| Carnegie Corporation of New York Vol. 3/No. 4 Spring 2006 |
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Commentary on Russia and Eurasia by Vartan Gregorian Judicial Elections: Still Fair and Balanced? A Developing Identity: Hispanics in the United States Linking African Universities with MIT iLabs Serving the Legacy
of Andrew Carnegie: Investing for Also in this issue: Organizations Supporting Judicial Reform Demographic Dividend or Missed Opportunity? Past Issues: Request a free subscription to the print edition
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by George Reid George Reid MSP is the Presiding Officer of the Scottish
Parliament. This article is adapted from remarks he delivered on October
4, 2005 at the Scottish Parliament, which hosted the third biennial Carnegie
Medal of Philanthropy ceremony. The Carnegie Medal award was created in
2001 at the centennial observance of Andrew Carnegie’s official
career as a philanthropist and is given to those who, like Carnegie, have
dedicated their private wealth to public good and sustained an impressive
career in philanthropy. We meet this morning in a special place. A UNESCO World Heritage Site, where the thousand years of Scottish history in Edinburgh’s Royal Mile fuses with the land of Scotland in Holyrood Park. Engaging in the Enlightenment The men whose thoughts gave intellectual rigor to the American Revolution—David Hume, Francis Hutcheson, Thomas Reid—walked the pavements outside where we sit. Benjamin Franklin twice came to Edinburgh to engage in dialogue with them. James Witherspoon—first Principal of the Presbyterian College of New Jersey, now Princeton, and the brains behind the Declaration of Independence—was here too. And so were the bridge-builders, doctors, engineers, entrepreneurs, free thinkers and wealth creators—the Scottish shock troops of American modernization—who did so much to make the U.S. what it is. Andrew Carnegie came from that get-up-and-go tradition. He was shaped by the Scottish Enlightenment and its principles. By its common sense utilitarianism: the need for social conscience and commitment to the greatest happiness of the greatest possible number. By its cosmopolitanism: the ability to be comfortable in different cultures. And, above all else, by its confidence in the future: the innate optimism that the world was not only getting better but offered extraordinary opportunities to those who set out to achieve them. Carnegie and the Community His money went, in a very Scottish way, not to the great and mighty…or to advance the cause of rampant capitalism, but to the community…to offer opportunity, and enrichment of life, to millions of ordinary men and women. Three thousand free libraries around the world to open the minds of the workforce of the future. Public parks and swimming baths and children’s health programmes to nurture the body. University endowments to push the limits of knowledge. A pension plan for teachers. Concert halls to bring excellence in the arts. A peace foundation to help end the scourge of war… No man can be truly rich, he said, unless he first enriches others. It was a radical programme deemed wildly socialist by his peers on Wall Street. But a century on, gathered here at Holyrood, we can take pride that a son of Scotland gifted progressive philanthropy to the world. The Carnegie Awards and
Symposium Why is Holyrood important to this process? But because progressive philanthropy faces major strategic challenges in our compressed global economy…in its relationships with the state…in its partnerships with civic society…in its advocacy work…and in its key role of ensuring change for good. Lessons for Scotland We have to get back the entrepreneurial, get-up-and-go spirit that we exported to America. We must recognize that we cannot redistribute the money until we have made it. We should note that, here in the Chamber, are representatives of the Hewlett and Packard families who currently invest around $500 million a year in civil, environmental and health programs—but who started small, with $853 in a garage in Palo Alto, California. And we should recall what Tom Hunter said when he gifted £55 million to the Clinton Global Initiative: “I’m a Scotsman. I don’t do handouts. I’ve not given anything away. I’ve invested it—in people who will maximise it in the service of their communities.” Lessons for America If we can benefit from some of the entrepreneurial spirit we took to the States, maybe they can benefit from some of the communitarian values that remain valid in Scotland. The progressive foundations in America are under challenge from younger, neo-liberal foundations of the right. Their trustees seek new ideas, new strategic directions. Across the Atlantic, this little country has a vibrant voluntary sector and a strong civic society. Our ties with America are firm. But so are our links throughout the European Union and many of the countries in the developing world. So, in the spirit of the Enlightenment, think of us as
a bridge across the Atlantic, to a wider world and to People First The old Chinese proverb contains a truth which all of us in this Chamber share. That beyond the relentless flow of labour and capital across frontiers…beyond the integration of markets, nation-states and technologies…people still come first. Ours need not be a world of ruthless competition, the market driving all—a divisive scenario in which the Rest squares up to the West. I have personal experience of this. For a dozen years of my life, I worked as a director of the International Red Cross and Red Crescent in wars and disasters around the world, in developing and developed countries alike. I therefore pay tribute to all of you in our Chamber this morning whose motives encapsulate both the Red Cross motto—Tutti fratelli, all are brothers—and that great hymn to humanity of our national poet, Robert Burns: That man to man the worl’ ower shall brithers be… I pay tribute to your work for human rights everywhere, particularly the rights of women. For the provision of microcredit, an old sewing machine turning a land-mine victim into a tailor and a person of substance. For the investment of hundreds of millions of dollars in the most deprived communities of the world. For bringing respite to those caught in the crossfire of conflict. For education of excellence, open to all. And for bringing compassion and tolerance to angry societies. But times change. The philosophies of the founding fathers of “charity” were rooted in another, older world. When the Red Cross was founded, armies lined up and fired off at each other. Ladies came out in carriages to picnic and watch the action. Today, wars happen inside countries, not between countries. Nine out of ten casualties are civilians. Red Cross workers have become targets. And the old rules and regulations are no longer enough. Challenges to Charity Andrew Carnegie recognized the problem in 1889 when he wrote: It is more difficult to give money away intelligently than it is to earn it in the first place. How do foundations invest money intelligently in the 21st century? How do they achieve Carnegie’s goal of scientific philanthropy? Only by constantly addressing and re-addressing the challenges of today.
Perhaps Vartan Gregorian, President of Carnegie Corporation of New York, has put it best: Foundations need to be in the ideas business, not the needs business. In other words, what’s needed now is enterprise and compassion. Surplus wealth for public good. A renewed commitment by the progressive foundations to empowering people and righting wrongs. Verily, verily, in the words of Andrew Carnegie: No man is truly rich, until he enriches others. For more information about the Carnegie Medal of Philanthropy, visit www.carnegie.org/sub/awardees/index.html. For more information about the 2005 Carnegie Medal of Philanthropy, visit www.scottish.parliament.uk/carnegie.
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