Ghana Youth Advocate: Strong Homes Build Strong Futures
Mathias Tulasi is calling on Ghanaian families, churches, and schools to prioritize mentorship and intentional parenting to break cycles of poverty. His message: the strength of a society starts in the home.
Youth advocate Mathias Tulasi believes Ghana's future depends on what happens inside homes today.
In an interview with the Ghana News Agency, Tulasi made a powerful case for deliberate parenting and structured mentorship as the foundation for youth success. He argued that many challenges facing young Ghanaians stem from weak family structures and inadequate guidance during crucial developmental years.
"The home is everything," Tulasi said. "If the home fails, the child becomes a victim, and poverty continues from one generation to another."
The literacy advocate, who mentors young people in Ho, Ghana, emphasized that good parenting requires intentional planning and discipline. He challenged families to cultivate positive values in children even when financial resources are limited, rejecting "anything goes" attitudes that he says harm development.
Tulasi's approach to mentorship extends beyond traditional one-on-one relationships. He credits teachers, senior colleagues, and books as his own mentors, calling books "silent mentors" that expose readers to wisdom from accomplished people across history.
"When you read about people who failed and succeeded, you are motivated to persevere," he explained. His own journey with literacy transformed how he views education as a tool for breaking generational cycles.
The mentor is calling for structured guidance programs in schools from upper primary through senior high to complement formal education. He believes every Ghanaian should master basic literacy and numeracy as fundamental rights, not privileges.
The Ripple Effect
Tulasi's vision reaches beyond individual success to collective transformation. He's urging parents, churches, traditional chiefs, schools, media outlets, and political leaders to make mentorship a shared priority.
His call addresses practical concerns too. Tulasi links many social problems among youth, including drug involvement, directly to lack of education, poverty, and weak home support systems. By strengthening families and mentorship networks, communities can prevent these issues before they start.
He even advocates for mentorship in marriage preparation, noting that many couples struggle because they enter relationships with unrealistic expectations. His message to partners: view your resources as shared family assets and invest in understanding what healthy relationships require.
The response to his message has been encouraging, with educators and community leaders across Ghana recognizing the need for coordinated efforts. Several schools are already exploring how to integrate more mentorship opportunities into their programs.
Ghana's future looks brighter when communities invest in their youngest members with intention and care.
Based on reporting by Google News - Ghana Development
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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