Colin Kaepernick plays American football
National Football League quarterback, Colin Kaepernick traces his ancestry to Ghana.
The 29 year old American footballer visited Ghana on July 4 while many Americans were attending celebrations with endless food and music.
READ ALSO: Colin Kaepernick visited some truly historic sites in Ghana to rediscover himself
On his visit to Ghana,Collin went to the Municipal Hospital in Keta, a village in Atito, President Kwame Nkrumah’s Memorial, and toured Cape Coast Castle.
According to the football star, he traveled to find his “personal independence”.
The 29-year-old, who played for the San Francisco 49ers last year, posted a video on Twitter asking: “How can we truly celebrate independence on a day that intentionally robbed our ancestors of theirs?”
Here is why he was nominated
Colin Kaepernick last played in an NFL game on Jan. 1. But over the past 11 months, he’s exerted more influence on American society than any of the stars lighting up television screens on Sundays.
A silent protest that began in 2016, when Kaepernick started kneeling during the national anthem to call attention to police brutality and racial injustice, grew into a social movement that highlighted the nation’s cultural divide, roiled powerful institutions from the NFL to the White House, and forced us all to grapple with difficult questions about protest, patriotism and free speech—issues many would rather ignore, let alone face as part of their weekend entertainment.
READ ALSO: Anthem protest starter inks rich book deal
As the controversy mushroomed this year, Kaepernick declined to speak about his role, but paid a heavy price for taking on the most popular sport in the U.S.
Despite boasting talent and credentials that surpass those of many of the journeymen quarterbacks signed this year, Kaepernick found himself out of work; front offices around the league decided they were better off without the distraction.
In October, he filed a collusion grievance against the NFL, arguing that he had been blackballed by its owners. He’s set to become the first star athlete since the Vietnam era to lose his career because of his beliefs.
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