Tribute By The President Of The Republic Of Ghana, Nana Addo Danqua Akufo-Addo, At The Funeral Of Hugh Masakela, On Tuesday, In Johannesburg, South Africa
I had to come, and came from the AU Summit in Addis Ababa on my way
back home to Accra, so I could express my condolences to Barbara and his
family in person.
Coming here, it was difficult to believe the
news. But being here, at this service, it is clear to me that the news
is, indeed, true. Masakela is gone, Masakela is no more. All that
energy, all that vitality, all that zest for life, (what the French call
joie de vivre), all that infectious sense of humour, all that loud
laughter, all that love of beauty in all its forms, all that passion and
belief in a higher destiny for mankind, especially for the African
people, all that charisma – they have all been extinguished. That is the
way of mortal man. We each have our beginning, we each have our ending.
It is what you do in between that matters.
What an amazing life
he lived, and did virtually everything he wanted to do. We met a long
time ago, nearly 50 years ago. Predictably, for both of us at the time,
it was at the bar of Keteke, then the hottest night club (or disco, as
they were then being called) in Accra. He was already a legend – “King
Kong”, and “Grazing in the Grass” had seen to that. But, he wore none of
that. Simple, straightforward, he exuded fun and warmth. Many drinks
later, we became firm friends, and looked out for and saw each other at
various clubs across the world – New York, London, Paris, Lagos,
Abidjan, Lome – wherever we were together, we would meet and party.
Nobody partied like Masakela.
From the beginning, that is what I
called him – Masakela – and he called me Nana. It never changed. For
some reason, I could never come to terms with Hugh or Bra Hugh. He was
Masakela, unique and compelling.
He bore his exile with dignity.
He never lost his belief that the inhuman system of apartheid would be
dismantled, and that South Africa would, one day, be free. And he did
his best to ensure that happened. He was one of the most prominent of
the South African exiles, who kept the struggle alive before the eyes
and conscience of the world, and he did it largely through his wonderful
music.
Trumpet, cornet, flugelhorn, his voice – he made beautiful music
out of each of them. And when his idol, the iconic Nelson Mandela,
greatest of all Africans, walked out of prison, his joy was without end.
I came here to visit with him when he returned home, and that was my
first experience of South Africa. He took me to the recording studio in
downtown Johannesburg, where he had recorded in the old days with Dollar
Brand (Abdullah Ibrahim), and the others. In fact, on the day we went,
the new diva, Sibongile Khumalo, was actually in the studio, and he
introduced me to her.
I was fortunate in my friendship with him
and his great friend, that other great figure of African music, Fela
Anikulapo Kuti (Fela Ransome Kuti of earlier years). They made
exhilarating company, and left me with marvellous memories. One such was
at dawn, in Lome, capital of Togo, when, after leaving the nightclub
‘Z’, we went to the beach, behind the Sarakawa Hotel, and, sitting on
the shores of the Gulf of Guinea, looking out across the Atlantic,
Masakela played for us for one hour. It was like a song of praise to all
that was beautiful on our African continent. Even Fela was moved, and
every time I think of it, it brings tears of joy to my heart.
His love of Ghana was such that he became a Ghanaian, and, for me, a
member of my family. My wife Rebecca, my sister Mamaa, her daughter
Khadija, my brother Bumpty, his wife Irene, our mutual friend Sabah
Bedwei Majdoub, Joe Ampah, his widow Rosalind, and the talented Accra
musicians – Francis Fuster, The Todd brothers, Frankie and Stanley Todd,
Sol Amarfio, the late Faisal Helwani, the outstanding Ghanaian music
producer – we were all his family, to whom he remained faithful to the
end. He even married, for a time, the lovely Ghanaian woman, Elinam
Cofie.
South Africa will always have to share Masakela with us in Ghana,
and, indeed, with the rest of Africa.
There are some people who
cross your life, and you know that it is a privilege to share the same
time and space with them. Masakela was one such. I feel truly privileged
to have lived at the same time as him, and to have been blessed by his
friendship.
Last year, he did what we had both talked and
dreamed of for decades – he played at my inauguration, as President of
the Republic of Ghana, on 7th January, 2017. He played on two occasions
that day – at the official lunch, and at the wonderful party my brother
gave for me and my wife, Rebecca, that evening, both, unforgettable
occasions. Indeed, several diplomats told me, on the news of his death,
that that was the first and only time they heard him in flesh, a memory
they would always cherish.
I am reluctant to quote Shakespeare –
he wrote some 500 years ago, and has since been extensively quoted. But
the reason for that is his mastery of the English language, which
allows him to find the appropriate words for each occasion. This is how
Mark Anthony described Brutus, one of the conspirators against Julius
Caesar:
“This was the noblest Roman of them all. All the rest of the conspirators acted out of jealousy of great Caesar. Only he acted from honesty and for the general good. His life was gentle, and the elements mixed so well in him that Nature might stand up and say to all the world, “This was a man.”
Masakela, you were the man. Rest in perfect peace. God bless.
Damirifa Due.
Nana.
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