From spiritual connections to survival reality: Why historical diaspora make emotional relocations to Ghana - and the brutal truth about the difference between African diaspora with family ties versus descendants of the transatlantic slave trade who kiss the ground at slave rivers, feel ancestor spirits at Cape Coast dungeons, and move based on escaping systemic racism without asking how they'll make money, raise children, or survive when the ancestral connection fades and bills arrive in a country where salaries don't match Western pay and jobs require networking not applications.
In this raw episode of Konnected Minds, host Derrick Abaitey sits down with Ivy Prosper - former social media manager for Ghana's Year of Return secretariat and diaspora relocation expert - who dismantles the dangerous "follow your ancestral calling to Africa" mentality keeping diasporans shocked when they land with spiritual feelings but no income plan, when the Diaspora Africa Forum (the only embassy for diaspora recognized by the African Union and based behind the Du Bois Center in Ghana) distinguishes between historical diaspora descended from enslaved Africans versus African diaspora with direct birth or parental connections to the continent, and when the pressures of living under systemic racism create such powerful emotional pulls to "go home" that people ignore logical questions about employment, salary differences, and whether kissing the ground at Assin Manso slave river translates into sustainable living when 90% of jobs in Ghana won't pay what you earned abroad unless you're recruited as a country manager with negotiating power to demand foreign currency salary, housing, and a car.
Critical revelations include:
The historical diaspora versus African diaspora distinction: the Diaspora Africa Forum (recognized by the African Union, based behind Du Bois Center in Ghana) defines historical diaspora as descendants of the transatlantic slave trade with no direct lineage, while African diaspora have birth or parental/grandparental ties to the continent - and the relocation experiences are completely different
Why historical diaspora make more emotional decisions: centuries of disconnect create a feeling of not knowing where you're from and wanting to connect with home - the desire to be with your people and escape systemic racism overrides practical planning
The systemic racism escape fantasy: the pressures of living in systems built on racism are so painful that you want to go somewhere you feel like home, where people look like you and nobody says "I don't like you because you're black" because everyone else is black
The spiritual connection reality: people kiss the ground when they land, feel ancestors' spirits at Door of No Return, Cape Coast dungeons, Elmina dungeons, and Assin Manso slave river where the last bath happened before people were shipped off
The cameraman's spirit encounter: a Ghanaian cameraman filming diasporans at Assin Manso slave river felt like somebody was grabbing his leg in the water - he looked and nobody was there, he believes it was a spirit
The relationship relocation parallel: moving to Ghana based only on emotion is like staying with someone who treats you badly because you love them - you ignore the logical side that supersedes the emotional feeling
The questions emotion blocks: when you're thinking about the spiritual connection, you're not asking how will I make money, how will I build a life, how will I take care of my children - those logical thought processes don't come in when emotion dominates
Why Ghana is not a place to come looking for jobs: you can get a job, but 90% of jobs won't pay the same as America, Canada, or UK - if you're a secretary or admin worker, your salary will be drastically lower than what you earned abroad
The only way to get Western-level salary: be recruited for a high-level position like country manager at a big corporation (Unilever, Nestle) where you have negotiating power to demand foreign currency salary, housing, and a car before you relocate
The money-runs-out trap: people come to Ghana not looking for jobs, spend all their money, then either have to find work quickly or go back home - because they didn't research what the country offers for careers and income before relocating
Guest: Ivy Prosper - Former Social Media Manager, Year of Return Secretariat (Ghana Tourism Authority)
Host: Derrick Abaitey