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Ebo Noah is a young Ghanaian prophet whose apocalyptic flood warning sent hundreds of followers—some from as far as Liberia—rushing to wooden arks he claimed would save them. When the world didn’t end on December 25th, he announced that God had “postponed” the destruction after hearing his prayers, sparking outrage, arrests, a burned ark, and even a surprise rap performance on a national stage. In this episode, we trace how one prophecy spiraled into a national spectacle, a legal crackdown, and a cultural moment uniquely shaped by Ghana’s long, complicated history with doomsday predictions.

Ebo Noah—born Evans Eshun in 1995—rose from TikTok obscurity to national notoriety in Ghana after declaring that a catastrophic global flood would begin on December 25, 2025. Acting on what he described as divine instruction, he built eight to ten large wooden arks with the help of local fishermen and urged followers to donate, fast, and even sell their belongings to secure a place aboard. Hundreds of believers abandoned their homes and traveled to ark sites in Elmina and Kumasi, convinced they were witnessing the final days.

When the flood failed to materialize, Ebo Noah claimed that his prayers had persuaded God to “postpone” the apocalypse, a declaration that triggered public anger, a burned ark, and accusations of fraud—especially after reports circulated that he had purchased a luxury Mercedes-Benz with donated funds. Days later, he appeared onstage at the Rapperholic 2025 concert, rapping alongside superstar Sarkodie as the crowd roared, deepening the surreal spectacle surrounding his prophecy.

His arrest on December 31, 2025, by Ghana’s Special Cyber Vetting Team marked a turning point in the country’s ongoing struggle with harmful prophecies—a phenomenon so widespread that police now enforce annual “Prophecy Communication Compliance Day” to curb predictions that cause fear, panic, or political unrest. From his mother’s public plea for mercy to his own vivid descriptions of prison life—“sitting like a monkey” by day and “sleeping like a fish” by night—Ebo Noah’s story reveals the collision of faith, social media, national law, and the very human desire for meaning in uncertain times.