Accra’s rapid growth and cosmopolitan energy are quietly pushing the Ga language toward the margins, sparking fears of cultural erasure in Ghana’s capital. As Twi and English dominate schools, markets, and public life, Ga-speaking children are increasingly taught another language as their “local” tongue, even in their native Ga communities. Linguists and cultural leaders warn that this loss of prestige and institutional support mirrors patterns of language extinction seen across Africa. In response, Ga traditional authorities, youth groups, and city officials are mounting a revival push, from compulsory Ga instruction in schools to restoring Ga visibility in public spaces. At stake is more than language—it is memory, identity, and Accra’s historical soul.
The Africa Report










