On the surface, the Wesley Girls case looks harmless—almost noble.
A student wants to fast, a school says no, and suddenly the entire nation is debating “religious freedom.” Simple, right? Not quite.
What many people don’t realize is that this is exactly how Trojan Horses work: they arrive looking peaceful, reasonable, even righteous… until the gates open and the real agenda spills out.
Ghana’s religious Peace was not built in A COURTROOM, it is built on MUTUAL RESPECT.
For generations, Ghanaians have lived with a simple understanding: “I respect your religious space, you respect my religious space; We respect each other.”
This understanding has kept Ghana out of the religious conflicts that have fractured countries with similar diversity.
Christians do not walk into mosques demanding hymns.
Muslims do not stand in churches insisting on Friday prayers.
Traditionalists do not force libations on congregations.
This is not merely tolerance. It is cultural intelligence.
Wesley Girls’ Senior High School is an institution with a Methodist identity — one that predates even Ghana’s independence.
Parents who send their daughters there understand this identity, accept it, and expect it.
The petition before the Supreme Court, however, seeks to redefine this identity in the name of religious rights.
The question is not whether Muslim students deserve respect. They absolutely do.
The question is whether every religious space must now be stripped of its distinctiveness to avoid legal challenge.
If Wesley Girls is forced to remove, weaken, or compromise its Methodist identity, what is next?
• Will Catholic Schools be sued for rosaries and mass obligations?
• Will Islamic schools be dragged to court for enforcing hijab?
• Will churches be required to halt worship because non-members object?
• Will mosques be compelled to eliminate calls to prayer because it offends neighbours?
These may sound extreme — until you examine the history of countries where such litigation was allowed to snowball.
Lebanon once enjoyed harmony among Christians, Sunnis, Shias, and Druze.
Then came grievances about control of schools, identity of institutions, and religious rights within shared spaces.
Today, the country remains fractured and unstable.
India was celebrated as a diverse mosaic.
A series of seemingly harmless disputes over religious spaces escalated into one of the world’s most polarized societies.
Nigeria saw tensions rise through small disputes in schools and public institutions long before extremism took root.
The story is always the same: A small argument about rights grows into a national debate.
National debate grows into mistrust.
Mistrust evolves into division.
Division becomes extremism.
Every religious conflict begins with a “simple issue” that no one thought could escalate.
The Wesley Girls case may appear isolated, but its approach raises uncomfortable questions.
Why skip dialogue? Why skip mediation? Why go straight to the highest court in the land?
Why ignite the most sensitive issue in Ghana with no attempt at community resolution?
Who benefits if Christian institutions lose their identity?
Who benefits if Muslims begin feeling cornered or disrespected? Who benefits if mutual suspicion replaces mutual respect?
Even without accusing anyone, the logic is clear:
A divided Ghana is easier to manipulate — politically, ideologically, and economically.
History has shown that when you weaken a society’s unifying pillars, the collapse begins quietly; rights matter.
But rights exercised without cultural understanding become weapons instead of protections.
Mission schools must maintain their identity.
Islamic schools must preserve theirs.
Traditional spaces must protect their uniqueness.
The Wesley Girls case is bigger than classroom rules and fasting practices.
It is a test of whether Ghana will remain a country where religious diversity is anchored in respect — or whether we will join the long list of nations destabilized by avoidable tension.
If the petitioner wins, Ghana may wake up to a new reality where every school’s long-standing culture, rules, and identity can be legally overridden in the name of individual “rights.”
And once you can force a mission school to bend on its religious ethos, you’ve created a legal pathway to force mosques to accept practices they disagree with, or traditional schools to discard their norms.
Today it’s fasting.
Tomorrow, it’s dress codes, prayer times, doctrinal studies, or control of school culture.
A country that has thrived on respect may suddenly be governed by court mandates—the fastest route to resentment and division.
But the courts are Harmless, Kwaku.
That’s exactly what the Greeks said before they rolled the horse inside the gates.





































































