which 23,151 patients were screened but noted that lack of diagnostic tools and well-equipped outreach van were hampering their outreach programmes.

In a welcome address, Mr. Daniel Augustine Bempong, said the celebration was the outcome of the collaboration among the stakeholders including their benefactors, the management and staff, and government working together to create the enabling environment for health delivery.
He said the need for optometric and ophthalmic services would increase since Ghana’s population was ageing with their attendant visual challenges.
He said the nation could do better by fulfilling its obligation to help treat the illness associated with the eyes, in order to give hope to those afflicted and help children from losing their sights.
Mr. Baba Jamal, Member of Parliament for Akwatia, thanked the Catholic Church for its role in healthcare delivery and thanked the Dominican Sisters of Speyer for their tremendous efforts at health delivery at the hospital, as well as the Hospital for establishing the Eye Clinic.
He said plans were advance to establish a Medical School at Akwatia to train more medical professional in the country. 
Dr. Juliette M. Tuakli, President of the Accra Rotary Club described the collaboration between the hospital and the Rotary Club as a fruitful one that will be further strengthen.
She commended the Hospital and the staff for the good work and they were doing and said the partnership will continue to grow.
The Chiefs and Elders of Akwatia and Boadua in congratulated the Hospital for the service to humanity and thanked the Dominican Sisters for the role in raising the hospital to its enviable status.
There were solidarity message from the German Rotary Club, who annually send Volunteer Doctors to the Eye Clinic, the Dominican Sisters in Speyer, the National Catholic Health Service.
A fund raising activity to purchase a new buss for the Eye Clinic’s outreach activity yielded 11, 000.
As part of the ceremony a bouquet and a plaque were each presented to Mr. and Mrs.Ruebsam, the Dominican Sisters, the German Rotary Club and the German Embassy in Ghana for the various contribution to establishment and running of the Clinic.
The pioneer staff of the Eye Clinic including Dr. Dawson were also honoured at the function graced by dignitaries comprising representative of the German Ambassador to Ghana, Minister for Health, Civil Authority, Clergy, Religious, Friends and well-wishers.
Earlier Bishop Afrifah-Agyekum, assisted by Most Rev. Gabriel EdoeKumordji, Bishop of Donkorkrom Vicariate blessed a fully equipped Ambulance the Dominican Sisters of Speyer Donated to the Hospital.   
*Mr. and Mrs.Ruebsam receiving the bouquet,
*Dignitaries and staff at the function
*BishopsAfrifah-Agyekum and Kumordji blessing the new Ambulance.

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