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Saturday, November 06, 2004

Perpetual Philanthropists By Paul Allen

Paul Allen cofounder of Microsoft , entrepreneur and founder of several enteprises has written an excellent piece about Philanthropists and the Philantrophy movement. Excerpts from his lecture at Brigham Young University:

When it struck me everything we do that prospers is only as a result of God's gifts to us, and that we should take no credit, I was humbled and immediately freed of my negative emotions about people whom I earlier thought were taking away from me the company that "I had founded." (Whenever those negative feelings creep back I force myself to think of the powerful spiritual experience I had when God said to me, through his Word, that I am not anything.)

Since then, I have carefully watched how some entrepreneurs and inventors and innovators do give God all the credit. Being freed from the "I built this company and I deserve the most money for doing so" attitude is a wonderful thing. If we give God the credit, and the glory, then whatever we end up with (in terms of material things) is satisfying and full of gratitude. If we end up with nothing, then we can say as Job did, "The Lord giveth and the Lord taketh away: blessed be the name of the Lord."

I intended to spend most of my lecture talking about my philanthropic heroes, but I had to rush through them in just a few minutes.

My philanthropic heroes are those who give gifts that are perpetual--gifts that bless the world forever. Namely,
Sir Thomas Bodley, who donated money for the original library at Oxford, now the world-renowned Bodleian Library. King James I quipped once that his name should have been Godly and not Bodley.
James Smithson, who never set foot in the U.S. but donated the 100,000 pounds to endow what became the Smithsonian Institution.
Leland and Jane Stanford, who built and endowed Stanford University
Pierre Omidyar , founder of eBay, who in 2002 publicly said he would give away 99% of his wealth over the next 20 years, much of it to the Omidyar Foundation.
The LDS Church recently instituted the Perpetual Education Fund, patterned after the 19th century Perpetual Emigrating Fund which helped tens of thousands of impoverished immigrants come from England and Scandinavia to Utah, to start a new life. (One of the immigrants was 14-year old David Eccles, whose family borrowed 70 pounds, and settled in Utah. Within a few decades, David became Utah's first multi-millionaire. At the time of his death, David Eccles owned 27 businesses and was worth between $10-20 million. There are now a half dozen foundations named after Eccles family members whose total assets exceed, I believe, $1 billion.)
The Perpetual Education Fund has already provided loans to about 15,000 students, who on average raise their income levels by 4 times. After repaying their loans, the funds are available to more students. Since education is the key to opportunity in life, this program is centered directly on the thing that has the greatest potential to change and bless the world--increasing human capital.
I can't fail to mention the Gates Foundation, which I believe has $17 billion in funds and will perpetually bless humankind; or Mohammed Yunus , founder of the Grameen Bank and micro-credit lending pioneer which has lifted millions of people from poverty since the 1970s.
There are many, many others, including the Academy for Creating Enterprise (founded by Steve Gibson) which operates presently in the Philippines and has helped more than 600 people learn how to start their own business.

In our own way, small or large, each person has the opportunity to endow a fund or donate to a program (such as PEF) or give a gift to bless our future posterity or the world at large. It might be writing a book containing life lessons and experiences that generations to come will treasure. It might be volunteering or teaching and changing but one life. Everyone can choose to leave a legacy that will be perpetual and thus be immortalized. Paul allen seems to have really written this piece with deep conviction - a good read and definitely worth pondering.



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