It has come out that Nana Gyensare Osei V, a chief of the Akwamu people, who oversees the residents of five towns across the Eastern Region, is a taxi driver in America.
In a short documentary by Barcroft.tv that was sighted by YEN.com.gh on the powerful life story of Osei, his double life of managing a throne and his taxi started after his brother died.
According to the chief who is known in his locality in America as Isaac Osei, his brother was the chief at Akwamu who died in 2006, causing Isaac Osei to become the new chief.
Before then, Isaac who is one of 19 children, had moved to New York in 1977 to make a better living for himself. He began driving a taxi and soon bought a medallion in 1982.
Things did not go on well in the search of greener pastures as the hardworking man ended up in many financial entanglements. At that low point in his life, Isaac Osei, underwent a divorce as well.
Life started to come together for Nana Gyensare V when he found another woman named Elizabeth Otolizz who got married to him.
Elizabeth saved Osei from all his financial troubles through hard work and diligence. Reports indicate that the two of them met at a small restaurant that Isaac had tried to put together just before 1990.
At the time the lovers met, she worked as a home health nurse, a newspaper delivery woman and a taxi driver all at the same time.
Together, the husband and wife started doing taxis. Through hard work and diligence, Elizabeth Otolizz and her husband turned their taxi driving business into a company in Manhattan, New York City, that is now growing into an empire.
The two call the firm Napasei Taxi Management Corporation and reports indicate that Elizabeth Otolizz runs it as the president while Nana Gyensare V himself serves as the vice president.
Speaking about how it is to run both the taxi business and settle family & property disputes back in Ghana, the chief indicated that he had to travel back and forth every time.
Nana Gyensare V added that though he gets worshipped as a king back in Ghana, he is treated like a normal 'nobody' when he is in America.
“When I’m here in New York, it’s a different thing. No one knows me,” Nana said.