Omar Bah
Omar Bah is a Gambian journalist and refugee residing in the United States and is the founder of the Refugee Dream Center in Rhode Island.
Biography
Omar Bah grew up in a small impoverished town in Gambia, where he was one of the few children to finish a high-school level education.[1] Gambia was under a dictatorship at the time, and at 21 Bah decided he wanted to be a human rights lawyer to fight injustice; however it was not possible to complete the necessary degrees in Gambia, so he switched to journalism.[1] He was kidnapped and beaten nearly to death in a Gambian jail for writing about the country's brutal dictator in the press.[2][3] Bah decided to flee for his life, going first to Senegal and Ghana, before being accepted as a refugee to the United States.[1] He arrived in Rhode Island in May 2007, followed his wife, Teddi Jallow, three years later.[1][4]
Bah earned a bachelor's degree in communication studies in 2010 from the University of Rhode Island.[2] He also received a master's in public administration from Roger Williams University and one in counseling psychology from William James College, where he now teaches.[5][6]
Bah had a difficult time adjusting to life in the United States, but found it easier than most because he could already speak, read, and write English as a result of his former career as a journalist. Bah did not understand how the United States expected refugees to become self-sufficient after only six months when so many didn't know any English before arriving.[1] He started the Refugee Dream Center in Providence, Rhode Island in 2015. The organization was founded to help support refugees with education, job opportunities, counseling, youth programs, and more.[2][4]
Bah has served on various city and state boards and committees.[3] He has advocated in Washington for “a robust U.S. refugee resettlement program”[3] and has lectured around the country.[2] He also represents Rhode Island at the Refugee Congress of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees."[5] In 2017, Bah was able to return to Gambia as part of a United Nations mission after dictator Yahya Jammeh lost power, but was threatened by Gambian First Secretary Isatou Badjie, who had worked under Jammeh.[7]
In 2018, he spoke out against Donald Trump's muslim ban,[8] and during the 2020 coronavirus pandemic in the United States, Bah focused his efforts on delivering supplies to refugee families in need.[1]
Awards
Publications
- Africa’s Hell on Earth: The Ordeal of an African Journalist
References
- Prinz, Annika (14 July 2020). "How Omar Bah, Founder of RI's Refugee Dream Center, Is Helping Community During Coronavirus". Go Local Prov.
- "Omar Bah '10". The University of Rhode Island.
- Ziner, Karen Lee (15 June 2013). "Refugee journalist Omar Bah to speak with Rhode Island Senators Reed, Whitehouse". Providence Journal.
- McGinnis, Lindsey (6 April 2020). "Their past was a nightmare. For many refugees, the Dream Center offers hope". CS Monitor.
- Omar Bah: Founder & Executive Director of the Refugee Dream Center, Inc. Brown University - Center for Human Rights & Humanitarian Studies
- Omar Bah hprt-cambridge.org. Jan 28, 2015
- Ahlquist, Steve (19 June 2017). "Omar Bah's return visit to Gambia marred by threats". RI Future.
- Bah, Omar (15 July 2018). "My Turn: Omar Bah: American greatness rests in compassion". Providence Journal.