
Merging Missions
Carnegie Corporation and other foundations working at the national level
found they were hard pressed to serve the immigrant community whose most
dire needs called for local action. Seeking effective new strategies to
get needed money down to grassroots groups they couldn’t reach,
representatives of several large foundations got together to think through
better ways to facilitate funding and move immigrant civic engagement
and integration forward. This initial meeting was organized by Michele
Lord, an attorney with years of experience working on immigrant issues,
who was consulting with the Ford Foundation. Observing how small immigrant
organizations regularly banded together to be more efficient and effective,
she suggested starting a parallel funding collaborative on a national
level. The idea was one that resonated with Carnegie Corporation, whose
president, Vartan Gregorian, was a longstanding proponent of strategic
foundation partnerships.
“We’re strongest when funders who share the
same goals combine forces,” says Taryn Higashi, deputy director
of the Ford Foundation’s Human Rights Division. “A problem
of this scope can’t be solved alone. It lends itself to a collective
approach, which allows us to compensate for each others’ blind spots.
The same is true for grassroots groups,” she adds. “Social
change doesn’t happen because of one group’s success; it takes
changing public opinion and systemic problem solving.”
The Four Freedoms Fund was started with grants totaling
$2.8 million ($1 million from Carnegie Corporation). “There were
two existing streams of funding, one from Carnegie Corporation supporting
civic participation and one from Ford supporting human rights. They needed
to merge: Simply put, we know people won’t participate in public
life if they’re afraid,” Lord explains. Representatives of
all five founding donors became members of the Board and, agreeing that
the work should be integrated, they pushed forward a holistic strategy
encompassing civic engagement and civil rights. The name Four Freedoms
Fund was suggested by Craig McGarvey (a consultant and former program
officer of the James Irvine Foundation) who had seen the Norman Rockwell
paintings based on FDR’s “Four Freedoms” speech on exhibit
in Atlanta and been inspired.
Four Freedoms
We look forward to a world founded upon four
essential human freedoms. The first is freedom of speech and expression—everywhere
in the world. The second is freedom of every person to worship God
in his own way—everywhere in the world. The third is freedom
from want...everywhere in the world. The fourth is freedom from fear...anywhere
in the world.
—President Franklin
D. Roosevelt, Message to Congress, January 6, 1941 |
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