The goal of the Global Chinese Philanthropy Research and Training Program is to integrate networking building, research, and training to bridge intellectual inquiry and professional practice in the field of Global Chinese Philanthropy. The program also seeks to foster passion and interest in volunteerism, stimulate innovative research ideas, and encourage the sharing of best practices related to Global Chinese Philanthropy.
The 2023 Global Chinese Philanthropy Panel Discussion will feature philanthropists, scholars, and practitioners who will discuss and share their experiences from a variety of perspectives. Please note that a closed-group discussion and members-only workshop for registered GCP Training Program participants will follow the panel, from 6:30-8:00 PM (Pacific Time) / 9:30-11:00 AM (Beijing Time).
WEBVTT
1
00:00:44.940 --> 00:00:46.160
Are you here?
2
00:00:58.720 --> 00:01:00.529
Min Zhou: Really? Let's start.
3
00:01:02.690 --> 00:01:04.140
Min Zhou: Good afternoon.
4
00:01:04.410 --> 00:01:07.140
Min Zhou: Good evening, and good morning.
5
00:01:07.240 --> 00:01:09.580
Min Zhou: From Asia and China.
6
00:01:09.770 --> 00:01:27.510
Min Zhou: welcome to the Ucla Asia Pacific center, global Chinese philanthropy, research and training programs. Panel discussion. My name is Minjo. I am distinguished professor of sociology and Asian American studies.
7
00:01:27.540 --> 00:01:36.480
Min Zhou: water and Shirley, one in that chair in us China relations and Communications and Director of the Asia Pacific Center
8
00:01:37.710 --> 00:01:44.409
Min Zhou: before we start today's program, I would like to say a few words about our center and the program.
9
00:01:44.780 --> 00:01:52.349
Min Zhou: The Ucla Asia Pacific Center promotes greater knowledge and understanding of Asia and the Pacific region
10
00:01:52.540 --> 00:02:01.910
Min Zhou: on campus and in the community through innovative research teaching public programs and international collaboration.
11
00:02:03.970 --> 00:02:06.239
Min Zhou: Jenny, could you forward this slide?
12
00:02:13.940 --> 00:02:26.409
Min Zhou: We focus on inter asian and trans pacific connections from historical. contemporary, and comparative perspective and encourage interdisciplinary work
13
00:02:26.870 --> 00:02:36.990
Min Zhou: on cross border and super national issues on language and culture, politics, economy and society, and the sustainability
14
00:02:38.020 --> 00:02:44.239
Min Zhou: in the ongoing processes of of globalization. The previous line please
15
00:02:44.810 --> 00:02:49.900
Min Zhou: previous one. our center runs the Taiwan studies program.
16
00:02:50.120 --> 00:03:02.630
Min Zhou: the program on Central Asia, the global Chinese philanthropy research and training program. And we are also working hard to raise funds to rejuvenate our Hong Kong studies Program 2,
17
00:03:02.730 --> 00:03:17.570
Min Zhou: we also serve as the National Research Center. the Regional Resource Center on East Asia and administered to administer the East Asian foreign Languages and area studies fellowships
18
00:03:17.600 --> 00:03:34.640
Min Zhou: from the Us. Department of Education, Title 6 Program. Our center has organized a lot of public events. So please visit our website. I'll watch out for our announcements via email.
19
00:03:35.070 --> 00:03:39.819
Min Zhou: Today's events will be recorded. And please
20
00:03:39.870 --> 00:03:51.639
Min Zhou: mute yourself if you have any questions pretty right down on the chat box, and we will address some of these questions. if we have time in the Q&A session.
21
00:03:52.310 --> 00:04:09.740
Min Zhou: So today's panel discussion is part of our center's global Chinese philanthropy research and training program funded by the Cyrus Town foundation. And this program is built on the global Chinese Philanthropy Initiative.
22
00:04:09.790 --> 00:04:20.869
Min Zhou: where our center has served as an academic partner since 2,017, and that initiative was funded by the long family foundation.
23
00:04:21.310 --> 00:04:48.559
Min Zhou: The current Gcp program integrates network building research and training to bridge intellectual inquiry and professional practice in the field of global Chinese philanthropy it aims at for storing passion, interest and voluntary some stimulating innovative research ideas and sharing best practices in the field.
24
00:04:48.720 --> 00:04:55.610
Min Zhou: Our program includes 3 components. One is to maintain and expand
25
00:04:55.820 --> 00:04:59.410
Min Zhou: the global Chinese philanthropy research network.
26
00:04:59.540 --> 00:05:05.540
Min Zhou: Second, is to organize a quarterly public lecture series.
27
00:05:06.670 --> 00:05:11.119
Min Zhou: And third, one is an annual training workshop.
28
00:05:11.190 --> 00:05:19.290
Min Zhou: The annual training workshop is designed for undergraduate and graduate students, with the primary focus
29
00:05:19.570 --> 00:05:29.559
Min Zhou: on inspiring young minds, fostering passion and wrenches and nurturing the culture of philanthropy and civic engagement.
30
00:05:29.600 --> 00:05:40.510
Min Zhou: So after today's panel discussion, our enroll students will stay on for another 90 min to have a more in-depth discussion.
31
00:05:42.870 --> 00:05:48.609
Min Zhou: Our Gcp program has currently 8 institutional partners.
32
00:05:48.890 --> 00:05:57.379
Min Zhou: including those institutions in the Us. Southeast Asia, like Singapore and Malaysia as well as China.
33
00:05:58.910 --> 00:06:04.030
Min Zhou: and we welcome other institutions in China. Asia.
34
00:06:04.400 --> 00:06:12.989
Min Zhou: and the Us. And other parts of the world to partner with us in promoting and developing the feel of Chinese.
35
00:06:13.010 --> 00:06:21.640
Min Zhou: global, Chinese philanthropy. So today's panel discussion is shown by 5 distinguished panelists.
36
00:06:21.800 --> 00:06:26.649
Min Zhou: Mr. Leochu, chairman of Morning Light Foundation.
37
00:06:27.500 --> 00:06:32.920
Min Zhou: Miss Vivian, long executive director of the Long Family Foundation.
38
00:06:33.140 --> 00:06:40.069
Min Zhou: Mr. Peter A. CEO of Chinatown Service Center, Los Angeles.
39
00:06:40.820 --> 00:06:53.639
Min Zhou: Professor Chen. Gang to from Nan Kai University in China. and Dr. Marina Dan Harper, Director for International Development at Uc. Davis
40
00:06:54.020 --> 00:06:57.670
Min Zhou: and daughter Marina Town will serve as
41
00:06:58.800 --> 00:07:02.390
Min Zhou: the moderator for today's discussion. Session
42
00:07:02.920 --> 00:07:08.529
Min Zhou: Now it's my pressure to introduce Dr. Marina Dan Harper.
43
00:07:08.810 --> 00:07:24.120
Min Zhou: Dr. Harper received her Phd. In Philadelphia from the Lily Family School of Philanthropy, Indiana University, and has done research on Diaspora, Chinese philanthropy.
44
00:07:24.400 --> 00:07:32.519
Min Zhou: Dr. Harper is currently currently senior director for International Development at Uc. Davis.
45
00:07:32.780 --> 00:07:37.309
Min Zhou: She has customized giving platforms for alumni
46
00:07:37.530 --> 00:07:42.190
Min Zhou: parents and friends of the Uc. Davis to give
47
00:07:42.390 --> 00:07:50.349
Min Zhou: from Asia, Europe, Latin America and Canada. understanding local, giving traditions.
48
00:07:50.390 --> 00:07:56.139
Min Zhou: propensity to give affinity, connectedness, and readiness
49
00:07:56.160 --> 00:08:18.109
Min Zhou: of varied constituents on the ground she knows this is not one size fits all fundraising, so she knows a lot about development. And without further ado, let's welcome Dr. Marina, Dan Hopper and the distinguished panelists for a enlightening
50
00:08:18.610 --> 00:08:21.560
Min Zhou: and stimulating discussion.
51
00:08:22.750 --> 00:08:25.109
Min Zhou: Dr. Hopper, take it away.
52
00:08:25.250 --> 00:08:28.819
Marina Harper: Thank you. Dr. Professor toe
53
00:08:28.890 --> 00:08:40.130
Marina Harper: We are so lucky today, and so please to have our 4 distinguished guests which you have heard join us in this panel discussion on global Chinese philanthropy.
54
00:08:40.150 --> 00:08:43.019
Marina Harper: Mr. Who is the chairman of
55
00:08:43.130 --> 00:08:59.999
Marina Harper: Morning Lights Foundation, is the first generation philanthropist. usually foundations go on forever for a long time, and sometimes we don't meet the founder. But today we're so lucky. We meet Mr. Who is the founder of the foundation.
56
00:09:00.210 --> 00:09:23.299
Marina Harper: Miss Vivian Long is executive director of the John and Maryland family foundation. She is a second generation philanthropist, following her parents path. So her parents was the first generation who founded the foundation. So now here we got a first gen, and we got a second Gen. philanthropist. So we're going to get a very nice broad view of things.
57
00:09:23.430 --> 00:09:37.809
Marina Harper: Mr. Peter, who is the CEO of L. A. Chinatown service center, and he was also the former president of the Chinese Consolidated Benevolent Association of Los Angeles. Now this is this
58
00:09:38.060 --> 00:09:44.069
Marina Harper: other organization that Mr. P. Certainly is from is very important for dioxide
59
00:09:44.160 --> 00:09:54.930
Marina Harper: giving, whether it's Chinese or other communities, because usually for these ethnic communities, this is where philanthropy starts
60
00:09:54.940 --> 00:10:10.830
Marina Harper: in these benevolent or in Singapore. I'm originally from Singapore. We call them plan associations here. Maybe call thong T. O. Ng, in Tantanis, is he? He might tell you more later. so
61
00:10:10.850 --> 00:10:23.419
Marina Harper: And Dr. Tiancantu whom I knew when I was at the Lily family school. So nice to see you again. Dr. To He's professor of sociology from 9 time university In addition
62
00:10:23.480 --> 00:10:40.270
Marina Harper: to scholarly path breaking research on Chinese philanthropy and civil society in China. Dr. Chu is also a practitioner who is actively engaged in philanthropic work of nonprofit organizations in China. Well, a very well welcome to all of you in the panel
63
00:10:40.850 --> 00:10:52.960
Marina Harper: to set the stage and kick, start our discussions. I would like to first share the definition and scope of philanthropy in the American context. I'm here. I'm going to go to share screen.
64
00:10:53.570 --> 00:10:55.839
Marina Harper: All right. Let me see.
65
00:10:56.770 --> 00:11:00.149
Marina Harper: I've opened up my slides here
66
00:11:01.420 --> 00:11:04.820
Marina Harper: and I click on share stream.
67
00:11:05.820 --> 00:11:11.429
Marina Harper: Right? Yeah. Now, are you guys seeing this?
68
00:11:13.520 --> 00:11:23.279
Marina Harper: So this definition, all right, fantastic. You're seeing it right? So this definition, philanthropy is voluntary action for the public good.
69
00:11:23.380 --> 00:11:27.820
Marina Harper: This is the broadest definition by Robert L. Peyton.
70
00:11:27.830 --> 00:11:54.259
Marina Harper: Now, why is he so important, Robin? He was the first full time professor of philanthropic studies, and one of the founders of the center and philanthropy that evolved to what is today the Lily family school of philanthropy in Indiana University. The first of such in the world is the first time when philanthropy used to be a practice. Oriented art and profession is now gone into academia.
71
00:11:54.560 --> 00:11:59.319
Marina Harper: and Robert Payton was a very critical guy in this
72
00:11:59.430 --> 00:12:07.330
Marina Harper: evolution as an educator, Payton pushed to show that research informs practice
73
00:12:07.340 --> 00:12:13.340
Marina Harper: and practice, informs research, breathing life into the concept of philanthropic studies
74
00:12:13.350 --> 00:12:16.459
Marina Harper: and training philanthropic leaders for the field.
75
00:12:16.800 --> 00:12:24.600
Marina Harper: So I'm type paid to this definition. I want to emphasize. Okay? So you look at this voluntary isn't a voluntary action.
76
00:12:24.800 --> 00:12:29.640
Marina Harper: voluntary action. We includes giving donation, which is money
77
00:12:30.040 --> 00:12:35.960
Marina Harper: service, which is time and expertise. It also includes in kind assets.
78
00:12:36.130 --> 00:13:05.649
Marina Harper: you know, jewelry or your stock your house. It also includes vehicles and instruments to deliver philanthropic action. Right? You can't just get into the air. You need these vehicles and organizations. They could be called Npos nonprofit organizations, which is what America uses the terminology some in the outside of America you might hear the word Ngos non-governmental organizations.
79
00:13:05.740 --> 00:13:17.239
Marina Harper: so sometimes they're also called Csos civil society organizations, and sometimes called social enterprises. So all these are the vehicles
80
00:13:17.430 --> 00:13:32.100
Marina Harper: and the In this statement that Robert Payton say it must manifest in action to be classified as philanthropy. It can be just an idea or a thought right with talking about voluntary action, philanthropic action.
81
00:13:32.340 --> 00:13:37.860
Marina Harper: it must have a specific purpose to achieve some vision of public goods
82
00:13:37.890 --> 00:13:46.969
Marina Harper: broadly. This would include things like relieving the suffering of others whom you actually have no formal legal responsibility for
83
00:13:47.640 --> 00:13:55.409
Marina Harper: improve the life quality of life in the community. And they also. It's a model dimension here.
84
00:13:55.470 --> 00:13:59.360
Marina Harper: intervening in other people's lives for their benefit.
85
00:13:59.460 --> 00:14:18.789
Marina Harper: For example, social justice for the voiceless, the suppressed. I have a donor who told me he's her father. This is like an older generation would buy a coffin for someone who's passed away. He doesn't even know the guy. He's passed away. He has no family to bury him. He would pay for the coffin and the last rights.
86
00:14:18.970 --> 00:14:31.300
Marina Harper: that that is moral dimension, where he feels that every individual should go off from this world in style, right in a nice coffin, and with the last rights being performed for him.
87
00:14:31.840 --> 00:14:41.920
Marina Harper: You may here other words, weaving in and out like charity, benevolence, altruism, humanism, a humanitarianism
88
00:14:41.950 --> 00:14:46.920
Marina Harper: tithing. So what's the difference? Or even the what civil society?
89
00:14:46.980 --> 00:14:51.840
Marina Harper: So now we're coming down to nuances. And I want to clarify 3 big words. Here
90
00:14:51.870 --> 00:15:05.320
Marina Harper: charity is a natural emotional impulse in response to a immediate situation. It comes from your heart because it's an impulsive action. for example, your car stops as a red light.
91
00:15:05.360 --> 00:15:06.700
Marina Harper: Right, a stop sign.
92
00:15:06.870 --> 00:15:23.850
Marina Harper: and a child, and the parent comes to you and ask for some money. You don't. You don't know the person, but they look like they're really in dire need for help, because they look scrawny. They have tactic clothing, and they're all dirty, you know that they haven't had the bath or
93
00:15:23.850 --> 00:15:38.730
Marina Harper: a shower for a long time. You take your money out and you give that is charity. Your heart is moved. It's coming from your heart. You don't question whether they have a plan or anything, but you know that you want to do some good for the person standing in front of you.
94
00:15:38.980 --> 00:15:41.670
Marina Harper: No, philanthropy is quite different.
95
00:15:41.710 --> 00:15:53.600
Marina Harper: Philanthropy addresses the root cost of social issues and requires more strategic, long-term approach for systemic change. So if you keep seeing all these problems, then you think.
96
00:15:53.940 --> 00:16:05.939
Marina Harper: Well, I can't be doing one by one like that, you know I that needs to be some plan and understand. Read some data and see what's going on. Why are these people lending themselves in this kind of situation?
97
00:16:06.080 --> 00:16:15.610
Marina Harper: So this kind of philanthropy at the level of philanthropy. It might include advocacy, collaboration, leverage, influence, lobbying.
98
00:16:15.720 --> 00:16:17.300
Marina Harper: It's coming from the head.
99
00:16:17.520 --> 00:16:28.009
Marina Harper: But a philanthropy part has the head and civil society emphasizes values-based values, laden nature of intervention
100
00:16:28.040 --> 00:16:33.449
Marina Harper: to fill the gaps that are underserved by government business. A private.
101
00:16:33.500 --> 00:16:47.970
Marina Harper: Now, if if there's no profit, business won't take this job right? So there's a gap already. Sometimes even government doesn't want to take the job because nobody has proven to them what the solution is. And that's where philanthropy comes in.
102
00:16:48.220 --> 00:16:58.939
Marina Harper: from the lens of moral dimension, for example, defending citizen rights, upholding social norms and behaviors for human development or national development.
103
00:16:59.050 --> 00:17:05.819
Marina Harper: All right. So I just wanted to set the stage from the American context. But now I'm going to
104
00:17:05.849 --> 00:17:12.649
Marina Harper: pose, question one to our panel here and ask you, how do you personally
105
00:17:12.740 --> 00:17:16.739
Marina Harper: define philanthropy from where you are involved with it?
106
00:17:16.880 --> 00:17:23.270
Marina Harper: What is your perspective, and what is your experience now? These words, philanthropy, everything.
107
00:17:23.339 --> 00:17:24.819
Marina Harper: It's up to us
108
00:17:24.829 --> 00:17:30.040
Marina Harper: eventually to also help define this especially, we're talking about Chinese
109
00:17:30.190 --> 00:17:35.139
Marina Harper: diaspora philanthropy in the context of America.
110
00:17:35.660 --> 00:17:39.290
Marina Harper: May I ask you to stop first.
111
00:17:41.330 --> 00:17:52.700
Leo Chu: Okay. I I agree. Everything you said. I think, one more. The very important thing is, philosophy has to come from your heart
112
00:17:53.420 --> 00:17:54.650
Leo Chu: and your passion
113
00:17:55.080 --> 00:18:23.190
Leo Chu: and your love. So I think this is very important for Chinese. You know I'm the first generation in the United States. I came here 1,975 from Hong Kong. I was born in China. So the Chinese way of looking at the lots of people is doing good things, doing good deeds is allowed to come. Go back to the old days about that. The family always teaches. Hey? You better do something good. In case you do something bad, this will compensate.
114
00:18:23.480 --> 00:18:48.110
Leo Chu: This will compensate what you have done. Okay, and this is a pay back. That. So this are all the is is from Buddhism, from you know, all the superstitious type of things that's started from that. So I was totally pleasantly surprised that it's actually a school of philanthropy. I mean, you know, any school I mean, this is wonderful, because from a philanthropy is basically
115
00:18:48.580 --> 00:18:55.460
Leo Chu: basically hand hand your hand out and said, Please give me some money or help. Mostly it's about money.
116
00:18:55.700 --> 00:19:24.349
Leo Chu: Okay, so is it has to be from Hub. But Chinese Chinese family education, you know Chinese don't really have a thing called philanthropy is doing good things could be Chinese always say, if you save on people's a person's life, you're building 6 steps to the heaven. Okay, the Buddhist. So it's a lot of it. This is superstitious for confusion and all that kind of stuff. Well, basically is teaching you do something good.
117
00:19:25.000 --> 00:19:48.669
Leo Chu: So that's, I think, from a lot of this, from also family education. You know you, you talk about these things over data tables, father, mother, you know I came from my fault. Okay, my father is not big philanthropist, but he doesn't understand his very little education from a very moderate family. So I mean, but he understands one thing, he said, hey, if I have
118
00:19:49.040 --> 00:20:05.039
Leo Chu: 2 balls of rice, I want to share one with somebody else. Okay, this is what the berries in my mind. when when when we listen to his talks, and mother and all that kind of stuff. So this is a a very basic education for Chinese
119
00:20:05.370 --> 00:20:13.909
Leo Chu: culture and family. This how I think this is my, it came to me. That's why, when I came to the United States, I mean, you know, for a long time. So I really
120
00:20:14.490 --> 00:20:18.580
Leo Chu: got into the the
121
00:20:19.380 --> 00:20:31.119
Leo Chu: giving away and giving away to the communities. Get back to the communities. What does that mean? What does that mean? And I I can see it on the Board of Special Olympics for 27 years.
122
00:20:31.800 --> 00:20:36.979
Leo Chu: So that that's not give me money or anything that's giving time.
123
00:20:37.170 --> 00:20:49.870
Leo Chu: Spent time with people. I mean. Time is a much more valuable than money. Okay, I love people who wrote a billion dollar check to build 6 buildings. But I love the people who actually devote their life for charity.
124
00:20:50.150 --> 00:20:52.710
Leo Chu: Okay, people like. by the time you said
125
00:20:53.850 --> 00:21:05.920
Leo Chu: that type of thing. So I think this is the thing very important. Culturally, how we can do this between the East and the West, and obviously all things little differently and culturally, but also politically as well.
126
00:21:07.720 --> 00:21:21.529
Marina Harper: I think I've talked enough. Wonderful! Wonderful! You you spoke with such passion. I just love it. I did the the the phrase
127
00:21:21.940 --> 00:21:26.439
Marina Harper: come across like, you know, give back to the sauce that you took from.
128
00:21:26.810 --> 00:21:30.890
Marina Harper: are you? The the is your thought that way?
129
00:21:31.210 --> 00:21:39.219
Leo Chu: No, no, I don't think that I think the source is important, but if the source can give me resources, they need less of my help.
130
00:21:39.440 --> 00:21:45.389
Marina Harper: Okay, I'm not the ones that don't have the sources. This is where I say it needs help.
131
00:21:45.460 --> 00:21:53.800
Leo Chu: You know, one of the things is that when you help other people to lift them up. basically, you level of the
132
00:21:53.940 --> 00:21:54.960
Leo Chu: wealth, get
133
00:21:55.700 --> 00:22:03.630
Leo Chu: how you can help the people this pull. Okay, to get a better job. Okay, what about being doing business themselves to get a better job? You need education.
134
00:22:03.760 --> 00:22:14.120
Leo Chu: Okay? So that's why I say, education is right, absolute vital, how you can pull people out of poverty, how you can train people, how it's
135
00:22:14.220 --> 00:22:18.630
Leo Chu: I mean in, in, in schools, basically to teach you be a good person.
136
00:22:18.760 --> 00:22:20.180
Marina Harper: Yes, yes.
137
00:22:20.380 --> 00:22:22.959
Marina Harper: wonderful. You speak so well about it.
138
00:22:23.040 --> 00:22:30.140
Marina Harper: Now we're going to go to Vivian. the second generation philanthropist, and see how you define
139
00:22:30.280 --> 00:22:32.380
Marina Harper: and think about philanthropy.
140
00:22:33.640 --> 00:22:48.969
Vivian Long: Sure. Well, it's wonderful to be on this webinar with everybody. Thank you so much, Dr. Harper, for I think orienting us all around this topic, and I agree with what you said. I agree with what Leo said, and I'm eager to see what everybody else has to say. But
141
00:22:48.970 --> 00:23:06.480
Vivian Long: I think for me philanthropy is a piece or an activity of a larger mindset, that I think of called stewardship and stewardship, I think, is much more expansive than philanthropy, but philanthropy is a really important piece of stewardship. But
142
00:23:06.530 --> 00:23:29.739
Vivian Long: you know, when I think about stewardship, as Leo said, there are so many resources that all of us are stewards of, and I think one misconception of giving and philanthropy is that you have to have a lot of resources in order to do that. And when you think about stewardship, you know, each of us have skills to contribute. Each of us have circles of influence and resources to give
143
00:23:29.740 --> 00:23:54.740
Vivian Long: and really thinking about. how do we contribute to the things that we care about, to the causes that we're passionate about? Philanthropy is one of those activities that we can partake in to express that stewardship. And you know, as Leo said, and you know, with deep admiration for the many boards he serves on, and Peter as well
144
00:23:54.740 --> 00:23:57.269
important alongside philanthropy.
145
00:23:57.270 --> 00:24:10.549
Vivian Long: So you know, when I think about philanthropy specifically I think it's one part of a larger ecosystem that really contributes back to social good and you know it. It
146
00:24:10.570 --> 00:24:37.850
Vivian Long: it inherently, I think, has a financial component, at least in the Western society, but it doesn't negate and actually is really dependent on the other components of giving, giving, of time, giving of talent, giving of treasure. And so I think if we can look at philanthropy as one piece of a much larger you know, pie of resources that's necessary to make sure the communities that we care about are served
147
00:24:37.850 --> 00:24:43.160
Vivian Long: it. It helps Us all understand our unique positions better.
148
00:24:43.420 --> 00:25:06.619
Vivian Long: I think, in our foundation. Some of our unique approaches to philanthropy are that we really care deeply about partnerships. And so we work at the foundation. We are fortunate enough to work with a pretty small number of partners that we really deeply care about and have cultivated relationship over a number of years. So one of the models that we use is trust-based philanthropy.
149
00:25:06.620 --> 00:25:14.739
and you know I've been in this role for about 7 years. I came from working at a nonprofit before which I think really help inform our strategy.
150
00:25:14.740 --> 00:25:34.960
Vivian Long: But we started to understand that one of the biggest needs for an organization was a long term commitment as opposed to just a one time commitment and also understanding what the organizational needs are beyond just supporting programs. And so we've made that change to really increase some of our portfolio giving in that way.
151
00:25:34.960 --> 00:25:45.810
Vivian Long: And then I would say, the second part is really caring deeply about the leaders that run these organizations so as funders. Oftentimes, I think, we are really
152
00:25:45.810 --> 00:26:12.670
Vivian Long: lauded, or success is attributed to us, and the reality is, you know, we have just provided financial resources, but the reality is the nonprofit leaders, the nonprofit teams, the board, the volunteers. They are the ones who have the deep knowledge of the community, the deep partnerships, the deep relationships, and most importantly, the trust. And so if we can really empower them to do that work, it is so much more
153
00:26:12.740 --> 00:26:26.410
Vivian Long: I think, successful for everybody. And so how I think, as a Funder, one of the big questions we've been asking is, how do we make sure the nonprofits that we are partnered with are the healthiest versions of themselves.
154
00:26:26.410 --> 00:26:53.509
Vivian Long: you know. And so we've gone down a path of, you know, supporting some capacity building efforts. we've done some operational grants to help hire staff. And we really see that as an important part of the mission, even though it not isn't necessarily as programmatic specific. we see that as a really important way to make sure these organizations are sustainable and could continue doing their work as long as they want to and are capable of.
155
00:26:55.360 --> 00:27:24.499
Marina Harper: Very good. I I really like the fact that you're looking deep into the sustainability of the structure the body first, before they can even go outside and do the work, and nonprofits suffer a lot from this kind of capacity building, because nobody is giving to the capacity building. They all want to do program right right now. It's very good to segue into a nonprofit organization here. Mr. Peter. and tell us from your lens.
156
00:27:28.290 --> 00:27:34.190
Peter Ng: Well, thank you so much. inviting me to this workshop. Dr. Hopper.
157
00:27:34.340 --> 00:27:52.510
Peter Ng: Absolutely. I agree totally with Leo and Vivian. we always grateful to the foundations that really supported organizations, such as China and our service center. we still even though this is our 50 s year.
158
00:27:52.510 --> 00:28:10.849
Peter Ng: but we still cherish the time when we first started. We started with one person, one desk, and out of volunteer like you said, we want to help. So I think bottom line is we all come from teaching or a culture that
159
00:28:10.860 --> 00:28:19.969
Peter Ng: helping people is the right thing to do. When I was small I was taught that if they used to do one good d.
160
00:28:21.050 --> 00:28:23.020
Peter Ng: that is the quota.
161
00:28:23.140 --> 00:28:27.749
Peter Ng: and then we would talk that helping people is the root of happiness.
162
00:28:27.930 --> 00:28:38.099
Peter Ng: So this is how we are bring up in the Chinese culture. And then, Being a immigrant myself, I came here when I was a teenager.
163
00:28:38.310 --> 00:28:50.529
Peter Ng: and my parents, because of lack of language, and also to the the knowing. The knowledge of this new land. We were also in a fisher of
164
00:28:50.640 --> 00:28:54.009
Peter Ng: the organization like the turn of our service center.
165
00:28:54.150 --> 00:28:56.609
Peter Ng: And we learn
166
00:28:56.700 --> 00:29:15.850
Peter Ng: that the community really embrace and support. Because when you're in England you need help from all sources you can. So Dr. Hopper mentioned that I was the president of Ccba. which is the very early stage for of
167
00:29:15.850 --> 00:29:30.979
Peter Ng: people getting together and then helping each other, and then it transform into organizations nonprofit, where we have actually staff. So the transition of having a volunteer to start the organization.
168
00:29:30.990 --> 00:29:44.579
Peter Ng: but it would not be able to sustain a long run, because the need is always exceeding the the the, the resources that to help. So that's why we have to have a regular staff to become
169
00:29:44.580 --> 00:30:03.259
Peter Ng: chapterize and then formulate it and be legalized as a nonprofit, so we can do the work, and also at the same time receive donations and help from private sources, such as foundations, corporations, and the government.
170
00:30:03.330 --> 00:30:19.400
Peter Ng: so that that is the way for the United States, which is I I think it's quite a mature compared to the other countries. And I I've been to several other country to observe, and I've learned so
171
00:30:20.700 --> 00:30:45.010
Peter Ng: for being at the limit of the it's so important for the society that have. This is a. It's a balance for the society where people, if they need help, they come and set up They would lose faith and do things that they may not be good healthy for them. So it's so important that
172
00:30:45.360 --> 00:31:02.880
Peter Ng: we can exist and also collaborate with other organization, and and also to show so many of the the the that we see it through the year the the folks that need to help. They don't know where to go to.
173
00:31:02.920 --> 00:31:05.230
Peter Ng: So, having
174
00:31:05.430 --> 00:31:20.979
Peter Ng: an organization of nonprofits in there for a while, so like we've been said, we build up the trust. They? The word gets around. So when they talk about each other, they say, Where do you do? Where do you go? One of the thing about
175
00:31:21.280 --> 00:31:31.980
Peter Ng: Chinese immigrants. They It's a tradition that they don't really have a fully trust of the government because they feel
176
00:31:32.030 --> 00:31:53.529
Peter Ng: The the government is not really looking to help them. So there's a mistrust there, and and they very conservative also. So who they go to. They go to the friend, and also to an organization. Actually, Peter, this is a good time that I want to intercept to introduce the what mutual aid
177
00:31:53.600 --> 00:32:06.569
Marina Harper: this, what neutral it is, it's very often in diasporic communities. So Chinese dioxide is spread out all through the world, and mutual, it is actually
178
00:32:06.750 --> 00:32:18.850
Marina Harper: self help help one of your own. Now, in the Us. Mutual, it is not typically, typically counted as philanthropy or charity in us, giving data because
179
00:32:19.160 --> 00:32:23.480
Marina Harper: it's so sophisticated here in the us now that the instruments
180
00:32:23.510 --> 00:32:40.100
Marina Harper: but mutual aid is when everyday people get together to meet each other's urgent needs for survival. Migrants fleeing from their home countries, usually with land in the new country, needing food, medical aid, housing jobs, education at the same time.
181
00:32:40.110 --> 00:32:46.190
Marina Harper: So mutual aid is based on the principles of direct action, cooperation, and solidarity
182
00:32:46.380 --> 00:33:01.939
Marina Harper: Circumstances at hand has forced people of mutual understanding to be generous. Unknowingly they have been forced into philanthropy in some ways. because they get in the philanthropic action because they see one of their own suffering.
183
00:33:01.940 --> 00:33:23.129
Marina Harper: They want to help one of their own, that is, from the same dialect group, or the last name you know. in in us. You call it the Thong Kong. I come from Singapore is called Clan Association. so that is a very natural thing. And many people actually get into philanthropy because they got involved in
184
00:33:23.590 --> 00:33:25.030
Marina Harper: coming from the hot.
185
00:33:25.100 --> 00:33:37.660
Marina Harper: And then they see this like. So this is actually a very typical Chinese. philanthropic action. I'm going to share screen again
186
00:33:37.680 --> 00:33:45.739
Marina Harper: and show you a diagram that the communal essence of this Chinese diaspora philanthropy
187
00:33:45.760 --> 00:33:48.300
Marina Harper: actually came from mutual aid.
188
00:33:48.830 --> 00:33:51.710
Marina Harper: So here's the diagram.
189
00:33:52.230 --> 00:34:19.320
Marina Harper: You notice how Just now we talked about family giving family extended family here. This is where the mutual, a client and dialect group, and then they start to give you. You can see it's going from inside to outside, right. So you are actually practicing philanthropy and in the family extended family client village, and then some. Then you realize, oh, I can give further out you further out.
190
00:34:19.440 --> 00:34:28.570
Marina Harper: This is very, very typical of Chinese D for philanthropy. in the Us. Or in many other countries. Also.
191
00:34:28.860 --> 00:34:47.260
Marina Harper: I better move on, plot along and invite Dr. To not, Professor, to. To. Now speak about this definition from China Point, China's point of view, and I'm sure he's got a lot to teach us here. I'm going to not share.
192
00:34:47.440 --> 00:35:08.420
Jiangang Zhu: Thanks, Marina. Very happy to meet you again. I I completely agree with. Leo we've been. And Peter's point. And yeah, I think philanthropy is really the act of giving resources time money, all the expertise to help other elite.
193
00:35:08.420 --> 00:35:17.899
Jiangang Zhu: I I think that's very universal definition. And when I was in the Dd family school of in In Dallas, I really is
194
00:35:17.900 --> 00:35:47.500
Jiangang Zhu: the struck by the the definition from the rope of the pattern. It's a voluntary action for public good. I even heard of the song by them. I'm sync, I've the deeply moved by this definition. I I think this shows very important. but to in I I mean in that I. As I apologize, I think that in the different, the cultural different cultural contacts, maybe the definition they are very different to emphasizes.
195
00:35:47.500 --> 00:36:10.940
Jiangang Zhu: some I think, from the main and the china. I'm I just feel that people talk about the philanthropy is often emphasized on the as a sense of the social responsibility. It seems like it's not only about the issues of the resources, but also about the the responsibility. The people, the individuals have the responsibility for the to the family
196
00:36:10.940 --> 00:36:22.690
Jiangang Zhu: to a extended family, to the community, and to the country and to the world. So I I think. people maybe sell a very different ways to
197
00:36:22.820 --> 00:36:26.950
Jiangang Zhu: contribute the the philanthropy practice.
198
00:36:26.970 --> 00:36:53.419
Jiangang Zhu: and the individuals and organizations. we engaging in philanthropy may have the different innovation or approaches. but I think this our tradesmen. that's responsibility that as some just like Marina side is a mutual aid, is a spirit of a new to a very important, I think, for the for the definition of the philanthropy in the Chinese. you know, Chinese cultural context.
199
00:36:53.420 --> 00:37:16.950
Jiangang Zhu: in my that's that's just I I totally agree with that. So that's why, when I was joined the to build the the committee foundation in China, the first the committee foundation quantum. How many foundation we just the focus on that. Why, we just to emphasize as a meetings of the community from the family, that the Chinese people were extended to the community, to a neighborhood
200
00:37:16.950 --> 00:37:31.779
Jiangang Zhu: to the rural community. So we we just because that's very important to connect to the spirit of the philanthropy, because for the Chinese. Maybe they just not define a very clearly between the public and the private, the just, the
201
00:37:31.780 --> 00:37:53.280
Jiangang Zhu: stride sprite, the the the spirit of from the family, from the the our extended family and it to a community. I think we think that's that's the that's the of the all the philanthropy spirit. in in Chinese cultural of, of course, I think, is a very strong moral meetings of philanthropy in the Chinese context.
202
00:37:53.280 --> 00:38:03.620
Jiangang Zhu: We think that's the the people. there's a P. People if they want to grow up themselves. So to perfect, perfect as a heart, the mind the
203
00:38:03.770 --> 00:38:18.700
Jiangang Zhu: so for images I put some good they needed to do something in the philanthropy, so philanthropy is a very important. The the part of the grow up of the life. so that's that's what I have done in China. We try to
204
00:38:18.900 --> 00:38:44.840
Jiangang Zhu: it. Try to do the education on the young people through the finance. We think they think of the philanthropy they very important for their growing up, especially when they want to become the citizen. Sometimes it's a world citizen. They need to to do some philanthropy and to experience the the spirit of the philanthropy in the heart, and the new, and the how to do the voluntary action, and then
205
00:38:44.840 --> 00:39:05.519
Jiangang Zhu: why they want to do, and why? What is the public good, and how to make the the change of the society. you know, in in in China we are very like of the civil society, so that people lead to our rebuild. All this mic is the innovation to build the society. Philanthropy is a a very good way for that.
206
00:39:05.520 --> 00:39:30.370
Jiangang Zhu: So when you see them. see that it people still in have the different, the definition of the philanthropy even now. from the sociology. So to see that people are something that's a reach. They reach people to something that everyone has a responsibility to do. The philanthropy even we have the law of the philanthropy. We have the definition, very clear definition of the philanthropy in the law.
207
00:39:30.370 --> 00:39:54.810
Jiangang Zhu: but the people still do the very, very different things. So think that. And now that I think in my experience of the training and the education of the philanthropy, I feel the people they just see. That's a very effective trial to participate in the in the social affairs and to even they can do some innovation.
208
00:39:54.850 --> 00:40:14.099
Jiangang Zhu: Our social innovation for some way as as a philanthropy way under to try to involve themselves into a social transition of the main in China, which vary, I think it's supported the with Strong, supported by the best part of Chinese people from the world.
209
00:40:14.140 --> 00:40:17.200
Jiangang Zhu: Yup, that's what I want to share that. Thank you.
210
00:40:17.730 --> 00:40:20.610
Marina Harper: Thank you, Dr. to
211
00:40:20.760 --> 00:40:30.109
Marina Harper: Very nice. Now we're here. A different flavor, a different context. That was very useful. I'm going to plow on to question 3. Looking at the time.
212
00:40:30.140 --> 00:40:34.929
Marina Harper: question. 2. Sorry. What was your philanthropic journey like?
213
00:40:35.170 --> 00:40:43.889
Marina Harper: Who influenced you into philanthropy? And how do you decide now on a daily basis or yearly basis. Who, what, when, where to give?
214
00:40:44.460 --> 00:40:50.359
Marina Harper: Is it it deliberate that you chose to be a philanthropist, or did it? Did philanthropy choose you
215
00:40:50.520 --> 00:40:59.739
Marina Harper: do you do it from the head, from the hot moral dimensions. So give us a sense. I go back round full circle to Mr. You, too.
216
00:41:01.340 --> 00:41:05.360
Leo Chu: well, it's it's a very interesting journey.
217
00:41:06.210 --> 00:41:17.270
Leo Chu: in Hong Kong. I came here when I was 33 years old already. Okay, so I started business. And this, actually, Peter, I'm very interested, you know. I'm very
218
00:41:17.730 --> 00:41:44.110
Leo Chu: not very. But I know your China Test service very, very well. in my old company that we are one of the we are one of the bigger employers of that service is we find out this. Really. I mean, you're thinking, helping people, you know, helping people. I don't think I'm doing a favor. I think they are doing me A. They provide me with the people that we can communicate with our own language, and they help us, and we can my job
219
00:41:44.140 --> 00:41:59.599
Leo Chu: and those some of those people. The first day they come here, and the second day they come to work in my company, and we still communicate with you. Get together and all that kind of stuff. So I think I think it's a very mutual thing that helps each other. And I never think about
220
00:41:59.700 --> 00:42:04.189
Leo Chu: China Town Service is really doing a one doing a
221
00:42:04.510 --> 00:42:28.229
Leo Chu: offering something to the people who can afford to hire them and stuff on. This is basically get them a new life. I think this very, very important, and some of my ex employees that actually came from Chinatown service. I mean, they are doing so well, and there is totally totally they. They basically built themselves into a whole different level of
222
00:42:28.390 --> 00:42:34.100
Leo Chu: people, so I can go on and on law. But talk about that. Then I got something that.
223
00:42:34.710 --> 00:42:46.779
Leo Chu: like special Olympics. My special Olympics is is a is a very interesting organization, is We raise money and we help people who are mentally returned.
224
00:42:47.080 --> 00:43:15.680
Leo Chu: What? Mentally we, Todd? So that is really, I mean, government gave us some money, and we do fund raising. So my wife, chairs and function call queue to so, and for 2524, 24 years, because, Covid, we cannot go on with the outside meetings, or maybe public meetings and stuff like this. So all this is changed. But what I see is, we make so many people. We train Southern California special Olympics. We train
225
00:43:15.680 --> 00:43:27.189
Leo Chu: 13,000 people. We have 25,000 volunteers. All the 25,000 volunteers are mostly either families or friends. Of all these, what we call essence.
226
00:43:27.190 --> 00:43:48.969
Leo Chu: As a matter of fact, 2,006, I think I know not 2,006 one year. We actually held our special Olympics summer game. Intellectual summer came in Shanghai. Okay? And I was, what's nature was then, I think, the governor. And then, we all went to Shanghai. So this is a different kind of philosophy.
227
00:43:49.070 --> 00:44:08.019
Leo Chu: Basically, you want to be involved by, you see so many mentally to talk to. mentally retarded people. They actually run, jump, swim. They even buy forces and create games, I mean, so the people who are more happy than those those as these other families.
228
00:44:08.370 --> 00:44:13.490
Leo Chu: because my first experience is my father's manager in Hong Kong. He?
229
00:44:13.520 --> 00:44:31.980
Leo Chu: Yeah, he had a he had a a, a daughter who had to go to special school, and in Chinese culture. When you have a family member like that. You don't bring that person into the oh, okay, you want to hide that person. Why? Because other people say, Hey, what's wrong with your family must done something wrong. That's why you got punished.
230
00:44:32.390 --> 00:44:44.699
Leo Chu: So that was the thinking. So this is the thing that got me in involved in, hey, how? We can actually not just make other people's life better or make more money actually make them happy.
231
00:44:45.880 --> 00:44:48.370
Marina Harper: Yeah, make them happy.
232
00:44:48.510 --> 00:44:56.760
Leo Chu: Yeah. So this is basically the how they need to think is to be involved with people that give something they don't have.
233
00:44:56.900 --> 00:45:05.779
Marina Harper: Yeah, you got started. And then you found this to be so exciting. What to do, you know, and you continue in in the journey from there
234
00:45:05.910 --> 00:45:11.480
Leo Chu: I continue the journey. Basically, I am interested in 2 things in education and also in health care.
235
00:45:11.580 --> 00:45:13.240
Marina Harper: Okay.
236
00:45:13.330 --> 00:45:25.039
Leo Chu: this, all this, my, my foundation, started 17 years from now 18 years. And basically on one purpose. Okay to help. Poor Chinese students cannot afford to go to school.
237
00:45:25.360 --> 00:45:27.130
Leo Chu: That's that's
238
00:45:27.320 --> 00:45:35.179
Leo Chu: we all ideal. So how do we start? We start building elementary schools in those days they call the School of Hope.
239
00:45:35.530 --> 00:45:55.319
Leo Chu: She wants you. She'll share okay until until but maybe 6 years later, Chinese government says we don't need you to build any more elementary school. This is another subject. Okay, China has has different rules and stuff. So so we stopped that. So what do we do? Then we started with
240
00:45:55.330 --> 00:46:21.480
Leo Chu: scholarships. We have 400 scholarships for Chinese students go to university in real poor states. Okay, so try and underway bombshe all those really really poor, I mean, people go to Shanghai people, but it's beautiful. They have not seen poor China yet. That's really poor. I mean, you have no idea. You have no, absolutely no idea how poor.
241
00:46:21.510 --> 00:46:33.029
Leo Chu: Okay? And so some of the students cannot afford. Okay, because they they far away. They have a walk. They don't have money to keep the bus. So we come up with another program to subsidize them to live
242
00:46:33.200 --> 00:46:38.140
Marina Harper: you the University. So now you give scholarships to us.
243
00:46:38.480 --> 00:46:46.239
Leo Chu: Well, that's because China changed their policy. Okay, now, China wants to all the Ngo some register.
244
00:46:47.040 --> 00:46:48.480
Leo Chu: And I said.
245
00:46:48.640 --> 00:47:08.370
Leo Chu: I think we have a problem because we have a privacy privacy laws. We cannot disclose the information of people who are involved in this. Okay? So now we don't. We cannot do those scholarships in China. So what we do is we stop doing scholarships for Chinese students coming to United States, and also with Chinese sense
246
00:47:08.480 --> 00:47:17.190
Marina Harper: perfect to hear your journey. That is so wonderful to hear the passion of a first Jen. Now we go to Vivian.
247
00:47:17.300 --> 00:47:22.790
Marina Harper: and here how your journey is because your parents passed the but on to you.
248
00:47:23.480 --> 00:47:47.330
Vivian Long: Yes, they did, I think, for us. the the family foundation was established by my parents back in 1992. So it's been around for over 30 years now, and when the foundation was starting out my sisters and I were quite young, and so we didn't even know about the foundation's existence. It was very private and a way for my parents
249
00:47:47.330 --> 00:47:57.269
Vivian Long: to live generously but they didn't really involve us at the foundation until we were adults until we were quite a bit older.
250
00:47:57.670 --> 00:48:21.060
Vivian Long: However, I think that when we did learn about the foundation it really didn't come as a surprise to us, because I think the model of giving and the model of generosity that my parents had themselves practiced and had really encouraged us to also practice was very consistent with what they wanted to do with the financial resources they had been given.
251
00:48:21.060 --> 00:48:32.599
Vivian Long: And so you know, I remember when I was young, instead of getting birthday gifts, my parents would have me collect shoes, and we would give them to communities in Mexico and
252
00:48:32.600 --> 00:49:00.530
Vivian Long: you know, instead of when I turn 16, I did a fundraiser, for you know, a nonprofit of my choice, and so I can see now, looking back on it the way in which they were really encouraging my sisters and I to think about, you know, one, the position of privilege that we were in, but also really what we could do to give back. So I think it was consistent. Once. They shared about the foundation, and you know, their hopes for the foundation
253
00:49:00.750 --> 00:49:32.510
Vivian Long: that we would step into that role. So I know you asked a little bit about decision making and how we determine what we're going to give to. So our family foundation. we have 5 areas of focus. And you know, really how we determine these 5 areas of focus was by saying, what is our family interested in? So, although I serve as our family's executive director, I am not the sole decision makers of where, our our funding goes. We make these decisions collectively as a family, and
254
00:49:32.510 --> 00:49:46.910
Vivian Long: I help guide us through some of that as the executive director. But, you know, it's not just me or my mom or my dad making this decisions, we really do it together. And so you know, through these 5 areas of focus that we have established.
255
00:49:46.910 --> 00:50:11.909
Vivian Long: That's something that we've done in collaboration with each other. And what we said is, we're gonna have areas of focus every 5 years, and every 5 years we're going to re-examine them and say, Hey, is this still consistent with what the family is interested in? And the reason why we did. That is because we felt like 5 years is a commitment that we want to make to each of these areas. It was one year felt too short. but 10 years also
256
00:50:11.910 --> 00:50:20.260
Vivian Long: it's it's it's, it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's, it's, it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's, it's it's it's, it's, it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it
257
00:50:20.260 --> 00:50:28.849
Vivian Long: and so We said it 5 years. Should be enough time for us to say, Hey, do we really? you know, plant seeds in these 5 areas?
258
00:50:29.140 --> 00:50:48.800
Vivian Long: And is it also enough time for us to say, Hey, let's think of new areas. that we want to explore potentially. So that's kind of the cycle in which we're operating in right now. and we'll see kind of how it goes. We're about to conclude our first 5 year cycle in 2,024. So
259
00:50:49.020 --> 00:51:00.840
Vivian Long: yeah, that's that's a kind of how our foundation operates. And I think you know my my background coming from nonprofit understanding how nonprofits work the challenges that they face.
260
00:51:00.840 --> 00:51:26.629
Vivian Long: I think that has really helped inform the way that we partner and I think that there can be a lot of power dynamics that exist in traditional philanthropy, where the Funder has a lot more power, and oftentimes the nonprofit feels as they don't have very much power, and so we feel really responsible for trying to address that power dynamic and actually flip it and say, Hey, our nonprofit partners are the experts. They
261
00:51:26.630 --> 00:51:49.769
Vivian Long: they are the ones with the trust in the community. They are the ones doing the really hard work. How do we make sure that they are empowered and feel the strongest they can to do the work that we really rely on them for right? We couldn't do the the the philanthropists couldn't do any of this without the nonprofits, and so I think we really feel grateful to them more than anything for the work that they're doing.
262
00:51:50.130 --> 00:51:58.140
Marina Harper: Wonderful. Thank you, Vivian, for he must given us that contact here now, Mr. Peter, from your lens.
263
00:52:01.030 --> 00:52:10.789
Peter Ng: But, as I mentioned, I join our family association in Chinatown, like the Clan Association, Singapore.
264
00:52:10.850 --> 00:52:15.750
Peter Ng: so we help each other from the family standpoint, and then because we all share the same
265
00:52:15.760 --> 00:52:28.539
Peter Ng: last name. So we like family, even though we are not really directly related. From there we evolve into more of open to the extended family. So
266
00:52:28.970 --> 00:52:37.930
Peter Ng: I actually myself, I started out as a volunteer at time Time Service center. I join the board because I wanted to get back
267
00:52:37.970 --> 00:53:01.980
Peter Ng: and whatever I can, I also don't make my own money, and because I used to be run a business on my business. So I was actually on the giving side. But then, there is an opportunity that China also center needed someone to to help run. So the board asked me if I wanted to do that side.
268
00:53:02.100 --> 00:53:04.349
Peter Ng: It was a big change for me
269
00:53:04.470 --> 00:53:26.050
Peter Ng: that 10 years ago I switch from a for profit to a nonprofit. it's really a I was to me a little while to get used to asking for money instead of giving money. But after a while I am so grateful that because without
270
00:53:26.050 --> 00:53:53.930
Peter Ng: the funders to donors. It's just impossible for us to do it even though, that we have plenty of volunteer. But to be able to do a good job. You need professionals meaning people that really do it day in and day out. They would not have a chance to to make a living to help their own family if they keep on volunteering. Right? So so I'm very grateful that I'm involved with China now. Service Center is
271
00:53:54.360 --> 00:53:55.740
Peter Ng: it's a staff.
272
00:53:55.870 --> 00:54:12.700
Peter Ng: and we are very fortunate that because all of the stop here because of the tradition with the long succession of predecessor that work here we help many. And and we all share the same passion
273
00:54:12.860 --> 00:54:19.480
Peter Ng: because we are not just doing a job, we helping people. So we have a couple of reward. So
274
00:54:19.530 --> 00:54:27.319
Peter Ng: we have this as a driving force to keep us going. Believe me, is it some time when you
275
00:54:27.570 --> 00:54:38.360
Peter Ng: help people? You see how they are suffering, and you trying to relieve them. But after a while you actually so involved with them, you become fatigue yourself.
276
00:54:38.380 --> 00:55:05.190
Peter Ng: and then and then the The donations from foundation is really a big boost for us when we see something that we, it's like we've been recognized. We're being in knowledge. So it gave us the energy to keep going. You just said, give you the energy In our own philanthropic studies of the Lilies family school. There is a terminology professionally. It's called the warm Glow.
277
00:55:05.290 --> 00:55:13.340
Marina Harper: The warm blow has been researched very deeply that philanthropies actually do benefit in health
278
00:55:13.390 --> 00:55:27.080
Marina Harper: because they have done experiments and measured. all this findings that when you give or you help, and you volunteer, you are actually producing happy hormones in your body.
279
00:55:27.170 --> 00:55:51.400
Marina Harper: and dolphins and oxytocin. These 2 things money cannot buy. Your body produces it, but to produce it, it's almost like you went for a run. But now, when you do this philanthropy at philanthropic action, whether it is just volunteering or giving money, anything you feel so good that you have an increase in, and dolphins and oxytocin in your body.
280
00:55:51.410 --> 00:55:54.569
Marina Harper: And this has been proven with data.
281
00:55:54.790 --> 00:56:05.070
Marina Harper: And the researcher who coined this, what one glow is Andreoni. So he's very important in our exams to know this terminology.
282
00:56:05.080 --> 00:56:26.640
Jiangang Zhu: So on that note, I go to Professor 2, and here from you from the China. Yeah, I'm I'm really touched the you how what you mentioned the the warm glow, some in my body. Actually, when I took part of my philanthropy journey, I always remember my grandmother who is actually
283
00:56:26.640 --> 00:56:52.020
Jiangang Zhu: she is a poor rural woman, but she, because she is a booty, so she always so the candidates to the people, you know we did, she and I I remember I just follow with with her to give the money into a beggar, or anyone you know vd to help she always give it a hand. So I think that's deeply in give give me very strong influence
284
00:56:52.030 --> 00:57:21.900
Jiangang Zhu: I actually, at the first time I was be becoming a warrant here, you know, Shanghai works for the slums, I think is actually the deep. Give me the info is the students from the university. actually, that appears on. They give me the encouragement, and we work together to do some service voluntary service at that time we don't know. This is the philanthropy. Actually, we just think that's a volunteer service, and it seems we can do something
285
00:57:21.910 --> 00:57:25.260
Jiangang Zhu: when we face some difficulties in the society
286
00:57:25.440 --> 00:57:48.729
Jiangang Zhu: on the the the sort of the sort of man that come from the we. It's Alliance class. We see the organization from the United States. But I see the owning organization can be permitted to register in China. the people from the lines. Clubs come to us and say we can do once to something beyond the lines clubs. So we have the idea to build the community foundation.
287
00:57:48.730 --> 00:58:08.169
Jiangang Zhu: We send from the from the United States, or we. Then we work together. I I remember some leaders of the line stops us as a small she just very energetic, so very. Give some to always give the woman hands. Sometimes I remember my grandmother, that's a shame, that similar spirit, so the just the one to keep others.
288
00:58:08.170 --> 00:58:29.460
Jiangang Zhu: So we work together, and we try to make it a make the philanthropy professional make the feelings. We can be well organized community foundation is a really a new way in China on the window, and how to work together decide something together and to support the community which connect to many families.
289
00:58:29.460 --> 00:58:54.440
Jiangang Zhu: then we just as think as I to philanthropy is not a ways of the allocate to resources. Philanthropy should be the way to educate the person, educate the young people, education the philanthropy leaders, give some leadership for the philanthropy for the philanthropist. so we just to build a our school philanthropy in Guangzhou? I I I' it's very difficult to do that.
290
00:58:54.440 --> 00:59:11.849
Jiangang Zhu: The reason some money just to come from the the founders. But we still need to some people to understand the importance of the function of the education of the philanthropy. So we met someone someone. I remember someone from the Singapore
291
00:59:11.890 --> 00:59:35.799
Jiangang Zhu: It's from the League Foundation. he seems very. He seems a very good investment. The idea of e-mail. I think that's a strategic investment. If the gave them money to educate the people, to do the effective of philanthropy, to do the social innovation that maybe bring the real change of the china. So I think I, deeply influenced by him, I would just change our folks
292
00:59:35.800 --> 00:59:54.200
Jiangang Zhu: from the donation to the how to make this social chance. So society change. So this is a very strong connection with the philanthropy to the all the policy change. I think that's high deproof of our my fantastic journey. Thank you. Yes, yes, seeing how other people do it.
293
00:59:54.380 --> 01:00:08.359
Marina Harper: we are. I'm going to combine. Question 3 and 4 looking at time, we got about 12 min left. So question 3 is, what are some idiosyncrasies or identifying elements of chime business
294
01:00:08.460 --> 01:00:19.889
Marina Harper: in philanthropic action based on your own personal experience. And then the second part of the question is, how do you think Chinese philanthropy can be passed down to next generations
295
01:00:19.900 --> 01:00:31.070
Marina Harper: in China, Prof. 2, or in diasporic Chinese communities, for example, Chinese Americans. So I go back to Liu to start this two-part question.
296
01:00:32.910 --> 01:00:35.329
Marina Harper: Oh, your your mute is on.
297
01:00:37.100 --> 01:01:02.719
Leo Chu: Sorry. What I said is, I think it's 3 parts. Oh, yeah. Your first part is the difference between the Chinese and also the American or the Western way of Philadelphia. The culture of and second party is what you said the question of before the whether the Chinese were passed down to the next generation in China and outside China.
298
01:01:02.960 --> 01:01:10.529
Marina Harper: That's basically 2 different questions. And talking about philanthropy in China, you cannot not talk about
299
01:01:10.550 --> 01:01:18.259
Leo Chu: politics. Okay. What Professor Chu said about is very, very true, based on the fact only on philanthropy.
300
01:01:18.730 --> 01:01:19.970
Leo Chu: Nothing to do with
301
01:01:20.490 --> 01:01:29.819
Leo Chu: politics, but once you mix in with the politics, the whole view changes. Okay, we will not allow to do anything in China.
302
01:01:29.980 --> 01:01:39.019
Leo Chu: Okay? Because now we are even afraid to do things in China. Okay? Because with all this national security laws, anything, anything can be
303
01:01:39.270 --> 01:01:41.649
Leo Chu: label as you're doing something wrong.
304
01:01:42.110 --> 01:01:49.169
Leo Chu: Okay? Because they have now a national security law that basically and pensive. Encompass everything.
305
01:01:49.220 --> 01:01:52.539
Leo Chu: Anything you say. Okay, you wear a yellow shit.
306
01:01:52.800 --> 01:01:53.939
Leo Chu: You go to jail.
307
01:01:54.250 --> 01:02:00.449
Leo Chu: I mean, with that kind of circumstances, with that kind of of of you know, situation is very difficult.
308
01:02:01.010 --> 01:02:03.270
Leo Chu: Okay, but you can even see it.
309
01:02:04.040 --> 01:02:14.820
Leo Chu: not in China, but outside of China, too. So this makes sir, Finance repeat very difficult. Okay, pass on to the second generation. I'm not sure
310
01:02:15.950 --> 01:02:20.650
Leo Chu: I'm not sure. And doing philosophy in China is totally different than outside.
311
01:02:20.870 --> 01:02:23.880
Leo Chu: If you look at it. In the United States.
312
01:02:24.270 --> 01:02:27.540
Leo Chu: United States, all donations.
313
01:02:27.990 --> 01:02:34.300
Leo Chu: nonprofit and volunteer work accounts for about 2% of Gdp.
314
01:02:34.620 --> 01:02:36.060
Leo Chu: 2% of Gdp.
315
01:02:37.200 --> 01:02:44.059
Leo Chu: China's education is only 3.5% of Gdp education fund from government is only 3.5%.
316
01:02:45.070 --> 01:02:47.060
Leo Chu: So there's a huge difference.
317
01:02:47.280 --> 01:02:52.419
Leo Chu: So I cannot see how to compare, because there's nothing to compare.
318
01:02:53.040 --> 01:03:06.539
Leo Chu: because nothing to compare in philanthropy. In China, I mean, has been used so much political. I mean, it's not even funny. Okay, they have a fundraising, they say. Oh, I I will donate 1 million, and they never donate a penny.
319
01:03:06.710 --> 01:03:18.080
Leo Chu: But they already got the name printed in the newspaper in the next day. So and so, and they are actually no, no moral about whether you should pay on now. Okay for them. It's just, Hey, look, Nick, you!
320
01:03:18.630 --> 01:03:22.079
Leo Chu: So now the new things call, hey? It's called Old Document.
321
01:03:22.160 --> 01:03:24.739
Leo Chu: What happened yesterday? I know I had to feel it today.
322
01:03:25.280 --> 01:03:32.380
Leo Chu: Now all these politics involved makes it very difficult. and makes it more of a threatening situation.
323
01:03:32.610 --> 01:03:40.739
Leo Chu: As we all know, the politics of the United States with FBI, you know, convicted people. And so you know all these things not helping.
324
01:03:41.250 --> 01:03:44.580
Marina Harper: So how about in the Us for the Chinese, diasporic
325
01:03:44.710 --> 01:03:48.170
Marina Harper: Americans, Chinese, Americans? Let's just say.
326
01:03:48.800 --> 01:03:51.989
Leo Chu: I think the Chinese Americans. look at Vivian.
327
01:03:52.840 --> 01:04:01.660
Leo Chu: She's the best example. Okay, she's a generation next generation with only 30 years only for 30 years. Okay, is a big change
328
01:04:01.690 --> 01:04:14.180
Leo Chu: education system in China. I'm very involved with China, although I live here for 48 years. Okay, I I you know, I I volunteer for full time. I'm not. You can. But I have a chair
329
01:04:14.280 --> 01:04:24.370
Leo Chu: that I put up to study Shanghai culture in Shanghai history and culture. So this is what I think I should do. But
330
01:04:24.700 --> 01:04:38.259
Leo Chu: but there's no transparency. So you don't know what they're doing. You don't know what they should pay your money for? Okay, they don't have to tell you anything. Okay, you go there to visit them. They buy you a good lunch and goodbye to it, and you see them next year.
331
01:04:38.270 --> 01:04:49.479
Marina Harper: Yeah. So based on this exciting conversation with you here, I want to jump directly to Jen. Count here to a professor, too. So that we get his view from from China.
332
01:04:50.370 --> 01:04:59.369
Jiangang Zhu: Yeah, I I totally agree with the I'm now. China. Politics is a really big challenge.
333
01:04:59.590 --> 01:05:28.780
Jiangang Zhu: for me. From my personal re view, I totally disagree with the political situation now, but that's a reality. We have to face it. I study the desk part of Chinese to do the philanthropy in the in the hometown of the I mean they're coming from, I mean chosen, I mean, I I really feel some that's part of finance piece to. They don't like to donate money into the formal organization with.
334
01:05:28.780 --> 01:05:49.779
Jiangang Zhu: It's very transparent, and we don't know what the money in the going. So the one to just to give them money to the hometown, to the I mean the the the relatives, or the the way to people on this thing, because they can know how the money going. that's very important. That for the that's part of
335
01:05:49.780 --> 01:06:01.729
Jiangang Zhu: I should say even we have the very strictly policy to confine the finance of PC. For especially for that part of philanthropy. but there still some gaps.
336
01:06:01.810 --> 01:06:24.150
Jiangang Zhu: I'm still some spaces in the private private in the we cause the local in the local areas in the in the hometown of the That's part of people I'm in Chelsea, on the people. That's why I see the Chinese is of the philanthropy in China. it's be called a one. She I mean relationship
337
01:06:24.150 --> 01:06:44.429
Jiangang Zhu: personal race. Very important. So sometimes we can just as go away around the the formal institution. We try to find some push you you really trust? Then you can give the money directly to the some courses you, you think very important. And to some some people you really trust.
338
01:06:44.430 --> 01:07:08.370
Jiangang Zhu: it's still possible to do something in my experience, I really my, I was in Charleston. I always see the people just to avoid some formal I mean supervision. They just give them money directly to some project which they are interested in. to some people they really think that they really the single that it's it's available to to support that.
339
01:07:08.650 --> 01:07:32.150
Marina Harper: I know it's very difficult. It's really hard time now, but we are the philanthropy. We have some spirit of philanthropy. So always try to do something. Yeah. Yeah. So all my best to these people. What try? So how to do philanthropy in China. Now I better go on to Vivian and then to Peter on the question of identifying elements, of chineseness, of philanthropic action.
340
01:07:32.150 --> 01:07:39.029
Marina Harper: and how to pass it on to next generations. And we'll stay with Chinese Americans here. So Vivian.
341
01:07:39.500 --> 01:07:56.309
Vivian Long: sure. Well, a as Dr. Zoe alluded to earlier, our foundation actually helped start an initiative called the Global Chinese Philanthropy Initiative, and that was really born out of an interest from my father to look at similarities and differences between
342
01:07:56.310 --> 01:08:15.199
Vivian Long: Chinese philanthropists and Chinese American philanthropists, and you know what has been said is absolutely true. you know there are some similarities, and the similarities were that you know Chinese and Chinese Americans like to give to education and health care. Education by far was the number one priority for both of those
343
01:08:15.200 --> 01:08:41.559
Vivian Long: populations. But one of the major differences was this question around kind of like government intervention and government policy in the Us. Obviously, it's a little bit more hands off. And in the in China it's a little bit more hands on. So it was really interesting to do that study. And now the research is almost 10 years old, so we could probably do a refresher. But that was a really good baseline to learn about some of those similarities and differences.
344
01:08:41.560 --> 01:08:59.749
Vivian Long: I will say when it comes to the next generation. You know. One thing that gives me a lot of hope is that you know my generation has, I think, a more global view of the relationship between the Us. And China, and a a large part of that is because there's so many
345
01:08:59.840 --> 01:09:24.659
Vivian Long: Americans that have either worked for a long period of time, or have studied in China and vice versa. And so, you know, there's a lot more cross pollination. There's a lot more engagement between the 2 communities, I would say at my generations level, which I think is so important because the relationship between the Us and China is nuanced right? It is complicated.
346
01:09:24.660 --> 01:09:32.100
Vivian Long: But I think we all agree that it's extremely important. And you know it's important that we do all we can to make it something positive
347
01:09:32.109 --> 01:09:57.009
Vivian Long: one of the ways that we've been doing that is through an initiative called the next Gen. Leader Circle, and it's a partnership between China Institute and the Erica project. And they It's a group of, you know, young professionals who really care about the relationship between us and China, and we see philanthropy as being a really critical bridge to help bring these 2 these 2 countries together. And so
348
01:09:57.190 --> 01:10:26.549
Vivian Long: when we talk about you know, how do we pass this on. I think the next generation really sees the need for it, and I think one distinction between the older generation and the younger generation is that There's a desire to do philanthropy and community. There's, I think, an excitement when you get to do it in a group setting, whereas I think an old, you know that that's something that I'm not sure was as valued before. So I'm excited about that, and I'm I think that you know there's a lot of
349
01:10:26.550 --> 01:10:38.759
Vivian Long: hope for how we can, you know, encourage positive relations between the 2 countries, and have philanthropy really be a tool for communication and ongoing dialogue.
350
01:10:38.920 --> 01:10:52.599
Marina Harper: Thank you, Vivian. All right, Peter. We have 2 min for you to summarize the what you feel about the identifying or into idiosyncrasies of chineseness in Philadelphia action, and how to pass down
351
01:10:52.910 --> 01:10:54.370
Marina Harper: the next generation
352
01:10:56.460 --> 01:11:11.230
Peter Ng: we involved in many different organizations, and one of them is called Cisani, which is established 35 years ago. it's called Stands for the
353
01:11:11.380 --> 01:11:12.970
Peter Ng: service to
354
01:11:13.380 --> 01:11:33.050
Peter Ng: help to Chinese Immigrant network. International. It comprise of 35 organization all over the world, and then we get together, and we what we observe is Also we were invited to China and to
355
01:11:33.070 --> 01:11:42.300
Peter Ng: to exchange ideas there was before the pandemic. And what we observed was, China is really trying hard because
356
01:11:42.300 --> 01:12:03.969
Peter Ng: they know that it's just necessary system. So they are trying to develop their own system there. And, Leo, you're the You. You're already going there. And you know what is like. So what we do is all these organization. They also grooming the next generation, the newcomers to join in. but I can see that
357
01:12:04.190 --> 01:12:23.409
Peter Ng: the politics definitely is not going to be an element at all, and and the Chinese Government knows it, and we here in the Us. Is prohibited. We we cannot, get politic involved in any other way out of way. We are not qualified for nonprofit, so it's quite easy for us but
358
01:12:23.410 --> 01:12:40.780
Peter Ng: that that the message it's already spread over there, but whether or not the the Chinese over there in in mainland, the whether they will carry that or not, that's up to them, but I think eventually they will recognize it. But it's important that we have a
359
01:12:40.780 --> 01:12:50.350
Peter Ng: oncoming stream of passionate new generation that's coming. Join us. So we can continue this mission. And with the
360
01:12:50.360 --> 01:12:58.979
Peter Ng: foundations and and all those that wanted to go into help that would really keep it going for us to to help those that in need.
361
01:12:59.300 --> 01:13:10.919
Marina Harper: Thank you, Peter, and thank you to the panelists. There's so much hope that you all have, you know, talked about. And now I'm going to pass it back to profit domain
362
01:13:11.280 --> 01:13:13.419
Marina Harper: for her to close.
363
01:13:13.950 --> 01:13:27.640
Min Zhou: Well, thank you so much, Marina, for being this excellent moderator, and thank you for the all the panelists for this enlightening and stimulating discussion.
364
01:13:27.640 --> 01:13:57.469
Min Zhou: And I'm just I I have learned so much from you, and thank you. And then I'm also very deeply touched by your passion, your enthusiasm, your energy, your determination, and your contribution to this course and and also thank you for sharing your stories, and and also your experience of doing philanthropy, and I believe that the audience has benefit
365
01:13:57.470 --> 01:14:00.990
Min Zhou: as much as I, and have benefited a lot.
366
01:14:01.050 --> 01:14:30.660
Min Zhou: and thank you so much again, and also thank you for the audience for participating. And please also, John, me to thank our centers. Deputy Director Aaron Mira program, Coordinator, Gina Chan Ginny 10, our graduate student assistant, Lena, one and undergraduate student, Lydian, and for their hard work behind the the scene.
367
01:14:30.660 --> 01:14:59.810
Min Zhou: and thank you so much for coming. And good evening, and good morning. Now we have a 1510, 15 min break, and for the enroll. Students. Please come back to the same zoom room, and we will start again at 6, 30 on 9, 30, paging time. Thank you, and good night and good morning. Bye, bye, bye, bye, bye, bye, bye, thank you. Thank you so much.
368
01:14:59.960 --> 01:15:01.669
Marina Harper: Thank you, everyone.
369
01:15:06.260 --> 01:15:10.200
Min Zhou: Thank you, Peter. Thank you, Leo.
370
01:15:10.280 --> 01:15:15.680
Marina Harper: Thank you.