Larry Traveller
Larry Traveller is a Ghanaian writer, poet, visionary storyteller, and Pan-African activist committed to unearthing buried truths and restoring the dignity of a continent long misrepresented. His work stands at the intersection of memory, resistane, and cultural resurrection-where oral tradition meets archival research and where the past is not merely remembered but reawakened.
As Co-Founder and Executive Director of Exodus to Africa Limited and the Exodus to Africa Foundation, Traveller leads a revolutionary mission to reconnect African descendants across the diaspora with their ancestral homeland-not as tourists but as builders, returnees, and co-authors of Africa's unfinished story. His advocacy blends grassroots mobilization, digital innovation, and cultural diplomacy, driven by the belief that Africa's liberation is incomplete without its scattered children.
When Africa Remembered Its Name is Larry's debut historical work-a vivid and poetic excavation of Ghana's first President, Kwame Nkrumah, and the sabotage of his dream. Through meticulously reconstructed scenes, declassified documents, ancestral rituals, and imagined reckonings, the book exposes the global forces behind the 1966 coup and honors those who refused to forget.
Larry writes with the fire of a griot and the precision of a historian. His voice echoes that of a generation raised in exile, silence, and contradiction-but determined to reclaim the narrative. Whether speaking in marketplaces, on academic panels, or through digital platforms, he invites Africans everywhere to remember boldly, speak truthfully, and walk forward with ancestral clarity.
He lives between Accra, memory, and the rising dream of a united Africa.
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