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Jennifer Ogole, a woman who fled the civil war in Uganda to form a charity is among several Brent and Kilburn based recipients of a New Year Honour.
On January 1, Jennifer Ogole, formed BANG Edutainment, has been awarded an OBE for services to young people.
Ian Livingstone, Jason Swettenham, Stephen Chamberlain, and Rajesh Makwana joined her on the roll of honour.
Born in Uganda, Jennifer and her family arrived as asylum seekers in the mid 1980s and moved to the Stonebridge Estate in Brent. This experience would pave the way for her to start looking for a charity to help people with disadvantaged backgrounds.
BANG is now widely recognised and respected as a youth-led organisation that values young people, stands for them and works with them becoming community leaders who will build sustainable communities. They divert, develops, and delivers engaging programmes for young vulnerable people at risk away from crime and negative influences by providing support programmes that build their personal and professional skills.
Willesden Green’s Baroness Valerie Amos, 67, a Labour member of the House of Lords, is the first Black person appointed to the Order of the Garter.
Also on the list is Stephen Chamberlain who founded St Laurence’s Larder and Open Kitchen – a service that helps people in need in Willesden Lane. Stephen will get a British Empire Medal (BEM) for services to the community in Brent.
The Rise Partnership Trust’s CEO and executive headteacher, Jayne Jardine, has been made an MBE for services to education and SEND (special education needs and disability).
Jennifer said: “I am thrilled and deeply honoured to have been awarded this prestigious accolade. It is a tribute to the hard work and dedication of all those who have helped me make BANG what it is today: one of the UK’s leading youth charities.”