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Narciso
Matos to leave Carnegie Corporation and head Mozambican civic organization
An
advocate for African education and development answers the call
to return home and advance the nonprofit sector.
(New
York, New York December 15, 2006) Narciso Matos, chair of the
International Development Program and an expert in the field of
African higher education, will be leaving Carnegie Corporation of
New York in July 2007 to lead the Community Development Foundation
of Mozambique, a civic nonprofit institution that supports local
initiatives through community investment, with the aim of defeating
poverty and promoting social justice. Established in 1990 by Graça
Machel, widow of the late president of Mozambique and wife of Nelson
Mandela, the Foundation is the first and foremost institution of
its kind in the country. It was in response to the direct request
of Ms. Machel, who knows Matos well from her days as Education Minister
of Mozambique, that he accepted the executive director position.
"Narciso Matos is the architect of our work in African higher
education," said Vartan Gregorian, President of Carnegie Corporation.
It has been a privilege to have him guiding the Corporation’s
strategy in this area. He has a deep understanding of Africa from
several critical perspectives, and his expertise has been invaluable
to our efforts to stimulate scientific and education leadership.
Higher education is a critical element in Africa's future and we
will miss Matos’ insight and experience, which have been so
vital to our endeavors to make a difference for the university system
and Africa's future leaders."
Matos will continue to steer the Corporation’s critical work
in African higher education while an international search is conducted
for his successor.
Helene
Kaplan, chair of the board of trustees of the Corporation, expressed
appreciation for Matos’ many contributions to the Corporation’s
ongoing programs in Africa. “We could never have equaled the
progress that has been made on the continent without an expert of
Matos' scope and integrity to shape our strategy," she said.
“As a scholar and education leader, he is deeply familiar
with culture and aspirations of the African university community
and understands the needs of the higher education sector. He has
been a dedicated and powerful advocate, and a partner to the continent’s
educational leadership.”
Matos
has been a vital force in the work of The Partnership for Higher
Education in Africa, of which Carnegie Corporation is a founding
member. This cooperative effort with the Ford, MacArthur, Rockefeller,
William and Flora Hewlett and the Andrew W. Mellon foundations,
supports capacity building within universities and throughout the
field of higher education in Africa. Since 2000, more than $150
million in support has gone to universities in six African countries.
In September 2005, $200 million more was pledged over the next five
years.
Born
and raised in Mozambique, Matos attended Eduardo Mondlane University
in the capital city of Maputo, and is a scientist by training with
a PhD in chemistry. In the late 1980's, he served as the university’s
Dean of the Faculty of Science and later as its Vice Chancellor,
the university’s highest administrative position. He was a
Member of Parliament for nine years. Prior to joining Carnegie Corporation
in January 2000, he was the Secretary General of the Association
of African Universities (AAU) and a member of the Advisory Group
on Higher Education to the Secretary General of UNESCO.
“I have always hoped that I would someday return to Mozambique,
where I can apply the many valuable lessons learned in my years
at Carnegie Corporation,” Matos said. “The Community
Development Foundation needs a leader who can help focus its work
and move the organization in a more strategic direction, and they
need that person now. Such organizations can be a lifeline for African
countries like Mozambique, where the needs are great. But they cannot
be expected to address all needs for all people,” he stressed.
“My goal is for the Community Development Foundation to become
an umbrella association and trainer for other hands-on non-governmental
organizations throughout the country. This change, however, will
not be easy,” Matos added. “It requires consolidation
of the Foundation’s financial base and strengthening the confidence
of local, national and international partners in order to build
up an endowment that can be maintained through the years. That will
be my primary challenge.”
Matos
said he was amazed at changes that have taken place in Mozambique
since he moved away eleven years ago. One positive difference is
the growth of civic organizations and nonprofits and the increased
numbers of people who, “if they were properly trained,”
would be qualified to work for them. Strengthening the nonprofit
sector is critically important to the role Matos sees for the Community
Development Foundation, which he envisions becoming “the voice
of civil society. We will speak out on policy matters,” he
predicted. “On issues such as debt relief, for instance, where
once only the government would act as interlocutor with institutions
like the World Bank, we could be involved as an advocate as well.
“Carnegie Corporation has been a school for me,” Matos
explained. “I’ve learned not just about field operations
but also about the dynamics between donor and receiver. It’s
been an eye-opening experience that’s taught me the importance
of empowering those who have to do the real work. My role will be
to act as a facilitator and to build trust in the organization.
And my goal will be to provide for the community based on what they
tell us is needed – not on what we want to do for them.
“Of course it is with some sadness that I leave my many friends
at the Corporation, and with some trepidation that I change the
direction of my professional life,” Matos admitted. “As
I see it, what I’m doing here at Carnegie Corporation, hundreds
of others could do as well. But in Mozambique we don’t have
enough people. One person can make more of a difference.“
Carnegie Corporation of New York was created by Andrew Carnegie
in 1911 to promote "the advancement and diffusion of knowledge
and understanding." As a grantmaking foundation, the Corporation
seeks to carry out Carnegie's vision of philanthropy, which he said
should aim "to do real and permanent good in this world."
The Corporation's capital fund, originally donated at a value of
about $135 million, had a market value of $2.2 billion on September
30, 2005. The Corporation awards grants totaling approximately $80
million a year in the areas of education, international peace and
security, international development and strengthening U.S. democracy.
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