General News of Thursday, 20 July 2006

Source: GNA

Adu Boahen was a renowned historian

Accra, July 20, GNA - Emeritus Professor Albert A. Adu Boahen, whose funeral began on Thursday, was one of Ghana's most renowned historians.

He died on his 74th birthday on May 24 at the 37th Military Hospital, after a prolonged illness. He was on admission at the hospital for a couple of years, after he had suffered a stroke in 2001. Emeritus Prof. Adu Boahen was born on May 24, 1932 at Oseim, in the Eastern Region.

His political life started while he was in his second year as a student of the Mfantsipim Secondary School in the Central Region. He was part of the protest strike of the Shool and other Cape Coast schools against the arrest of the 93Big Six=94 by the British Colonial Government.

Prof. Adu Boahen graduated from the University of Ghana in 1956, with a B.A. Honours degree in history and was offered a scholarship to study at the University of Oriental and African Studies, London, where he graduated with Ph.D degree in African Studies.

He became a Lecturer at the University of Ghana in 1959 and a professor of History in 1971.

He was noted for both his political activism and international role as a Visiting Professor to universities throughout the world, and as a Consultant to UNESCO.

There are nine books and over 25 published and unpublished articles to his credit. Amongst his many books and papers on modern and colonial history are: 93The Monographs of Mfantsipim and the Making of Ghana: A Centenary History 1876-1976=94, for which, he won the Noma Award for Publishing in Africa in 1997.

He was also Editor of UNESCO's eight volume History of Africa series.

He also received many awards and on July 12, 2004, Prof. A Ali Mazrui, the renowned African International Cultural Historian and Political Scientist presented a copy of a "Ghana in Africa and the World" dedicated to Adu Boahen to President Agyekum Kufuor. The seventh volume of the book of eight volumes and written by about 30 authors was edited by Adu Boahen.

Prof. Adu Boahen's real political carrier began in 1978, when he took part in a strike against the Acheampong Government, which later caused him a detention in the Tamale prison for four months. He also criticised the June 4 uprising led by Former President Jerry John Rawlings, which toppled the Supreme Military Council government under General F. W. Akuffo.

His involvement in the Movement of Freedom and Justice in June 1990 led to his arrest and detention together with fellow members of the Movement. Prof. Adu Baohen became the first Presidential Candidate of the New Patriotic Party (NPP) in Election 1992, which he lost. 20 July 06