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One of China's richest women hopes to keep driving culture of philanthropy

by Belinda Goldsmith | @BeeGoldsmith | Thomson Reuters Foundation
Thursday, 22 June 2017 18:00 GMT

A humble upbringing made Zhai Meiqin determined to help others

By Belinda Goldsmith

LONDON, June 22 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - After starting work in a hotel kitchen, Zhai Meiqin began selling furniture and built a billion-dollar conglomerate but she took great pride on Thursday for being recognised for driving a new phenomenon in China - philanthropy.

Zhai, one of China's richest women and president of the privately-owned HeungKong Group Ltd, said she never forgot her humble upbringing in Guangzhou in southern China where her father was an architect and her mother worked in a store.

This made her determined to help others and she started donating to charity shortly after setting up the business with her husband in 1990.

As their business grew, taking in real estate, financial investment and healthcare, Zhai broke new ground in 2005 by establishing China's first non-profit charity foundation.

Since then the HeungKong Charitable Foundation has helped an estimated 2 million people, by funding 1,500 libraries, providing loans for women to start businesses, and funding orphans, single mothers, handicapped children and the elderly.

"I realised there were a lot of poor people in China and this drove me to earn more money so I could help them," said Zhai, 53, who was one of nine philanthropists named on Thursday as winners of the 2017 Carnegie Medal of Philanthropy.

Zhai and her husband Liu Zhiqiang, whose HeungKong Group with 20,000 staff has made them worth about $1.4 billion according to Forbes magazine, are known for being leaders of the culture of philanthropy in China.

Their foundation was listed as number 001 by the Ministry of Civil Affairs. Zhai said at the end of 2015 there were 3,300 registered non-profit charity foundations in China.

"By setting up the foundation I wanted to encourage other people, other entrepreneurs, to also donate to charity," she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation in a phone interview from Guangzhou translated by her daughter.

"Now I want to make sure that the next generation continues this culture of philanthropy in China," she added, with two of her four children taking an active role in her foundation.

The other philanthropists to win the Carnegie Medal - that was established in 2001 and is awarded every two years - came from across the globe.

The list included India's education-focused Azim Premji, Canadian-born social enterprise pioneer Jeff Skoll and American- Australian lawyer and former World Bank Group president James Wolfensohn.

The winners were chosen by a committee made up of seven people representing some of the 22 Carnegie institutions in the United States and Europe. (Reporting by Belinda Goldsmith @BeeGoldsmith, Editing by Astrid Zweynert @azweynert. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women's rights, trafficking, property rights, climate change and resilience. Visit http://news.trust.org)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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