Making a difference (Even if youre not Warren Buffet)
August 17, 2006 | 12:00am
Good intentions are like cold dough on a table, waiting for something to enable it to rise and amount to something be it a mouthwatering ensaymada or a basic pan de sal. Most of us have dough somewhere in the kitchens of our soul. Like a baker with brioche in her mind, we have a picture of what we want our good intentions to amount to a safer community, help for streetkids, a cleaner environment, a better world. But often, it just sits there, a good intention waiting to rise to its full potential.
And then there are those who transform their good intentions into concrete reality, searching for, and finding that missing ingredient that makes all the difference.
Harvey Keh is just a little past the quarter century of his life, and yet he has already enabled hundreds of poor high school students to have a shot at a college education. Jesuit-educated Harvey (Xavier School in Greenhills for elementary and high school and Ateneo de Manila for college) founded Pathways to Higher Education in April 2002, as a new education development program under the Office of the President of the Ateneo de Manila University.
"Since we started in 2002, 15 students have graduated from college and there are currently more than 350 college students from all over the Philippines that are beneficiaries of Pathways," says Harvey, now a fellow at the Asian Institute of Management in Makati.
"We are currently preparing more than 1,200 public high school students from all over the Philippines to go to college," adds Harvey, who once taught Theology to college sophomores at the Ateneo.
One of Pathways more famous beneficiaries is Archie Dolit, a son of a taho vendor and a lavandera, who is now on his fourth year as a Electronics and Communications Engineering (ECE) major at the Ateneo. Another beneficiary of Pathways is Mary Herbel Santiago, probably the first ever student from the depressed community of Payatas, Quezon City to make it to Ateneo de Manila as a full scholar. She is now a freshman there.
"One of our other pioneer students is Michelle Francisco, now on her Senior Year in Miriam College. Just recently, Michelle was chosen as one of the delegates to the very prestigious Ayala Young Leaders Congress (AYLC). Finally, one more student from our pioneer batch that we are very proud of is Bernie Nebres, who is also from Payatas and is the only one among all his siblings to have entered college. Bernie will become a teacher when he obtains his Education degree from Centro Escolar University in March 2007," Harvey says proudly. He recently set up a new foundation (AHON Foundation), which is committed to building public school libraries all over the Philippines. They built their first public school library at the Industrial Valley Elementary School in Marikina City.
I asked him from where he drew the inspiration to be a doer and an enabler.
"Ive always told people that I live by the motto that To Whom Much is Given, Much is Expected. Coming from a middle class family and being able to study at very good schools (Xavier School and Ateneo de Manila), I thought it was about time that I give back and try to provide better opportunities to deserving students to get a better chance to live a good life through education. Ive always said as well that my parents are my greatest inspiration, my mom and my dad have always reminded me how important education is and at the same time they constantly remind me how important it is to help others especially those is need," says Harvey, whose other role models are Ateneo president Fr. Bienvenido Nebres, S.J. and Naga City Mayor Jesse Robredo.
Most of us try to "give back" when were pretty settled in life. Often we want the Warren Buffets and the John Gokongweis of this world to be the tidal wave that will change the landscape of poverty. But good-old-middle-class us? I think most of us have good intentions. Yes, good intentions.
I salute you, Harvey.
Among the most recent benefactors of Pathways is the KC de Venecia Foundation. Forty students from poor families in Metro Manila are now assured of their college education thanks to the foundation and Pathways.
KC was the youngest daughter of Speaker Joe de Venecia and wife Gina. She perished in a fire that gutted their home in Dasmariñas Village on Dec. 16, 2004. In her memory, the De Venecia family has put up a foundation that will help young students fulfill their dreams.
As a young girl, KC was into arts and sciences. She started painting at the age of five, and was keen on taking a course related to the same field. She was only in her third year in high school at the International School when she died. After she died, her parents received the cash value of KCs education plan, which they bought for her in the US when she was a baby. Joe and Gina felt that the money should go to poor students who desire, but cannot afford, a college education.
Last Aug. 1, KCs mother Gina de Venecia and her brother Christopher, president of the KC de Venecia Foundation, signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with Pathways that guaranteed the college scholarship of 40 students.
This first batch of KC scholars were chosen by Pathways. The MOU signing took place at the Ateneo, where Christopher is on his third year of college. Incidentally, his dad, Speaker de Venecia, is also an alumnus of the university.
Present during the MOU signing were the family, relatives and friends of KC, while Pathways was represented by its founder Harvey Keh, acting director Solvie Nubla and Ateneo president Father Nebres, who is also Pathways chairman.
The KC de Venecia Foundation is composed of KCs family and friends. Her mom Gina as the CEO is assisted by her brother Christopher and sister Carissa Cruz Evangelista. KCs cousin lawyer Ernest Maceda is the corporate secretary while brother Ipe Cruz, cousins Jodel Ampil, JM Nakpil, Camella Isabel de Venecia, Maria Fredelyn Sta. Ana, Patricia Claire Perez and best friend Harvey Alumisin compose the board of trustees.
It takes more than just moguls like Buffet, Gates and Gokongwei, superstars like Pitt and Jolie and public servants like the De Venecias to make this world a better place. We who rise out of bed every morning to eke out a living can help prepare others to make theirs.
(Pathways to Higher Education may be reached at tel. # 426-6001 loc. 4047/4048).
(You may e-mail me at [email protected])
And then there are those who transform their good intentions into concrete reality, searching for, and finding that missing ingredient that makes all the difference.
Harvey Keh is just a little past the quarter century of his life, and yet he has already enabled hundreds of poor high school students to have a shot at a college education. Jesuit-educated Harvey (Xavier School in Greenhills for elementary and high school and Ateneo de Manila for college) founded Pathways to Higher Education in April 2002, as a new education development program under the Office of the President of the Ateneo de Manila University.
"Since we started in 2002, 15 students have graduated from college and there are currently more than 350 college students from all over the Philippines that are beneficiaries of Pathways," says Harvey, now a fellow at the Asian Institute of Management in Makati.
"We are currently preparing more than 1,200 public high school students from all over the Philippines to go to college," adds Harvey, who once taught Theology to college sophomores at the Ateneo.
One of Pathways more famous beneficiaries is Archie Dolit, a son of a taho vendor and a lavandera, who is now on his fourth year as a Electronics and Communications Engineering (ECE) major at the Ateneo. Another beneficiary of Pathways is Mary Herbel Santiago, probably the first ever student from the depressed community of Payatas, Quezon City to make it to Ateneo de Manila as a full scholar. She is now a freshman there.
"One of our other pioneer students is Michelle Francisco, now on her Senior Year in Miriam College. Just recently, Michelle was chosen as one of the delegates to the very prestigious Ayala Young Leaders Congress (AYLC). Finally, one more student from our pioneer batch that we are very proud of is Bernie Nebres, who is also from Payatas and is the only one among all his siblings to have entered college. Bernie will become a teacher when he obtains his Education degree from Centro Escolar University in March 2007," Harvey says proudly. He recently set up a new foundation (AHON Foundation), which is committed to building public school libraries all over the Philippines. They built their first public school library at the Industrial Valley Elementary School in Marikina City.
I asked him from where he drew the inspiration to be a doer and an enabler.
"Ive always told people that I live by the motto that To Whom Much is Given, Much is Expected. Coming from a middle class family and being able to study at very good schools (Xavier School and Ateneo de Manila), I thought it was about time that I give back and try to provide better opportunities to deserving students to get a better chance to live a good life through education. Ive always said as well that my parents are my greatest inspiration, my mom and my dad have always reminded me how important education is and at the same time they constantly remind me how important it is to help others especially those is need," says Harvey, whose other role models are Ateneo president Fr. Bienvenido Nebres, S.J. and Naga City Mayor Jesse Robredo.
Most of us try to "give back" when were pretty settled in life. Often we want the Warren Buffets and the John Gokongweis of this world to be the tidal wave that will change the landscape of poverty. But good-old-middle-class us? I think most of us have good intentions. Yes, good intentions.
I salute you, Harvey.
KC was the youngest daughter of Speaker Joe de Venecia and wife Gina. She perished in a fire that gutted their home in Dasmariñas Village on Dec. 16, 2004. In her memory, the De Venecia family has put up a foundation that will help young students fulfill their dreams.
As a young girl, KC was into arts and sciences. She started painting at the age of five, and was keen on taking a course related to the same field. She was only in her third year in high school at the International School when she died. After she died, her parents received the cash value of KCs education plan, which they bought for her in the US when she was a baby. Joe and Gina felt that the money should go to poor students who desire, but cannot afford, a college education.
Last Aug. 1, KCs mother Gina de Venecia and her brother Christopher, president of the KC de Venecia Foundation, signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with Pathways that guaranteed the college scholarship of 40 students.
This first batch of KC scholars were chosen by Pathways. The MOU signing took place at the Ateneo, where Christopher is on his third year of college. Incidentally, his dad, Speaker de Venecia, is also an alumnus of the university.
Present during the MOU signing were the family, relatives and friends of KC, while Pathways was represented by its founder Harvey Keh, acting director Solvie Nubla and Ateneo president Father Nebres, who is also Pathways chairman.
The KC de Venecia Foundation is composed of KCs family and friends. Her mom Gina as the CEO is assisted by her brother Christopher and sister Carissa Cruz Evangelista. KCs cousin lawyer Ernest Maceda is the corporate secretary while brother Ipe Cruz, cousins Jodel Ampil, JM Nakpil, Camella Isabel de Venecia, Maria Fredelyn Sta. Ana, Patricia Claire Perez and best friend Harvey Alumisin compose the board of trustees.
(Pathways to Higher Education may be reached at tel. # 426-6001 loc. 4047/4048).
(You may e-mail me at [email protected])
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