Not to let work get in the way of a good
adventure, the team stopped outside of Wa for a look at one of the ancient
mosques of Ghana. It’s made from mud and sticks, and is reminiscent of the Mali
ones, yet maybe on a smaller scale (I haven’t seen the ones in Mali). It was
great.
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The mosque, looking into the women's entrance |
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Inside, it was very small, but it would fit many people at prayer time |
We got to enter (me through the female access of course) and even go to
the roof through a tiny opening. The local kids caught onto the sight of
cameras and went nuts. Can’t keep them away from the lense.
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Next door to the mosque |
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View of the local town from the roof |
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Exiting the roof through a small hole. and windy mud stairs backwards. quite the skill. |
A 16th century mosque, I didn't actually learn all that much about it but just enjoyed being a tourist. I looked it up to maybe shed some light or interesting facts on the mosque, but the best I could find is that it is "a very solemn place". Ghana has to work on it's online tourist presence a little bit... or I should listen more. But at least I didn't go AWOL...
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No shoes were harmed during filming |
After maybe half an hour investigating
the place, we set off in the convoy again. However our car was missing the two
journalists that had come along for the day…. So the security vehicle called
the convoy to a halt and we searched the town for the journos. I’m talking a
tiny village with a handful of houses. I couldn’t get my head around the fact
we’d lost two people in this small town. And they weren’t from here too, so I’m
sure they’d be noticed. After an hour of waiting, we found that they had caught
a bus back into town. Who knows why. There was mention that they probably had a
more lucrative story waiting for them in town. That is how the media works
here, you pay for the journalists. Crazy. So this was an interesting insight
into the media world!
The team was not happy, outraged at having lost an hour of time... even though we'd just spent the morning sightseeing. But we soon set off for more work site
inspections, (sans journalists).
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Camera spotted! posing starts. The children love tourists.
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Children and their toys.... and giant smiles |
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security escort courtesy of the local kids |
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Waiting for the journalists to appear... the town locals quite enjoyed the drama |
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