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Why a $381.6 million U.S. billionaire went to Vietnam

The 89-year-old American billionaire TTO has just completed his biggest goal of

life: giving away all of his $ 8 billion worth of assets, leaving only

$2 million for the rest of his life. "He is a living Buddha,"

Phan Thanh Tung said about billionaire Chuck Feeney.
You're born empty-handed and you're gone. U.S. billionaire Chuck

Feeney held that view and did the right thing. When giving away,

he often wants to see for himself whether his donation will

reach the right person, the right job.

"The meeting that day gave me a different look at the purpose

of the money that I earned. A series of questions came to my mind

Who is Chuck Feeney? Why would he give such a large sum of money to eat?"

- Mr. Phan Thanh Tung, one of hundreds of you.Vietnam received Australian

scholarships from billionaire Chuck Feeney, recalling a special meeting 15

years ago. "He is a living Buddha," Tung said about billionaire Chuck Feney as

soon as he started talking to me on the evening of 19-9 years.

The 89-year-old American billionaire has just accomplished his biggest goal of

life: giving away all of his $ 8 billion worth of assets, leaving only $2

million for the rest of his life. The Atlantic Philanthropy that he secretly founded

in 1982 was officially over. Your mission, your mission. Millions of people have

benefited from the philanthropic money of the billionaire who has the philosophy of "Give While Alive."

Fate with Vietnam

Becoming a billionaire thanks to the Duty Free Shoppers franchise, Chuck

Feeney decided that he needed to do something meaningful while he was alive,

so the Atlantic Foundation was born. Unlike other tycoons, he chose to contribute

anonymously because he wanted to meet people, talk to them.n, learn and act naturally and closely.

In 1997, the sale of shares in Duty Free Shoppers exposed his Atlantic Foundation.

The New York Times ran a big headline at the time: "This man gave away

$600 million but no one knew about it."기업인터넷

The two decades of ties with Vietnam also began the same year when Feeney

read in an article on the East Meets West Foundation (MMWF), a humanitarian

organization based in San Francisco (U.S.). The EMWF had a number of volunteer

programs in Vietnam. But there's a big challenge: there's only enough budget

left for five months of operation and there's no other source of support.

A sentiment rose inside him at the time, as he later confided,

"The U.S. didn't do enough to help rebuild Vietnam after the war.

I think Vietnam has gone through a difficult time. I want to help.

" Feeney immediately called the head of the EMWF and wrote a

check for 100.$0,000 for backup. That modest amount of money has

begun the 16-year mission of the Atlantic Foundation in Vietnam.

In a book published by the Atlantic Foundation in 2018, Robert Matusek,

a longtime friend of billionaire Feeney, recalled the days when the

two visited Vietnam to explore EMWF activities. "He used to walk into

every corner of every lousy hospital and school."I can improve this,

rebuild that," Chuck said, "and realize that Vietnam is a good

place to invest," https://fleet1.tistory.com/ Mr. Matousek said.

Donor projects in Viet Nam were then hardly based on a specific strategy.

The decision is based on something special about Feeney and the specific

value of each individual thing. For example, on a visit to the EMWF office

in Da Nang, Feney found it there.on the other side of a university library

under construction.짝퉁가방 After talking to the board of directors, he decided to

support the completion of the library. Witnessing patients crammed

into old hospitals in Hue And Da Nang, Feney, are also supportive,

but are determined to remain anonymous.

Mark Conroy, then director of the EWMF, had to whine out that he

couldn't work with the local government if Feeney kept the mystery to

himself. But Feeney kept that principle in all his good offices, from Ireland to

Cuba, B.Eermuda, Australia... makes people think you're... Money laundering.

An official at RMIT University in Vietnam, where Feeney provided more than

US$42 million, later revealed the procedure to apply for permission in the

first place, which was long due to the billionaire.

Hey, hey, hey, hey, wanna cover your tracks.

Special meeting



Tung still can't forget meeting "people" Feney for the first time on

a 2005 Tet holiday afternoon in Australia. As Tung and other

Vietnamese students from Queensland University rushed to prepare

a small year-end party, a gray-haired man, a faded coat, entered.

"This is billionaire Chuck Feney, who gave you this scholarship,"

the younger man came along with the introduction.

It was the first time Tung heard of this name and he knew

for the first time that the $56,000 he received came from

a stranger halfway around the world.