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    kumasi

    Explore " kumasi" with insightful episodes like "Episode 185: Building An Ecosystem for Youth Development with Kojo North", "EPISODE 60", "Episode 41: Empowering Patients using Healthtech Interconnectivity with Dr. Muri Raifu Part 2", "#11 - CHEF K - BARBECUE CITY - How To Start Your Own Restaurant In Ghana" and "Episode 40: Empowering Patients using Healthtech Interconnectivity with Dr. Muri Raifu Part 1" from podcasts like ""Glocal Citizens", "The James Carrington podcast", "Glocal Citizens", "Sun Chasin' Success" and "Glocal Citizens"" and more!

    Episodes (6)

    Episode 185: Building An Ecosystem for Youth Development with Kojo North

    Episode 185: Building An Ecosystem for Youth Development with Kojo North
    August Greetings Glocal Citizens! Kicking off my favorite month of the year (it’s my birthday month) is a Ghanaian Brit by way of the Netherlands, Kojo North. A proud Ghanaian, Kojo has built a successful career consulting software companies while dividing his time between London, Amsterdam, and Kumasi. With a keen interest in supporting Ghanaian software startups, he invests in and advises startups focused on driving digital transformation within the lodging and restaurant industries. Believing in technology's power to solve real-world challenges, Kojo employs this approach across the board with his projects. Kojo's ambitions stretch beyond the realm of software and in 2021, he embarked on a transformative project to redefine student accommodation in Ghana. His vision includes not just the Resurrection Student Hostel but a complete ecosystem with a restaurant and a remote-first office creating opportunities for graduates to work for European-based companies without leaving home. A trained pianist, Kojo has a love for all arts, particularly painting. As his investment portfolio in Ghana expands, he plans to exhibit various African artworks in the Resurrection restaurant, creating an inspiring atmosphere for diners and workers. Kojo shares his journey on his YouTube channel hoping to encourage other diasporans to join him in exploring their roots and contributing to their homeland's growth, making strides in the digital landscape, championing art, and share in his unique journey with the world. Where to find Kojo? On Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/kojonorth/?hl=en) On YouTube (https://www.youtube.com/@KojoNorth/featured") Who’s Kojo watching? Zora Opoku (https://www.zohraopoku.com) Bob Pixel (https://www.instagram.com/bobpixel/?hl=en) Paa Joe (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paa_Joe) Other topics of interest: About the Ashanti (https://www.africancraftsmarket.com/african-tribes/ashanti-people.html) About the Ewe (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ewe_people) About Ijburg (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IJburg) About Osu, Accra (https://www.grin.com/document/889371) Shepherd’s Bush, London (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shepherd%27s_Bush) Notting Hill Carnival (https://nhcarnival.org) Brexit (https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-32810887) Accra Art Week (https://www.facebook.com/accraartweek/) Remotely Works (https://www.remotely.works/companies) What is a Tro tro? (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tro_tro) Ghana National Service (https://www.nss.gov.gh/about) KNUST - Tech (https://www.knust.edu.gh) Special Guest: Kojo North.

    Episode 41: Empowering Patients using Healthtech Interconnectivity with Dr. Muri Raifu Part 2

    Episode 41: Empowering Patients using Healthtech Interconnectivity with Dr. Muri Raifu Part 2
    Autumn Glocal Citizens! For the next two episodes, we’ll be visiting with healthtech entrepreneur and neurosurgeon, Dr. Muri Raifu. Muri is another Ghana native, by way of Nigeria. A scholar-athlete at Amherst College in Massachusetts, in addition to his medical training Muri also received his MPA from Harvard’s John F. Kennedy School of Government. Currently based in Los Angeles, California, Muri is blazing a trail both in his private practice, and his start-up Talamus Health which is in the business of improving and unifying healthcare delivery in emerging markets, helping patients interact with and share their health information with a connected circle of providers. Since launching in 2018, Talamus is emerging as a go to solution for health service providers partnering with more than 1,000 healthcare providers across Africa. Other notable early achievements include being named Most Scalable SME at the United Nations ITU Global Awards in 2018 and making Fast Company’s 50 Most Innovative Companies in the World list in 2019. This conversation is another Glocal Citizens gem where we take a seat on a coming of age and career tour with Muri from Ghana, across the US and back, across Africa. Where to find Muri and Talamus? On Talamus (http://www.talamushealth.com) On LInkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/in/murisiku-muri-raifu-md-mpa-faans-3622a587/) On Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/muri.raifu) On Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/brainoperator1/) What’s Muri lightening to? Fela Kuti (https://felakuti.com/) Bob Marley (https://www.bobmarley.com) Shatta Wale (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shatta_Wale) Sarkodie (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sarkodie_(rapper)) Talib Kweli (http://www.talibkweli.com/) Mos Def (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mos_Def) Art and science of interest— PCR Primers (https://www.khanacademy.org/science/biology/biotech-dna-technology/dna-sequencing-pcr-electrophoresis/a/polymerase-chain-reaction-pcr) Wangechi Mutu (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wangechi_Mutu) Kenyan Visual Artist Yinka Shonibare (http://yinkashonibare.com/) British-Nigerian Artist Sanford Biggers (http://sanfordbiggers.com/) Harlem-based Visual Artist Amoako Boafo (https://marianeibrahim.com/artists/44-amoako-boafo/biography/) Ghanaian Painter Dotum Popoola (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dotun_Popoola) Hyperrealist Artists in Nigeria (https://www.cnn.com/2018/04/06/africa/ken-nwadiogbu-hyperrealist-artist-nigeria-africa/index.html) Special Guest: Muri Raifu, MD.

    Episode 40: Empowering Patients using Healthtech Interconnectivity with Dr. Muri Raifu Part 1

    Episode 40: Empowering Patients using Healthtech Interconnectivity with Dr. Muri Raifu Part 1
    Autumn Glocal Citizens! For the next two episodes, we’ll be visiting with healthtech entrepreneur and neurosurgeon, Dr. Muri Raifu. Muri is another Ghana native, by way of Nigeria. A scholar-athlete at Amherst College in Massachusetts, in addition to his medical training Muri also received his MPA from Harvard’s John F. Kennedy School of Government. Currently based in Los Angeles, California, Muri is blazing a trail both in his private practice, and his start-up Talamus Health which is in the business of improving and unifying healthcare delivery in emerging markets, helping patients interact with and share their health information with a connected circle of providers. Since launching in 2018, Talamus is emerging as a go to solution for health service providers partnering with more than 1,000 healthcare providers across Africa. Other notable early achievements include being named Most Scalable SME at the United Nations ITU Global Awards in 2018 and making Fast Company’s 50 Most Innovative Companies in the World list in 2019. This conversation is another Glocal Citizens gem where we take a seat on a coming of age and career tour with Muri from Ghana, across the US and back, across Africa. Where to find Muri and Talamus? On Talamus (http://www.talamushealth.com) On LInkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/in/murisiku-muri-raifu-md-mpa-faans-3622a587/) On Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/muri.raifu) On Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/brainoperator1/) What’s Muri lightening to? Fela Kuti (https://felakuti.com/) Bob Marley (https://www.bobmarley.com) Shatta Wale (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shatta_Wale) Sarkodie (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sarkodie_(rapper)) Talib Kweli (http://www.talibkweli.com/) Mos Def (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mos_Def) Art and science of interest— PCR Primers (https://www.khanacademy.org/science/biology/biotech-dna-technology/dna-sequencing-pcr-electrophoresis/a/polymerase-chain-reaction-pcr) Wangechi Mutu (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wangechi_Mutu) Kenyan Visual Artist Yinka Shonibare (http://yinkashonibare.com/) British-Nigerian Artist Sanford Biggers (http://sanfordbiggers.com/) Harlem-based Visual Artist Amoako Boafo (https://marianeibrahim.com/artists/44-amoako-boafo/biography/) Ghanaian Painter Dotum Popoola (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dotun_Popoola) Hyperrealist Artists in Nigeria (https://www.cnn.com/2018/04/06/africa/ken-nwadiogbu-hyperrealist-artist-nigeria-africa/index.html) Special Guest: Muri Raifu, MD.

    TRANS// CLASSLESS // QUEER // Performing Art and Activism in GHANA

    TRANS// CLASSLESS // QUEER // Performing Art and Activism in GHANA

    In this episode of Fem*Poem, Romina Achatz is in conversation with activist, multidisciplinary artist,  curator and artistic director of perfocraZe International Artists Residency (pIAR, Kumasi, Ghana), Va-Bene Elikem Fiatsi, also know as CrazinisT artisT. They talk about Performances, Politics of the Body, (Post)Colonialism, genderfluidity, human rights, the advantage of living without a fixed identity, but rather wanting to inventing oneself every day new, the Ghanaian LGBTQI+ Community and being publicly Trans in Ghana.

    Va- Bene Elikem Fiatsi was born 1981 in Ho (Ghana) and describes herself as a an avatar. Her* works investigate the „culturality“ of gender stereotypes and sexual misrepresentation, questioning the extreme quest for socio-cultural supremacy over marginalized people, political injustice, violence, vulnerabilities, human sense of mortality and objectification of otherness. However, crazinisT uses the  body as a thought provoking tool and material that confronts and exploits the stereotypical aesthetics of marginalized citizens within ‘so-called’ civilized societies while exploring ‘rituals of identity’, gender fluidity and the sense of belongingness. CrazinisT has been actively engaged in contemporary practices since 2012, traveling around the world, collaborating with countless artists, fighting for human justice with her art and everydaylife. She confronts not only the white supremacy with the history of slavery, of Colonialism and it’s cultural impact- including their ideas and invention of 2 genders.

    Artist statement:

    I believe performance is an embodiment of life, perhaps subtle but intensive and ephemeral, which could provide an intimate dialogue between the performer/s and the audience (co-performers). It is important using performance as a potent medium to re-examine our own colonial history from dynamic experiences. However, the subject of Gender, sexuality, race and being privileged  seem as residues from several colonial past, experiences and [post-religious] debates for autonomy, cultural authenticity and the politics of power.

    As an artist whose work provoke thoughts and emotions on our own sense of mortality and vulnerability, I engage the body into performative works of art as set of rituals that assists in evoking our continuity and discontinuity to the ‘Other’ and ‘Self’, trying to give new meanings to the concept ‘being’. While exploring the politics of Identity, class, gender, sexuality, human vulnerabilities, and our own sense of mortality, I present my body as a violation, taboo and pleasurable object of violence through simple but complexly layered rituals to my audience. In my performances, silence and meditation is to seduce the audience to participate in the habitual [shamanic] gestures by deeply evoking emotional dialogues as process and product of performance art, which at the same time collapses the walls between the audience and the performer. To be a shaman in my rituals is a metaphor of being an intermediate between the privileged and the marginalised, speaking the language of silence as an artistic responsibility to question the conscience of humanity.

    However, my investigations as an activist and artist employ experimental cross-disciplinary works, which cut across performances, installations, videos, sounds and photography while exploring the notions of [belongingness] and relationship between the body and the world. I seek to provoke and question the cultural frictions between gender performativity, race, sexual prejudice and its misrepresentations

    *“[sHe/it…]“ is my bio-political pronoun. Note: Any one/any institution can ‚responsibly‘ use any pronoun of their preference for me  otherwise just use „sHit“

    Jingle- Voice by multi- media artist Raphaela Salhofer

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