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King Peggy Bartels      

King of Otuam, Ghana; Co-Author of "King Peggy: An American Secretary, Her Royal Destiny, and the Inspiring Story of How She Changed an African Village"

Peggielene Bartels was born in Ghana in 1953 and moved to Washington, D.C., in her early twenties to work at Ghana's embassy. She became an American citizen in 1997. In 2008, she was chosen to be King of Otuam, a Ghanaian village of 7,000 souls on the west coast of Africa. A devout Christian, she lives in Silver Spring, MD, still works at the embassy, and spends several weeks each year in Ghana.

In 2008, Peggieliene Bartels received a phone call that would change her life. Working as a secretary at the Embassy of Ghana in Washington, DC, Peggy was told she had been chosen King of Otuam, a fishing village of 7,000 people in Ghana, half a world away.

Born in Ghana and now a naturalized U.S. citizen, Bartels had never even lived in Otuam. She had visited relatives there from time to time, but she was not prepared for the news that she had been chosen to succeed her uncle, the late king. Going back for centuries, all of the kings had been men.

Upon arriving for her crowning ceremony, she discovered the dire reality: there was no running water, no doctor, and no high school, and many of the village elders were stealing the town's funds. To make matters worse, her uncle (the late king) was sitting in a morgue awaiting a proper funeral in the royal palace, which was in ruins. The longer she waited to bury him, the more she risked incurring the wrath of her ancestors.

As the first female ruler of Otuam, it was clear she had her work cut out for her. She soon began to suspect that they had chosen her specifically because she lived so far away –and, as a woman, she would be weak and not able to change the legacy of corruption.

What they got instead was a headstrong, decidedly modern female king.

She set to work using funds from her own modest salary to rebuild the palace for the proper funeral. She rejuvenated her royal council to include people she trusted and turned her attention to improving the lives of her community members.

She worked to raise funds and donors to bring a water system to Otuam, where children as young as 5 years old were having to walk miles to fetch fresh water. Land fees –which had for years gone uncollected or into the wrong hands - now go directly into an account in a rural bank opened in her village.

The next project is to build a high school for students who have finished ninth grade.

An important part of her mission as King of Otuam is to bring empowerment to women. Peggy says, "I truly believe that the future of Africa lies in the hands of its women. Women, who nurture the children and take care of resources for the entire family, must be educated to bring these gifts to their communities. In Africa, more and more women each year are entering university, politics, and business. I hope that more women will become kings like me."

She is Co-Author of a book about her story, called King Peggy: An American Secretary, Her Royal Destiny, and the Inspiring Story of How She Changed an African Village.

She now juggles two lives — from the palace in Otuam and from Washington, D.C., where until recently, she still drove a 1992 Honda Accord.

Speech Topics


King Peggy: From Secretary to King

Nana Amuah-Afenyi VI is Peggy Bartels' new title, but she is better known as King Peggy. This straight-talking powerhouse is the first woman in her fishing community of 7,000 people in Ghana's Central Region to be anointed a king, or "nana."

The story of her journey from American secretary to leader of 7,000 people half a world away is not only astonishing, it's uplifting, empowering and not without humor. Peggy proves that real life challenges and triumphs are often stranger than fiction, and that it is possible to effect change- even in the most inflexible and demanding of circumstances.

In changing Otuam, Peggy was herself transformed, from an ordinary secretary to the heart and hope of her community. King Peggy can speak with her co author, Eleanor Herman.

News


Author and female king to share her story at the Weinberg Center
Peggielene Bartels, better known as King Peggy, is a secretary at the Ghanian Embassy in Washington. In 2008, she was chosen to be King of Otuam, her hometown in Ghana. She turned the story of that journey into a book with the help of co-author Eleanor Herman.
Queen Latifah To Play King Peggy - Based On Secretary-Turned ...
King Peggy & Queen Latifah. File this one under "unconfirmed" for now. According to a number of UK media outlets, Queen Latifah is attached to star in a biopic ...
The American secretary who became king: A woman's journey to ...
For 30 years Peggy Bartels was a secretary in the U.S. -- until she was asked to take over from her uncle as king of a Ghanaian village.

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