Audio By Carbonatix
Her Royal Highness, the Queen of England, Elizabeth II has acknowledged the work of Abena Asomaning-Antwi, Founder of the Angle-Zoe Foundation, a non-governmental organization (NGO) in Ghana by conferring on her the Point of Light Award.
The Angel-Zoe Foundation is a voluntary faith-based non-governmental organization founded by Mrs. Asomaning-Antwi in 2007, with the objective of reaching out to prison inmates to help with their rehabilitation and proper re-integration into the society following their discharge from prison.
The presentation of the award which took place last Thursday at the British High Commission in Accra signifies the great impact Mrs. Asomaning Antwi through Angel-Zoe Foundation has made in the Ghanaian community
The Point of Light Award recognizes outstanding individual volunteers - people who are making a change in their communities. It was first established by President George H. W. Bush in 1990, and embraces the challenge of undertaking community need projects through volunteerism.
In her acceptance speech, Mrs. Asomaning- Antwi said “Angel-Zoe Foundation had come to stay regardless of the opposition faced and the nonchalant attitude of the same society I sought to help. My weapons in the past eleven years have focused on building relationships with inmates and officers, mentorship, counselling, training. We also reconciled inmates and families who want nothing to do with them after their incarceration.’’
Sharing her experience in the early stages of the foundation, Mrs. Asomaning-Antwi said “It wasn’t easy when I decided to quit corporate work and concentrate solely on Angel-Zoe Foundation. But I pursued this singular cause quietly because many corporate entities I approached for support refused to help. Angel Zoe Foundation was too unpopular, and often didn’t fit into their corporate social responsibility plans. And today here I am with the evidence of my desire”.
She expressed her appreciation for the award saying “it was never intended for prestige or recognition but alas, here we are. The Point of Light recognition will definitely spur me on to pursue further the welfare of the vulnerable in my country and elsewhere”.
The British High Commissioner, Mr. Iain Walker, explained that “the Point of Light Award acknowledges the power of the individual to cause change and improve the world, and has celebrated more than 6,000 winners so far.
Latest Stories
-
ASAC 2026: Ghana sees 3 medals as 4x100m relay team make final
48 minutes -
One million coders programme: Can government achieve its target?
60 minutes -
Asiama wins “Best Male Vocal Performance” at the 27th TGMA
1 hour -
Over half of Gen Zs, millennials delay major life decisions including starting a family – Deloitte Survey
1 hour -
Stanbic Bank eyes district expansion in Upper West as credit conditions improve
2 hours -
NDC women’s wing accuses Suame MCE of nepotism, neglect of party members
2 hours -
Ghana’s labour market faces deep structural weaknesses; NDPC’s job first agenda is laudable – US-based Economist
2 hours -
NPP warns of retaliation over alleged harassment of party members
2 hours -
PSWU-NIA division suspends strike after NLC intervention
2 hours -
Ghana going back to the IMF for the 18th time?
3 hours -
Ghana to start selling $1 billion of cocoa bonds from July
3 hours -
‘We’ll make you a cedi millionaire’ – Ibrahim Mahama to xenophobic attack victim
3 hours -
Development of Savannah Region is government’s priority list – Asiedu Nketiah
3 hours -
Success of Mahama’s government is a collective responsibility — Asiedu Nketia rallies NDC supporters during regional tour
3 hours -
Governance expert calls for rule of law amid political victimisation claims
4 hours