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Efua T. Sutherland: One of Africa’s Most Remarkable Women of the 20th Century

Efua Theodora Sutherland (born 27 June 1924 – 2 January 1996) also known as Efua Nyankoma; Efua Theodora Morgue; Efua Theodora Sutherland was a Fante playwright, director, dramatist, children’s author, poet, educationalist, researcher, child advocate, and cultural activist. Her works include the plays Foriwa (1962), Edufa (1967), and The Marriage of Anansewa (1975). She founded the Ghana Drama Studio, the Ghana Society of Writers, the Ghana Experimental Theatre, and a community project called the Kodzidan (Story House). As Ghana’s earliest playwright-director, she was an influential figure in the development of modern Ghanaian theatre, and helped to introduce the study of African performance traditions at university level. She was also a pioneering African publisher, establishing the company Afram Publications in Accra in the 1970s.

She was a cultural advocate for children from the early 1950s until her death, and played a role in developing educational curricula, literature, theatre and film for and about Ghanaian children. Her 1960 photo essay Playtime in Africa, co-authored with Willis E. Bell, highlighted the centrality of play in children’s development and was followed in the 1980s by her leadership in the development of a model public children’s parks system for the country.

Sutherland’s pan-Africanism was reflected in her support for its principles and her collaborations with African and African diaspora personalities in a range of disciplines, including interactions with Chinua AchebeAma Ata AidooMaya AngelouW. E. B. Du Bois and Shirley Graham Du BoisMargaret BusbyTom FeelingsLangston HughesMartin Luther King and Coretta Scott KingFemi OsofisanFélix Morisseau-LeroyEs’kia MphahleleWole Soyinka and Ngugi wa Thiong’o. Having in 1980 written an original proposal for a pan-African historical theatre festival in Ghana as a cultural vehicle for bringing together Africans around the globe, Sutherland was the inspiration behind the biennial Pan-African festival of theatre arts known as PANAFEST, first held in 1992.

Efua Sutherland died in Accra aged 71 in 1996.

Education and early career

She was born as Efua Theodora Morgue in Cape CoastGold Coast (now Ghana), where she studied teaching at St Monica’s Training College in Mampong. She then went to England to continue her education, earning a BA degree at Homerton CollegeCambridge University — one of the first African women to study there — and studying linguistics at the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London.

Returning to Ghana in 1951, she taught first at Fijai Secondary School at Sekondi, then at St. Monica’s School (1951–54), and also began writing for children. She would later say: “I started writing seriously in 1951. I can even remember the precise time. It was at Easter. I had been thinking about the problem of literature in my country for a very long time. I was on teaching practice with my students once in a village and I got positively angry about the kind of literature that the children were being forced into. It had nothing to do with their environment, their social circumstances or anything. And so I started writing.”

In 1954, she married Bill Sutherland, an African American and Pan-Africanist, who in 1953 had moved to Ghana. They had three children – educationalist Esi Sutherland-Addy, architect Ralph Sutherland, and lawyer Amowi Sutherland Phillips) – and she helped her husband in the establishment of a school in the Transvolta area.

Literary production

When the Gold Coast became the independent nation of Ghana in 1957, Efua Sutherland organised the Ghana Society of Writers (later the Ghana Association of Writers), which in 1960 brought out the first issue of the literary magazine Okyeame, with Sutherland eventually becoming editor.

Sutherland experimented creatively with storytelling and other dramatic forms from indigenous Ghanaian traditions. Her plays were often based on traditional stories, but also borrowed from Western literature, transforming African folktale conventions into modern dramatic theatre techniques. Many of her poems and other writings were broadcast on The Singing Net, a popular radio programme started by Henry Swanzy, and were subsequently published in his 1958 anthology Voices of Ghana. The 1960 first issue of Okyeame magazine contains her short story “Samantaase”, a retelling of a folktale. Her best known plays are Edufa (1967) (based on Alcestis by Euripides), Foriwa (1967), and The Marriage of Anansewa (1975).

In 1958, Sutherland founded the Ghana Experimental Theatre, which was based at the Ghana Drama Studio built by Sutherland and launched by President Kwame Nkrumah in 1963 with Joe de Graft as its first director. Sited in downtown Accra, the Drama Studio became a training ground for a range of theatre practitioners from all over Africa. In 1962, she joined the staff of the new School of Music and Drama, headed by J. H. Kwabena Nketia. In 1963, when Sutherland took on the role of Research Associate at the Institute of African Studies, University of Ghana, she brought along with her the Ghana Drama Studio, which became an off-campus training space, called the University of Ghana Drama Studio. Sutherland, in addition to her field research and teaching in African Dramatic Forms, was a core member of the team that conceptualised and established the School of Performing Arts. Also concerned with traditional storytelling and developing community theatre, she founded the Kodzidan (Story House) in Ekumfi-Atwia, Central Region, which was recognised worldwide as a pioneering model in theatre for development.

Sutherland mentored and was in turn inspired by many of Ghana’s accomplished writers, including Ama Ata AidooKofi Anyidoho and Meshack Asare.

In the early 1970s, Sutherland co-founded the publishing company Afram Publications, which was incorporated in 1973, and in March 1974 began operating from her private studio in “Araba Mansa”, her compound at Dzorwulu, Accra. Sutherland remained involved in Afram’s editorial work until her death.

Cultural activism and pan-Africanism

Sutherland’s work attracted the attention of creatives from the global African world. Maya Angelou’s fifth volume of memoirs All God’s Children Need Traveling Shoes testifies to the emotional support and entrée into Ghanaian society afforded her in the 1960s by Efua Sutherland who became a close friend.

Sutherland had met Dr W. E. B. Du Bois when she led the Ghana delegation to the 1958 Afro-Asian Writers Conference in Tashkent (now the capital of Uzbekistan). She was to personally intervene, at his death in Accra, Ghana in 1963, to support Mrs Shirley Du Bois. In the 1980s Sutherland was instrumental in establishing the W.E.B. Du Bois Memorial Centre for Pan African Culture and mausoleum at the Du Bois’ Accra home.

In 1980, Sutherland wrote a paper entitled “Proposal for a Historical Drama Festival in Cape Coast”, underscoring the significance she attached to connections between Africa and its Diaspora. This inspired the venture that came to fruition as the state-sponsored PANAFEST, the first Pan-African Historical Theater Festival, which was held in Cape Coast, Elmina and Accra, Ghana, from 12 to 19 December 1992, under the theme “The Re-emergence of African Civilization”.

Advocacy for children

Sutherland presided over Ghana’s ratification of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (the first country to do so) and chaired the National Commission on Children from 1983 to 1990, a period that marked the most vigorous and comprehensive child advocacy on a national scale in the history of Ghana. In this capacity, she steered a number of innovative programmes, including a Child Education Fund to support underserved communities, the Mobile Technical Workshop extending science learning to poor or rural children, and the securing of land to seed model child-centred park and library complexes around the country. She laid the groundwork for the Mmofra Foundation, active since 1997 as a civic organisation dedicated to enriching the cultural and intellectual lives of all children in Ghana. In 2012 the Playtime in Africa Initiative, inspired by her eponymous 1961 book, was launched to revitalise child-friendly public space advocacy.

Her final most significant work at the Institute of African Studies, Legon, was her Children’s Drama Development Project, which was aimed at developing materials, methods and staff for programmes of creative dramatics in and out of school. Sutherland was invited by UNICEF to join a worldwide network of scholars to consider a code of human rights for the protection of children.

Florence Laast, founder of Accra’s St Martin de Porres School, speaking of how her own life had been impacted by Sutherland’s mentorship, described her as “one of the greatest thinkers of our time” who believed that “the home is our first classroom, and our parents the first teachers”.

How to Develop a “Poor” Town with a Heart of Gold and a passion for the people; Lessons from Efua Nyankoma Sutherland

Sutherland applied her prodigious energies to the study of Ghanaian folklore. “I’m on a voyage of discovery,” she said. “I’m discovering my own people.” In Ghanaian society, funerals were the occasion for public entertainment to accompany the vigil for the deceased. She attended these and other traditional ceremonies. Sutherland’s quest for folk tales led her to the small, impoverished Fante village of Atwia, with a population of 700, in the Central Region of Ghana. She stayed four months on her initial visit in 1964. The village was famous for its storytelling, but the visitor was particularly impressed by the community’s determination to provide its children with an elementary education. Nonetheless, most of its youngsters departed for Ghana’s cities once they reached their teenage years. With the aid of the village elders, Sutherland moved to revitalize the small community’s cultural life, beginning with the construction of a village theater. Said Sutherland, “I have had a long-standing hunch that the educated African had better get with the uneducated communities which form the bulk of his society in every African country at present.”

Sutherland contributed money from her research funds to buy building materials, and the villagers themselves provided the labor. Soon, emigrants from the village who had settled in urban Ghana returned to contribute their skills as masons and carpenters. During the construction, Sutherland brought University of Ghana students from the departments of literature and drama to the village for visits. The seminars in which they participated gave the villagers in this remote setting an indication of what the finished theater would add to their community. In June 1966, the community theater was completed. It received the Fante name Kodzidan (The Story House). An initial performance a month later attracted all the participants in the International Music Festival Conference then being held at Accra.

With Sutherland taking the lead, Atwia began an economic as well as a cultural revival. The exodus of teenagers from the village slowed as new developments such as a theater ensemble and a corn mill for processing grain made Atwia a lively center for the surrounding area. For Sutherland, the entire Atwia adventure was an important lesson for the urban inhabitants of Ghana and other parts of Africa. They could now see how to revitalize the uneducated communities around them.

In a 1968 interview, Sutherland reflected on her own need to learn about “hidden areas … important areas of Ghanaian life, which I just wasn’t in touch with.” Her forays into the countryside had given this city-bred intellectual a new perspective on her nation’s life: “I’ve just made a very concentrated effort to make it untrue that I do not know my people and I know them now.” That same year, Sutherland founded the Kusum Players (Kusum Agoromba). This group of professional actors with its home at the Ghana Drama Studio toured the country presenting plays to groups of various ages. Most of the plays it performed were by Sutherland and several were in the Akan language.

Sutherland responded with dismay to an interviewer’s questions in 1972 as to whether “you are the pivot around which all the drama in Accra circulates.” Nonetheless, she admitted to managing several plays at the Drama Studio, while also organizing poetry readings and editing Okyeame. At the same time, she remained active in promoting experimental village theaters. “I somehow get the energy to do it,” she said. “I suppose it is a sense of joy that I have in doing it that keeps me going.” She was the first well-known media personality in Ghana, working in both radio and television.

Legacy

  • Following the 1992 construction of the National Theatre of Ghana on the site occupied by the Drama Studio, a replica of the Studio was constructed on the campus of the University of Ghana as part of the facilities of the School of Performing Arts. On the occasion of the 50th anniversary of the university, the Studio was renamed the Efua Sutherland Drama Studio.
  • A 12-acre space in central Accra reserved as a children’s park in central Accra through the advocacy of Efua Sutherland and it is named after her.
  • Efua Sutherlandstraat is one of a number of streets in an area of AmsterdamThe Netherlands, named after significant women writers and activists.
  • Active since 1997, Mmofra Foundation was established by Efua Sutherland in her final years and is dedicated to enriching the cultural and intellectual lives of all children in Ghana. For over 20 years, thousands of children have benefited from its literary, nature-sensitive and creativity-oriented programmes.
  • A green cultural space/park called Mmofra Place in the Dzorwulu area of Accra is open to children of all backgrounds, thanks to the estate of Efua T. Sutherland.
  • Efua Sutherland Hall is a student hall of residence at Ashesi University, Berekuso, Ghana.
  • The Legacy of Efua Sutherland: Pan African Cultural Activism, a volume in her honour was published in 2007, edited by Anne V. Adams and Esi Sutherland-Addy. Contributors are: Anne Adams, Esi Sutherland-AddyAma Ata AidooMaya AngelouKofi Anyidoho, Sandy Arkhurst, William Branch, Margaret BusbyJohn Collins, David Donkor, James Gibbs, Comfort Caulley-Hanson, Biodun Jeyifo, Robert July, Mabel Komasi, Florence Laast, John Lemly, Jurgen Martini, Michael McMullan, Penina MlamaFemi Osofisan, Sandra Richards, Amowi Sutherland Phillips, Ola Rotimi, Margaret Watts, Henry Wellington, and Vivian Windley.
  • Writer, poet, lecturer and diplomat Abena P. A. Busia devoted a chapter to Efua Sutherland (“To the Roadmaker: Fragments of a Meditation”) in her volume of poems Traces of a Life: A Collection of Elegies and Praise Poems (Ayebia Clarke Publishing, 2008).
  • Sutherland was honoured with a Google Doodle on 27 June 2018, which would have been her 94th birthday.

Works briefly annotated

Sutherland experimented creatively with storytelling and other dramatic forms from indigenous Ghanaian traditions. Her plays were often based on traditional stories, but also borrowed from Western literature, transforming African folktale conventions into modern dramatic theatre techniques. Many of her poems and other writings were broadcast on The Singing Net, a popular radio programme started by Henry Swanzy, and were subsequently published in his 1958 anthology Voices of Ghana. The 1960 first issue of Okyeame magazine contains her short story “Samantaase”, a retelling of a folktale. Her best known plays are Edufa (1967) (based on Alcestis by Euripides), Foriwa (1967), and The Marriage of Anansewa (1975).

In Edufa the eponymous character seeks to escape death by manipulating his wife, Ampoma, to the death that has been predicted for him by oracles. In the play, Sutherland uses traditional Ghanaian beliefs in divination and the interaction of traditional and European ceremonies in order to portray Edufa as a rich and successful modern person who is held in high esteem by his people. The play uses traditional ritual and symbolism, but the story is told in the context of Edufa’s capitalistic abandonment of his moral commitment to his wife, while his wife and the other women favour the morality of the past.

In Foriwa the eponymous character, who is the daughter of the queen mother of Kyerefaso, and Labaran, a graduate from northern Ghana who lives a simple life, bring enlightenment to Kyerefaso, a town that has become backward and ignorant because the town’s elders refuse to learn new ways. Foriwa’s main theme is the alliance of old traditions and new ways. The play has a national theme to promote a new national spirit in Ghana that would encourage openness to new ideas and inter-ethnic cooperation.

The Marriage of Anansewa: A Storytelling Drama (1975) is considered Sutherland’s most valuable contribution to Ghanaian drama and theater. In the play, she transmutes traditional Akan tales of Ananse Spider (Anansesem) into a new dramatic structure, which she calls Anansegoro.[29] Nyamekye (a version of Alice in Wonderland), one of her later plays, shows how she was influenced by the folk opera tradition.

Sutherland was also an author of works for children. These works included two animated rhythm plays, Vulture! Vulture! and Tahinta (1968), and two pictorial essays, with photographs by Willis Bell (1924–2000): Playtime in Africa (1960) and The Roadmakers (1961). Many of her short stories can be described as rhythmic prose poems. Voice in the Forest, a book of the folklore and fairytales of Ghana, was published in 1983.

Playtime in Africa has been described “a groundbreaking book on Ghana’s play culture”, which Sutherland considered important for in developing young minds and bodies. Not only was it published three years after Ghana’s independence it was the first documentation of children’s play culture in Ghana. The book presented the nuances of children’s lives to forefront of society and it also ushered in an indigenous movement in writing for children, along with publishing and development through drama for children.

Voice in the Forest is a text that powerfully portrays the political, economic, and social complexity of colonialism and cultural relativism in Ghana in regards to children. The text is a retelling of an Akan folktale and deals with traditional cultural values through the role of the trickster figure. It tells the story of a man named Bempong who unknowingly discovers a Samanta, a wood nymph, and brings her back to his village. Initially Bempong believes the Samanta is a lost girl, wandering alone through the forest. For the first half of the story the Samanta refuses to speak. It is not until Bempong cuts off her hair, in an effort to tame her outgrown hair, that Bempong realizes this girl is a Samanta, a wood nymph—”a creature of strange magical powers”. Finding her voice in a moment of anger, the Samanta curses the village, leaving them with no food until she has her hair back. The hero of the book is Afrum, Bempong’s son, who is regarded as the village fool. Sutherland’s choice to celebrate the fool is a part of a longer lineage of uses of the trickster figure in African literature.

Honours

In 2020, at an event marking International Women’s Day, Sutherland was honoured by 3Music Awards for her achievements in the entertainment industry.

In March 2024, the estate of Efua Sutherland launched a centenary celebration of her life and legacy in Accra, unveiling plans to commemorate the year in which she would have turned 100.

Selected bibliography

  • with Willis E. BellThe Roadmakers: a picture book of Ghana(for children). Accra: Ghana Information Services / London: Newman Neame, 1961, 1963
  • with Willis E. Bell, Playtime in Africa (for children), New York: Atheneum, 1962
  • Edufa (play), Longman, 1967
  • Foriwa: A Play in Three Acts, Accra-Tema: State Publishing Corporation, 1967
  • Tahinta (1968)
  • Vulture! Vulture! and Tahina: Two Rhythm Plays, Tema: Ghana Publishing House, 1968
  • Odasani (play), Accra: Anowuo Educational Publications, 1969
  • with Willis Bell, The Original Bob: The Story of Bob Johnson, Ghana’s Ace Comedian (play), Accra: Anowuo Educational Publications, 1970
  • Anansegoro: Story-Telling Drama in Ghana, Accra: Afram, 1975
  • The Marriage of Anansewa (play), London: Longman, 1977, 1980; Washington, DC: Three Continents Press, 1980
  • The Voice in the Forest: A Tale from Ghana, Philomel Books, 1983
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Efua_Sutherland
https://www.encyclopedia.com/women/encyclopedias-almanacs-transcripts-and-maps/sutherland-efua-1924-1996

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