For some 30 years, Bartels has been working in the Ghanaian embassy in the United States as a secretary.
But a few hours later,
when a persistent ringing phone woke her up in the dead of the August
night, the 55-year-old found out she was much more than simply a
secretary.
At the other end of the
line was Bartels's cousin, from Otuam, a small fishing village on the
coast of Ghana. Excited and humble, he congratulated her on being the
new king of Otuam.
"I said, 'listen, it's 4
o'clock in the morning in the U.S., I am very tired, let me sleep,'"
remembers Bartels. "I thought he was trying to really play games with
me."
Peggielene Bartels
is a Ghanaian-born American citizen who became the first female king of
Otuam, a fishing village of about 7,000 people in Ghana, in 2008.
But this was no time for games.
The previous king of
Otuam, who was Bartels's uncle, had just died. The village elders, who
remembered Bartels from the times she'd visited with her mother, had
decided to anoint her as their new ruler.
After the initial shock,
Bartels decided to accept the kingship. Over the course of a few days,
she went from being plain old Peggielene Bartels, who had worked for
nearly three decades at the Ghanaian Embassy in the United States, to
becoming King Peggy -- the first female king of Otuam, reigning over
approximately 7,000 people.
"It never ever occurred
to me [that I'd be Otuam's king]," says Bartels, who's been living in
the United States since her early 20s. "I realized that on this earth,
we all have a calling. We have to be ready to accept it because helping
my people has really helped me a lot to know that I can really touch
their lives," she adds. "I would have really regretted it if I hadn't
really accept this calling."
Although she still works at the Ghanaian Embassy, Bartels uses all her holiday every year to spend a month in Otuam.
King is the traditional
title of Otuam's ruler, and Bartels says she's happy to be called a
king, rather than queen, because it means she can achieve more.
"Most of the time, a
king is the one who has all the executive power to do things, while the
queen is mostly in charge of the children's affairs and reporting to the
king," she says. "So I really love this."
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