Ghana Adventures Of Wapipi Jay Esewani Part 2 -
Most tourists would run. But this is —Wapipi is not most tourists. Remembering the Sankofa symbol, he held the drum high and played a clumsy rhythm. Thump. Pause. Thump-thump.
The dancer stopped.
By: The Accra Storyteller
A voice—ageless, genderless, and patient—spoke from the leaves: "You came for adventure. But adventure came to find you. The drum you carry holds the rhythm of a lost tribe. Take it to the W.E.B. Du Bois Memorial Centre in Accra. There, the final lock will open." ghana adventures of wapipi jay esewani part 2
As Wapipi approached, the stool hummed. The drum in his hands began to vibrate. Suddenly, the fabric on the loom wove itself into a pattern that depicted a man with Wapipi's exact face crossing a river of crocodiles. Most tourists would run
But this wasn't a pleasure cruise. In Part 2, our hero heard a rumor—a legend about a village that only appears when the water levels drop, revealing the skeletal remains of a pre-colonial settlement. Locals call it Ntumda Fo (The Land That Sleeps Under Water). The dancer stopped
Did you miss Part 1? Catch up on the journey from Kejetia to Kakum. And follow Wapipi Jay Esewani’s real-time travel log for updates on the sacred drum and the Kente prophecy.