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GHANA: Wesley Girls vs. Shafic Osman: A test of right, childhood and the rule of law itself – Kay Codjoe writes

GHANA: Wesley Girls vs. Shafic Osman: A test of right, childhood and the rule of law itself – Kay Codjoe writes

In every argument about Wesley Girls, fasting, hijab, and rights, we keep circling around the same loud questions. Should mission schools keep their traditions?

Should Muslim students adjust? Should the Ghana Education Service (GES) intervene? But the conversation has missed the quiet stories. The stories that do not trend on social media. The stories that rarely make the headlines because the children who lived them, who grew up, adapted and decided to keep their pain private.

If we are honest, every Ghanaian knows at least one child who had to bend in school in a way that broke something inside them.

There was the boy who came from a home where dawn prayers were like breathing. He entered a top school and stopped praying for years because people mocked him. Not because he was doing anything wrong. Because the school culture made his faith feel unsophisticated. He grew up thinking silence was safer than expression.

There was the girl whose mother sold cassava at the roadside. Her school insisted on expensive prayer books and ceremonial clothing for worship she did not believe in. She never confessed that her mother had to borrow money just to keep up with the school’s rituals. She sat through every service, numb, calculating how long before the next item on the list.

There was the Form Two student who fainted during morning devotion because she had been fasting secretly. She hid it from her housemistress because the school rule forbade fasting. The nurses revived her and assumed she had skipped breakfast. She lied to protect herself from punishment. She went back to class ashamed.

There was the Muslim boy in a co-ed school who was told he could pray behind the science block if nobody saw him. If a teacher passed by, he was to pretend he was stretching. He learned to pray in fear. Today, he has a job, a family, and a deep discomfort with public worship because school taught him that being seen with his forehead on the ground made people uneasy.

There are the Christian students in some Islamic-founded schools who sit on benches during Friday prayers, careful not to irritate anyone. There are the traditionalist students who hide their beads because their classmates call them names. There are the ones who pretend, day after day, to belong to religions they do not believe in because resisting would bring trouble.
This is the real Ghana. The Ghana everyone knows but avoids discussing.

So when we speak about Wesley Girls, we are not simply debating a rule. We are confronting a national habit. For decades, Ghana has allowed schools to imprint religious conformity on children without asking how those children survive it emotionally. Our society pretends the cost is small because the children mostly keep quiet. But quiet is not the same as fine.

The Constitution did not emerge to protect institutions. It emerged to protect people who lack power. Children are among the least powerful citizens we have. They cannot negotiate. They cannot protest. They cannot choose a different school when their parents have already paid. They carry expectations, anxieties, and identities into institutions that can crush them without even noticing.

This is why the conversation must shift. Let us stop pretending that enforcing religious rules in public schools is harmless. Let us admit that for some students, it creates lifelong discomfort with who they are. Let us recognise that every school rule touches a human life. And let us hold dear the truth that the public school system belongs to the Republic, not any denomination.

Ghana’s strength has never come from making everyone the same. It has come from allowing everyone to be themselves without fear. That is why the Constitution protects the right to believe, the right to disagree, the right to be different, and the right to say no to religious activities that do not reflect your identity.

The New Ghanaian does not judge a child for praying differently. The New Ghanaian does not insist that a child must fit a mould before she can belong. The New Ghanaian understands that the highest duty of a public institution is to include, not exclude.

This moment calls for honesty. Not every child has the courage to speak. Many will endure in silence, the same way generations did before them. But we, the adults of this republic, cannot keep pretending that silence equals consent. The child who is afraid to practice her religion at school is not undisciplined. She is unprotected
.
Ghana must not only stand by its Constitution. Ghana must stand by its children.

Wesley Girls is a spark, not a scandal. It is exposing the quiet truths we buried. And maybe, for the first time in a long time, we will finally build a public school system where every child walks in as themselves and walks out whole.

That is the Ghana we should be fighting for.

Kay Codjoe

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DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.

Source: MyJoyOnline | Read the Full Story…

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