Margaret Sarfo | |
Birth Date: | 26 January 1957 |
Resting Place: | Osu Cemetery |
Alma Mater: | University of Ghana |
Employer: | The MirrorGraphic Communications Group Limited |
Spouse: | Kojo Safo |
Children: | 4 |
Margaret Sarfo (pen name Peggy Oppong, née Odame; 26 January 1957 – 8 May 2014)[1] was a Ghanaian author and journalist. She worked with the Graphic Communications Group Limited rising through the ranks to become the Editor of The Mirror.[2] [3]
Sarfo was born in 1957 to Daniel Odame and his wife, of Mpraeso, Kwahu, in south Ghana.[1] She attended primary schools in Adabraka, Accra, followed by the Okuapeman Secondary School, Akropong in 1971 where she attained the General Certificate of Education (GCE), Ordinary and Advanced levels.[1] She enrolled at the University of Ghana in 1979, graduating with a BA (Hons) in English and Russian.[1] After a year studying in Russia,[1] she returned to the University of Ghana and obtained a Graduate Diploma and MPhil degrees in Communication Studies.[1] ..
Margaret Safo joined the then Graphic Cooperation for her national service. She became a permanent employment as a staff writer in the 2nd January,1987. She earned the honor of becoming the Deputy Editor of The Mirror on 14 May 1998 and became the Editor on 2 January 2003 in due course. Margaret Safo retired from the Graphics Communications Group in 2011 to write and publish her novels, including the following:
She was married to Mr. Kojo Safo after meeting him during her school days at the University of Ghana and joined him later in Nigeria in 1982; where she taught English Language at the Methodist Comprehensive High School in Ekiti State. They returned to Ghana three years afterwards.[2] She had for children;Mrs Sena Offei-Anim of Fidelity Bank, Tamale; Ms Sedina Safo of Peggy Oppong Books, Accra; Samuel Safo of the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, Kumasi and Mrs Dela Bonsu, Graphic Communication Group Limited.
Mrs Margaret Sarfo died at the 37 Military Hospital on May 8, 2014. She was laid to rest at the Osu Cemetery on Saturday, June 28. She left behind her husband and four children.[2] [8]