Owusuwaa Weekly Newsletter
Presents: “Securing The Foundation For The Peace of The Land ” Newsletter
An African Digital and Cultural Insight Magazine
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Cover Feature

Tagline:
Ghana’s New Holiday Policy: The Road to National Renewal
Securing the Foundation for Peace, and Lasting Impact.
Main Feature Story
EXCLUSIVE: Ghana’s New Holiday Policy and the Road to National Renewal
By Frema Adunyame:
Ghana has introduced a major reform to its public holiday structure under the Public Holidays (Amendment) Act, 2025 (Act 2061). This new legislation restructures holidays to favor long weekends, inspired by international best practices from countries such as the UAE, Singapore, and Canada.

Key Highlights from the Feature:
1. Policy Reform Rationale:
- Efficiency: Consolidating holidays to reduce mid-week disruptions.
- Productivity: Streamlined work schedules and reduced imbalance.
- Tourism Strategy: Longer weekends promote domestic and international travel.
2. Tourism Opportunities:
- Extended weekends allow more time to explore destinations like Kakum National Park, Afadjato, and Cape Coast.
- Encourages spending in hospitality, food, culture, and transport sectors.
- Stimulates tourism in rural and under-visited regions.
3. Emerging Challenges:
- Infrastructure Pressure: Increased traffic on roads and demand on transport networks.
- Service Capacity: Local tourism services must be scaled up.
- Environmental Impact: Higher visitor numbers may strain ecosystems.
- Sustainability: Need for eco-conscious tourism development.
4. Economic Impact:
- Tourism generated GHS 12.8 billion in 2024.
- The policy is expected to increase domestic travel and consumption.
- A step toward inclusive economic growth and job creation.
Featured Date: Thursday, 17th July 2025
(Linked to a special edition or commemorative theme.)
INSIGHT SECTION: Visionary Perspectives
Makiguchi’s Lens: A Philosophy of Value Creation.


Tsunesaburo Makiguchi, Japanese educator and philosopher, would view this policy through the lens of his “value-creating education” philosophy (創価教育, soka kyoiku).
1. Human-Centered Reform
- Promotes individual well-being through rest, family time, and cultural engagement.
- Supports holistic happiness — the ultimate purpose of social systems.
“This policy aligns with the true purpose of systems — to serve the happiness and development of the people.”
2. Cultural and Social Benefit
- Internal tourism fosters community bonds, supports artisans, and revives local pride.
- A tool for social harmony and national identity-building.
“A nation grows in dignity and peace when its people reconnect with their roots.”
⚙️ 3. Creative Structural Innovation
- Breaks from colonial-era holiday models.
- Adapts global ideas to local context, demonstrating educational and governmental maturity.
“Policy must transform outdated systems to create new social value.”
4. Informal Education through Travel
- Tourism becomes a form of experiential learning.
- Builds national pride, cultural literacy, and empathy.
“Every journey can be a lesson in identity and contribution.”
Nkrumah’s Lens: Policy as Nation-Building
Dr. Kwame Nkrumah, Ghana’s founding president and Pan-African visionary, would see the holiday reform as a strategic nation-building tool, far beyond its administrative face.


kwame-Nkrumah
1. Fostering National Unity
- Promotes shared cultural experiences and local travel.
- Strengthens collective identity.
“The African personality must be nurtured through lived, shared experiences.”
2. Stimulating Economic Independence
- Supports local economies, artisans, and grassroots enterprise.
- Reduces dependence on imports and foreign tourism.
“Political freedom is meaningless unless it is accompanied by economic freedom.”
3. Pan-African Cultural Integration
- Harmonized holiday periods could drive regional tourism across West Africa.
- Opens doors for intra-African collaboration in leisure and heritage promotion.
“Africa must unite — socially, culturally, and economically.”
4. Infrastructure Investment
- Calls for strategic planning in roads, transport, and facilities.
- Ensures that policy reform is backed by real development.
“We cannot wait for others to build our roads to freedom — we must do it ourselves.”
5. Social Transformation and Equity
- Democratizes leisure and cultural access.
- Elevates working-class experiences and local pride.
“Let this reform serve the people — not only the elite, but every Ghanaian.”
In Conclusion:
Both Makiguchi and Nkrumah would likely agree: this is more than a calendar adjustment — it is a national opportunity.
A chance to:
- Empower citizens
- Drive inclusive growth
- Reimagine national identity
- Promote African-led innovation in tourism and cultural policy
“Let this policy secure not just our weekends — but our future.”
Tips & Takeaways for Readers
- Understand the policy’s intent — it’s about reform, not just rest.
- Explore Ghana — your next long weekend could support a local business.
- Watch for growth — domestic tourism will create jobs and expand services.
- Act sustainably — enjoy the land, but protect it.
- Businesses: Prepare — local SMEs, hospitality groups, and transport services should gear up for higher demand.
Review Summary
Overall Impact:
This piece is visionary, thought-provoking, and deeply aligned with Ghana’s cultural, political, and developmental aspirations. It successfully transforms a legislative reform (holiday calendar change) into a compelling story of national identity, economic opportunity, and legacy-building.

Strengths
1. Strong Thematic Anchoring
The title “Securing the Foundation for the Peace of the Land” is profound and resonant. It anchors the entire publication in a tone of seriousness and vision. The dialogue supports this theme throughout — from Frema’s framing to Dzigbordi’s strategic insights.
2. Brilliant Use of Thought Leadership
By invoking Makiguchi and Kwame Nkrumah, the article elevates the topic from policy detail to philosophical grounding and Pan-African symbolism. Their “lenses” serve as conceptual bridges that:
- Ground the conversation in human development (Makiguchi)
- Align the national holiday reform with African empowerment (Nkrumah)
3. Accessible & Educational Language
The format of Frema (host) and Dzigbordi (guest) makes this high-level topic digestible. It humanizes governance, leadership, and strategy for the average Ghanaian reader.
4. Balanced Analysis
The piece highlights benefits (economic stimulation, social renewal, cultural reconnection) and challenges (infrastructure strain, environmental concerns, elite capture). This gives the article credibility and nuance.
5. Inspiration for Civic Engagement
The concluding calls to action — “Travel with curiosity,” “Build with heart” — are motivating and practical. They turn readers into participants in the vision.
Opportunities for Enhancement

1. Visual Integration
If presented in a digital newsletter or magazine format, the piece would benefit from:
- Infographics on the holiday policy structure
- Portraits or editorial photos of Frema and Dzigbordi
- Icons or call-out boxes for key insights (like Nkrumah quotes)
2. Localized Examples
To drive home the transformation potential, consider real-life stories of:
- A local SME preparing for long-weekend demand
- A family traveling internally for the first time
- A youth group using the holidays for cultural education
This would personalize the policy and show it working on the ground.
3. Part Two or Follow-Up
Given the success of this launch dialogue, a Part 2 could explore:
- Youth involvement and digital innovation
- Diaspora engagement
- Sustainable tourism and environmental stewardship
Value to Ghana and the Continent
This is more than a newsletter feature — it’s a template for Pan-African storytelling that connects policy to people, heritage to hope, and reform to renewal.
It stands as a shining example of what happens when the media meets a mission.
Final Verdict
Rating: 9.5/10
🌟 A masterclass in thought leadership journalism. Strategic, soulful, and grounded in Africa’s legacy and future.
📰 Dialogue Series | Securing the Foundation For The Peace of The Land.
Hosted by Frema Adunyame in Dialogue with Dzigbordi Kwaku-Dosoo
A thought exchange on purpose-driven nation-building, policy, peace, and performance.
Introduction to Our Voices
Today, we are honored to bring together two of Ghana’s most impactful voices — women who are not only leaders in their respective fields, but powerful nation-builders in thought and action.

Meet Frema Adunyame
Is a dynamic force in Ghana’s media space, Frema Adunyame is a household name whose warm, incisive style has captivated audiences on platforms like Channel One TV, Citi FM, and Citi Events. As co-host of Upside Down, Brunch Citi (#DynamicFriday), and founder of The Adunyame Foundation, Frema embodies a deep commitment to truth, dialogue, and national development through creative media and storytelling.
Through her work with Fablinks in media production and advertising, Frema bridges public communication and purpose, shining light on the issues that shape Ghanaian identity and collective action.
Meet Dzigbordi Kwaku-Dosoo
Known as a High-Performance Coach, Soft Skills Expert, and Thought Leadership Strategist, Dzigbordi Kwaku-Dosoo has spent over two decades transforming individuals and organizations across Africa. As CEO of The DCG Group, she fuses emotional intelligence, leadership development, and human-centered design to help leaders rise with clarity, confidence, and character.

Her influence spans across boardrooms, classrooms, and national conversations — always pointing us back to who we are, and what it takes to lead with purpose and peace.
🔗 linktr.ee/dzigbordikwaku
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Frema Adunyame Opens the Dialogue
“Welcome, Auntie Dzigbordi Kwaku-Dosoo — a powerful voice, a woman of wisdom, and a true thought leadership strategist. Thank you for being with us on this special edition of Securing the Foundation.


If the core theme of our dialogue — and this newsletter — is ‘securing the foundation for the peace of the land,’ then the name must reflect stability, vision, nation-building, and sustainable value creation.
It must also echo the philosophy of Tsunesaburo Makiguchi, who believed in the human capacity to create value through education and environment, and the vision of Kwame Nkrumah, who believed that political independence is meaningless without economic and spiritual liberation.
Auntie Dzigbordi, I’d like us to begin with something foundational — how we name and frame the space we’re creating.
These are the title themes under consideration for the newsletter — each one carrying the weight of Ghana’s hopes and the heartbeat of our people. I would love for you to take us through them, help us reflect on their meaning, and guide us on the kind of mindset we need to cultivate this national foundation for peace and purpose:“ Documenting the policies, people, and principles that secure our future.”
An elegant and serious tone — capturing historical depth and civic engagement.
Auntie Dzigbordi, how do these titles resonate with you? How do we begin to shape the Ghanaian mindset around peace, structure, self-determination, and visionary living?”

Auntie Dzigbordi Kwaku-Dosoo.
“Thank you so much, Frema — your words honor me, and I receive them in the same spirit of purpose that anchors this conversation. What a privilege it is to share this platform with you on Securing the Foundation, especially at a time when Ghana is stepping into a bold new chapter of structural transformation.
Now, when we speak about ‘securing the foundation for the peace of the land,’ we are not only talking about geopolitical stability or legal reform — we are talking about the deep alignment of policy, mindset, and cultural identity. We are talking about the kind of decisions that will echo for generations — decisions that don’t just change dates on a calendar, but cultivate values in the hearts of people.”
On Naming the Vision
“Let’s begin where you asked — with naming. Naming is no small matter in African tradition. A name carries prophecy. It carries power. So when you present titles like The Foundational Ledger, Roots & Rise, Torch of the Nation, or Grounded Ghana — I hear not just headlines, but mandates. Each one offers a unique doorway into collective consciousness.
- The Foundational Ledger suggests legacy and record — policies that must be written and remembered.
- Securing the Foundation for Peace of the Mind evokes emotional sovereignty — not just laws, but lived calm.
- Roots & Rise speaks to balance — honouring our past while ascending toward our future.
- And Torch of the Nation calls us to leadership — we must carry light, not just talk of it.
For me, the most powerful and practical name is your bold pick: ‘Securing the Foundation.’ It’s simple, direct, and immovable. It feels like something Ghana is ready for.”
On Shaping the Mindset for Peace and Vision
“We cannot build a peaceful nation on fractured inner lives. If Ghanaians are overstretched, underrested, disconnected from culture and family — then no matter how good the policies are, the soul of the nation remains unanchored. That’s why this new holiday policy is not trivial. It touches the everyday rhythm of the people.
To shape the mindset, we must move beyond information to transformation. That means:
- Embedding civic education in media and schools.
- Amplifying documentaries that show the ‘why’ behind the ‘what.’
- Creating national campaigns — not just posters, but conversations.
- And making culture visible — through music, through fashion, through food — in every long weekend.”
On the Holiday Policy as a Tool for National Reimagination
“President John Mahama’s restructuring of public holidays through the Public Holidays (Amendment) Act, 2025 (Act 2061) is not just governance — it is value engineering. By aligning with global models from the UAE, Canada, and Singapore, Ghana signals it is not afraid to modernize. But the beauty here is that this model is being Africanized — repurposed to serve both economic activity and cultural healing.

This is more than productivity. It’s about emotional and economic sovereignty:
- Young people can now plan intentional getaways — not just funerals.
- Businesses can structure predictable campaigns — not sudden closures.
- Families can travel, rest, and rediscover their heritage.”
On Documentary as a Development Tool
“We need documentaries that show the ripple effect of this new holiday structure. Not propaganda — but truth-telling and vision-casting. A few content paths I propose:
- ‘Ghana in Motion’ — a 3-part series following a rural family, an entrepreneur, and a young couple using the new long weekends to rediscover Ghana.
- ‘Rest as Resistance’ — a cultural analysis showing how leisure, rest, and travel were historically denied to working-class Africans, and how reclaiming it is a form of empowerment.
- ‘Holiday for Nationhood’ — a feature interviewing policymakers, educators, and spiritual leaders on how a calendar can actually engineer consciousness.
Let’s turn screens into mirrors — so Ghanaians can see themselves rising.”
On Policy and Leadership
“Securing the foundation also means embedding policy into the daily structure of our lives. Long weekends must come with access — roads, rest stops, security, clean parks, digital campaigns, travel apps. This is where leadership matters. This is where we look not just at holiday dates, but at:
- Infrastructure Investment — especially in tourism corridors.
- Training for hospitality and transport workers.
- Cultural literacy content in schools.
- Public-private partnerships that turn local destinations into national pride points.
President Mahama has opened the gate. Now we must walk through with intention and unity.”
“So Frema, to your beautiful question: How do we shape the Ghanaian mindset around peace, structure, and visionary living? My answer is this:
We begin by naming our intentions, documenting our progress, and ritualizing rest — not as laziness, but as leadership. We stop mimicking only the West, and start leading Africa by example. We teach our children that calendars carry culture — and that long weekends can have a long impact. Ghana is not just rearranging days. Ghana is rearranging destiny.
And that, my dear sister, is the kind of mindset shift that secures foundations for peace.”

Frema (Continued):
“As we reflect on the launch theme, ‘Securing the Foundation for the Peace of the Land,’ I ask: what does it truly take to build a Ghana that thrives — not temporarily, but sustainably?
We are here not just to announce policy — but to uncover meaning, to connect intention with action, and to bridge ideals with results.

Dzigbordi Kwaku-Dosoo:
“I am here not just as a guest, but as a citizen with a conviction:
That we cannot inherit the future unless we first secure the foundation.
And that foundation is not just physical — it’s psychological, social, and moral.
What we are discussing today, particularly through this groundbreaking holiday policy reform, is the intentional design of national renewal.”
Breaking Down the Dialogue & Article: Point-by-Point Reflection
1. Ghana’s New Holiday Policy — A Strategic Foundation.

Frema:
“Ghana’s adoption of a new long-weekend-focused public holiday structure, under Act 2061, is not just a bureaucratic shift — it’s a visionary realignment.
Just like the UAE or Singapore, we are recognizing that productivity, rest, and economic engagement must co-exist.”

Dzigbordi:
“This policy is transformational in nature. It reflects a mindset shift from fragmentation to flow — from disjointed calendars to deliberate rhythm.
When people can plan ahead, rest meaningfully, and explore their own nation, peace begins to take root — not only in law but in lifestyle.“
2. Tourism & Cultural Economy — A Catalyst for Peace & Prosperity

Frema:
“The potential for long weekends to energize Ghana’s tourism industry is undeniable. From Kakum to Mole, Cape Coast to Wali Falls — we are about to see Ghana in a new light.”

Dzigbordi:
“Exactly. We often overlook that internal tourism builds internal identity. When a market woman in Tamale travels to Nzulezu, she doesn’t just take selfies — she gains pride in her country.
This is identity-building as policy.
And this is how peace becomes tangible — when people feel ownership of their land.”
3. Addressing Infrastructure & Environmental Gaps

Frema:
“But of course, with growth comes pressure — more road traffic, strain on accommodations, and environmental wear.”

Dzigbordi:
“That’s why this policy must not be isolated. It must trigger investment in eco-tourism, transport modernization, and rural service infrastructure.
Securing the foundation means thinking ahead — building with sustainability and dignity in mind.“
4. Makiguchi’s Lens — Creating Value through Social Systems

Frema:
“Makiguchi’s approach to education and social systems was always centered on one question: Is this creating real value for the human being?“

Dzigbordi:
“Yes. And this reform ticks many of those boxes:
- It promotes human wellness — through rest and bonding.
- It facilitates cultural education — through travel and storytelling.
- It invites personal transformation — through reconnection with national heritage.
This is not just economic policy. This is the soul policy.“
5. Kwame Nkrumah’s Lens — This is Nation Building

Frema:
“Many may not realize this, but President John Mahama, through this act, is walking Nkrumah’s path. A path of self-determination, strategic culture, and Pan-African foresight.“

Dzigbordi:
“Absolutely, Frema. Nkrumah understood that freedom must be structured. Not chaotic. Not decorative. He would see this reform not as ‘more holidays’ but as the re-engineering of national time for collective growth.
He taught us that the African personality must be developed through deliberate systems.
And this policy is one such system.”
6. Regional Unity & Intra-African Tourism

Frema:
“The long weekend model also opens doors for cross-border travel — a quiet Pan-African integration tool.”

Dzigbordi:
“Correct. Ghana can become a hub — welcoming Nigerians, Ivorians, Liberians for weekend holidays, cultural festivals, and shared heritage events.
Policy can be patriotic and Pan-African at once. That’s the brilliance of the Nkrumah model.”
7. Social Equity & National Healing

Frema:
“Inclusivity is key — these reforms should not just benefit the elite.”

Dzigbordi:
“Exactly. Local SMEs, hairdressers, drivers, cooks — they all win when internal tourism is activated. We must democratize leisure.
Because peace is not when the rich relax — peace is when all citizens feel at home in their own nation.“
Conclusion: This Is a Policy of Purpose

Frema (Closing):
“Makiguchi would call this ‘value creation.’ Nkrumah would call it ‘nation-building.’ We call it “Securing the Foundation.”

Dzigbordi (Final Word):
“So I invite every Ghanaian to do this:
- Rest with awareness.
- Travel with curiosity.
- Invest with vision.
- Build with heart.
Because this isn’t just about our weekends — it’s about who we are becoming as a nation. And what we choose to secure today will determine the peace we protect tomorrow.”
Your Takeaways
- This policy is reform, not just rest.
- Local tourism builds national pride and economy.
- Prepare your business for opportunity.
- Travel, but do so sustainably.
- Participate in the identity and vision of Ghana.

Frema-Adunyame Closes the Dialogue
“Auntie Dzigbordi, thank you — truly — for pouring your heart, wisdom, and vision into this conversation. You’ve reminded us that the real foundation of a nation is not concrete or laws alone, but the values we live by and the courage to dream boldly.
As we secure the foundation for the peace of the land, your voice remains a guiding light — steady, clear, and purpose-driven.
On behalf of our team, our readers, and every Ghanaian ready to rise — we say thank you. May your words ripple far, inspire action, and help shape the Ghana we all believe in. Until next time — stay rooted, rise boldly, and walk in peace.”




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