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Ahimsa, A Way of LifeDear John,

 

This may be of interest to our group.

 

Regards.

 

Chinny

 

http://www.newindpress.com/sunday/sundayitems.asp?id=SEH20070201071536 & eTitl

e=Cover+Story & rLink=0

 

 

Ahimsa, A Way of Life

Thursday February 1 2007 16:42 IST

 

Priya M Menon

 

 

 

 

More than six years ago, Purnima Toolsidass, an animal welfare activist, was

amazed when she received an email from the Winsome Constance Kindness Trust

in Australia. The sender was entrepreuner-turned- humanitarian Philip

Wollen.

 

``I don't know how Phil got to know of us, but he wrote saying he is

interested in supporting our activities,'' says Purnima, Trustee,

Compassionate Crusaders Trust and People For Animals Kolkata,. ``Maybe he

had read about our managing trustee, Debasis Chakrabarti, who is well-known.

A number of foreign trusts as well as individuals support us and maybe Phil

heard about us from one of his contacts.''

 

The first donation he sent, about Rs one lakh, came just in time as the

organisation was in debt with the suppliers of medicine and fuel. ``We were

worried they would not extend out credit,'' says Purnima. ``He is an

exceptionally rare, kind and generous person who speaks out against cruelty

and exploitation and I hope at least a few emulate his noble example.''

 

This is but one of the numerous instances when Wollen has lent a helping

hand to many a worthy cause in India.

 

What makes Wollen's Trust unique is the way it functions. Organisations

cannot apply for a grant. Instead, Philip and Trix network with about 9,000

people across the globe to gather information about little-known

organisations.

 

``We call them low cost probes,'' says Wollen. For instance, if he wants to

know about a shelter being run in some remote corner of India, he would have

one of his friends in the area casually check it out for him. For such

people, like Purnima, it is pretty much like `` a bolt from the blue'' when

they get a letter from the Trust, informing them that they have been awarded

a grant and asking for their bank account number. `` It is very demeaning

for them to have to ask,'' says Wollen. ``And also heartening to think that

someone in the West has heard about them.'' All the grants are unconditional

and the Trust never asks for reports or micromanage the groups.

 

Wollen has been named Australian of the Year 2007 by the state of Victoria

and has also featured in the Queen's Birthday Honours list in 2005. But he

has his roots firmly entrenched in India.

 

This ``boy from Bangalore'' who migrated to Australia at the age of 18 is

the founder of the Winsome Constance Kindness Trust that works for animals,

children and the environment. Of the 350-odd groups that the Trust supports

the world over, 55 of them are based in India. ``India is truly the jewel in

our crown,'' says Wollen, also the chief patron of Visakha SPCA in

Bangalore.

 

In Chennai recently with wife Trix to attend the Asia for Animals Conference

2007, Wollen was busy doing what he does best - using his money efficiently

to support a just cause. This time round, he is trying to create an umbrella

organisation for the numerous animal welfare organisations in India.

 

``There are so many animal welfare groups in India, but they don't speak

with one voice,'' says Wollen. What he envisions is an organisation which

will provide information about animal welfare issues, highlight problems,

lobby with the government, write for newspapers, and promote vegetarianism.

Wollen is willing to spend Rs three lakhs per annum on the project and

support it for five years.

 

The zeal and enthusiasm with which he talks about his projects is

infectious. What emerges is the picture of a man who has combined his sense

of business with the vision of a more humane world.

 

True to character, Wollen's recent visit to India has been peppered with

acts of kindness, bringing a ray of hope to many. In Bangalore, Wollen

looked up former classmate George Wadforth (who has acted in movies like

Lagaan, in which he played the umpire, a policeman and an English gentleman

in a ballroom sequence). ``He was blind, poor and barefoot, living in a tiny

room near a vegetable shop that he could only crawl into,'' says Wollen, a

former student of Bishop Cotton Boys' School who was meeting Wadforth after

40 years. Moved by Wadforth's plight the Wollens met the entire expenses of

George's eye surgery.

 

His compassion has also brought some solace to seven-year-old Ravi who lost

his legs after being hit by a lorry. Wollen, who met the surgeon, paid the

hospital bill of Rs 2.5 lakh. ``His father earns just Rs 1,500 a month,''

says Wollen, who is in constant touch with Ravi's social worker, Sylvia

Sharma.

 

Wollen is quick to act once he identifies a worthy cause. And expects the

same of others. Visiting an orphanage in Bangalore, he realised that they

were very cramped for space. ``All they wanted was a bag of rice but I saw

that they needed to double their size,'' says Wollen. He agreed to give the

Rs 10 lakh required, provided they began building the very same day.

 

Wollen's Indian connection goes back a long way. ``Four or five generations

of my family have lived in India; in fact we believe that my grandfather was

born in Chennai though we cannot figure out where,'' he says. ``My uncle MSD

Wollen was Chief Air Marshal and retired as the chairman of HAL.'' Wollen

himself spent the first 18 years of his life in Bangalore.

 

After migrating to Australia, Wollen made his mark specialising in the

``Wall Street kind of business''. By the age of 35, he was the most head

hunted executive in Australia. At 38, he was voted the best entrepreneur. On

his 40th birthday, Wollen, then VP of Citibank, took the decision that would

change his life from being merely successful to being ``significant''. After

visiting a slaughterhouse, the merchant banker decided to give up the world

of mergers and acquisitions and devote himself to humanitarian causes. He

established the Winsome Constance Kindness Trust (named after his mother and

grandmother). The mission statement of the Trust is ``to promote kindness

towards all other living beings and enshrine it as a recognisable trait in

the Australian character and culture.

 

The Trust builds schools, clinics, orphanages and shelters. ``We don't

fundraise,'' says Wollen, who wants to ``give everything away before I die

with warm hands''.

 

All the work of the Trust is done by Wollen and Trix, for whom early

mornings and late evenings are part of a typical working day as they often

work two time zones. ``We get about 400 e-mails a day,'' says Trix, who has

also designed the Trust's website.

 

The duo is also quick to act in times of crisis. When the Tsunami struck in

2004, Philip and Trix raced from Adelaide to Melbourne to give instructions

to their bankers. ``We were too far away to help physically but money is

always needed for labour, food and transportation,'' says Wollen, who sent

more than a crore to India in the first 48 hours.

 

A staunch vegan, for Wollen the most beautiful word ever written is -

ahimsa. Trix visits the kitchen of every Indian hotel they stay in - to take

lessons in vegan cooking from the chefs.

 

More than anything else, Wollen hopes that other wealthy people will emulate

his model. And the website tries to achieve just that, providing a list of

organisations that work for non human animals as well as human animals that

they hold in high esteem, proclaiming: We strongly recommend them to

philanthropists who are serious about getting maximum " bang for their buck " .

We have satisfied ourselves that these groups are in it for the " long haul " .

Consequently, they are ideal candidates to receive bequests under the wills

of philanthropic people.

 

``Wealthy people (in business and the professions) don't have the time,

experience or the knowledge which we have. So they trust us to do the hard

investigative work on the ground,'' he says. ``They believe that if I am

putting my own money into a project, I would not be doing it lightly. So

they follow my lead. They ask us to recommend a list of quality groups.''

 

Some of the groups that have been selected so far include Animals Asia

Foundation (China Moon Bears), Society for the Protection of Animal Rights

in Egypt (SPARE), Animed Arad (Shelter in Romania), Leo Tolstoy CETA (The

Ukraine), Beirut for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (Lebanon), Save a Dog

Scheme (Australia) and Sea Shepherd Conservation Society (anti-whaling in

Antarctica)

 

Wollen also hopes to get the Indian diaspora to support Indian groups. ``But

Indians in Australia have been parsimonious in supporting causes back home.

And some of them are very well off,'' says Wollen, never one to mince his

words. ``The Jews, Italians and Greeks have done it very well. I admire them

greatly.''

 

Let them fly

 

Wollen's Kindness House in Melbourne, provides modern office facilities for

about 150 NGOs from all over the world. Wollen has just one demand - that

the people who work there ``do not consume animals on its premises''. At the

entrance of Kindness House is a large bird cage whose bars have been ripped

open, the edges painted red. On one side is a couple of lines from William

Blake's Auguries of Innocence:

 

A robin redbreast in a cage

Puts all heaven in a rage

 

On the other side is the tenet that Wollen firmly believes in:

In their capacity to feel fear, pain, hunger and thirst, a pig is a dog is a

bear Š is a boy.

--

Kim Bartlett, Publisher of ANIMAL PEOPLE Newspaper

Postal mailing address: P.O. Box 960, Clinton WA 98236 U.S.A.

CORRECT EMAIL ADDRESS IS: <ANPEOPLE

Website: http://www.animalpeoplenews.org/ with French and Spanish

language subsections.

 

 

 

 

Something to think about: We believe that the Golden Rule

applies to animals, too. We don't accept the prevailing notion that

" people come first' " or that " people are more important than animals. "

Animals feel pain and suffer just as we do, and it is almost always humans

making animals suffer and not the other way around. Yet in spite of how

cruelly people behave towards animals -- not to mention human cruelty to

other humans -- we are supposed to believe that humans are superior to other

animals. If people want to fancy themselves as being of greater moral

worth than the other creatures on this earth, we should begin behaving

better than they do, and not worse. Let's start treating everyone as we

would like to be treated ourselves.

 

 

 

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Dear Chinnygaru,

 

Thank you so much for sending this real article.

 

Phil is a true ambassador of the needy ones.

 

He has set the ball rolling in India for the formation of a strong onetone

animal welfare organisation and strongly hoping that comes through very soon.

We need this umbrella organisation .I agree to give of the best to get this

going.

 

Warm regards,

Pradeep.

 

" Dr.Chinny Krishna " <drkrishna wrote:

Ahimsa, A Way of LifeDear John,

 

This may be of interest to our group.

 

Regards.

 

Chinny

 

http://www.newindpress.com/sunday/sundayitems.asp?id=SEH20070201071536 & eTitl

e=Cover+Story & rLink=0

 

Ahimsa, A Way of Life

Thursday February 1 2007 16:42 IST

 

Priya M Menon

 

More than six years ago, Purnima Toolsidass, an animal welfare activist, was

amazed when she received an email from the Winsome Constance Kindness Trust

in Australia. The sender was entrepreuner-turned- humanitarian Philip

Wollen.

 

``I don't know how Phil got to know of us, but he wrote saying he is

interested in supporting our activities,'' says Purnima, Trustee,

Compassionate Crusaders Trust and People For Animals Kolkata,. ``Maybe he

had read about our managing trustee, Debasis Chakrabarti, who is well-known.

A number of foreign trusts as well as individuals support us and maybe Phil

heard about us from one of his contacts.''

 

The first donation he sent, about Rs one lakh, came just in time as the

organisation was in debt with the suppliers of medicine and fuel. ``We were

worried they would not extend out credit,'' says Purnima. ``He is an

exceptionally rare, kind and generous person who speaks out against cruelty

and exploitation and I hope at least a few emulate his noble example.''

 

This is but one of the numerous instances when Wollen has lent a helping

hand to many a worthy cause in India.

 

What makes Wollen's Trust unique is the way it functions. Organisations

cannot apply for a grant. Instead, Philip and Trix network with about 9,000

people across the globe to gather information about little-known

organisations.

 

``We call them low cost probes,'' says Wollen. For instance, if he wants to

know about a shelter being run in some remote corner of India, he would have

one of his friends in the area casually check it out for him. For such

people, like Purnima, it is pretty much like `` a bolt from the blue'' when

they get a letter from the Trust, informing them that they have been awarded

a grant and asking for their bank account number. `` It is very demeaning

for them to have to ask,'' says Wollen. ``And also heartening to think that

someone in the West has heard about them.'' All the grants are unconditional

and the Trust never asks for reports or micromanage the groups.

 

Wollen has been named Australian of the Year 2007 by the state of Victoria

and has also featured in the Queen's Birthday Honours list in 2005. But he

has his roots firmly entrenched in India.

 

This ``boy from Bangalore'' who migrated to Australia at the age of 18 is

the founder of the Winsome Constance Kindness Trust that works for animals,

children and the environment. Of the 350-odd groups that the Trust supports

the world over, 55 of them are based in India. ``India is truly the jewel in

our crown,'' says Wollen, also the chief patron of Visakha SPCA in

Bangalore.

 

In Chennai recently with wife Trix to attend the Asia for Animals Conference

2007, Wollen was busy doing what he does best - using his money efficiently

to support a just cause. This time round, he is trying to create an umbrella

organisation for the numerous animal welfare organisations in India.

 

``There are so many animal welfare groups in India, but they don't speak

with one voice,'' says Wollen. What he envisions is an organisation which

will provide information about animal welfare issues, highlight problems,

lobby with the government, write for newspapers, and promote vegetarianism.

Wollen is willing to spend Rs three lakhs per annum on the project and

support it for five years.

 

The zeal and enthusiasm with which he talks about his projects is

infectious. What emerges is the picture of a man who has combined his sense

of business with the vision of a more humane world.

 

True to character, Wollen's recent visit to India has been peppered with

acts of kindness, bringing a ray of hope to many. In Bangalore, Wollen

looked up former classmate George Wadforth (who has acted in movies like

Lagaan, in which he played the umpire, a policeman and an English gentleman

in a ballroom sequence). ``He was blind, poor and barefoot, living in a tiny

room near a vegetable shop that he could only crawl into,'' says Wollen, a

former student of Bishop Cotton Boys' School who was meeting Wadforth after

40 years. Moved by Wadforth's plight the Wollens met the entire expenses of

George's eye surgery.

 

His compassion has also brought some solace to seven-year-old Ravi who lost

his legs after being hit by a lorry. Wollen, who met the surgeon, paid the

hospital bill of Rs 2.5 lakh. ``His father earns just Rs 1,500 a month,''

says Wollen, who is in constant touch with Ravi's social worker, Sylvia

Sharma.

 

Wollen is quick to act once he identifies a worthy cause. And expects the

same of others. Visiting an orphanage in Bangalore, he realised that they

were very cramped for space. ``All they wanted was a bag of rice but I saw

that they needed to double their size,'' says Wollen. He agreed to give the

Rs 10 lakh required, provided they began building the very same day.

 

Wollen's Indian connection goes back a long way. ``Four or five generations

of my family have lived in India; in fact we believe that my grandfather was

born in Chennai though we cannot figure out where,'' he says. ``My uncle MSD

Wollen was Chief Air Marshal and retired as the chairman of HAL.'' Wollen

himself spent the first 18 years of his life in Bangalore.

 

After migrating to Australia, Wollen made his mark specialising in the

``Wall Street kind of business''. By the age of 35, he was the most head

hunted executive in Australia. At 38, he was voted the best entrepreneur. On

his 40th birthday, Wollen, then VP of Citibank, took the decision that would

change his life from being merely successful to being ``significant''. After

visiting a slaughterhouse, the merchant banker decided to give up the world

of mergers and acquisitions and devote himself to humanitarian causes. He

established the Winsome Constance Kindness Trust (named after his mother and

grandmother). The mission statement of the Trust is ``to promote kindness

towards all other living beings and enshrine it as a recognisable trait in

the Australian character and culture.

 

The Trust builds schools, clinics, orphanages and shelters. ``We don't

fundraise,'' says Wollen, who wants to ``give everything away before I die

with warm hands''.

 

All the work of the Trust is done by Wollen and Trix, for whom early

mornings and late evenings are part of a typical working day as they often

work two time zones. ``We get about 400 e-mails a day,'' says Trix, who has

also designed the Trust's website.

 

The duo is also quick to act in times of crisis. When the Tsunami struck in

2004, Philip and Trix raced from Adelaide to Melbourne to give instructions

to their bankers. ``We were too far away to help physically but money is

always needed for labour, food and transportation,'' says Wollen, who sent

more than a crore to India in the first 48 hours.

 

A staunch vegan, for Wollen the most beautiful word ever written is -

ahimsa. Trix visits the kitchen of every Indian hotel they stay in - to take

lessons in vegan cooking from the chefs.

 

More than anything else, Wollen hopes that other wealthy people will emulate

his model. And the website tries to achieve just that, providing a list of

organisations that work for non human animals as well as human animals that

they hold in high esteem, proclaiming: We strongly recommend them to

philanthropists who are serious about getting maximum " bang for their buck " .

We have satisfied ourselves that these groups are in it for the " long haul " .

Consequently, they are ideal candidates to receive bequests under the wills

of philanthropic people.

 

``Wealthy people (in business and the professions) don't have the time,

experience or the knowledge which we have. So they trust us to do the hard

investigative work on the ground,'' he says. ``They believe that if I am

putting my own money into a project, I would not be doing it lightly. So

they follow my lead. They ask us to recommend a list of quality groups.''

 

Some of the groups that have been selected so far include Animals Asia

Foundation (China Moon Bears), Society for the Protection of Animal Rights

in Egypt (SPARE), Animed Arad (Shelter in Romania), Leo Tolstoy CETA (The

Ukraine), Beirut for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (Lebanon), Save a Dog

Scheme (Australia) and Sea Shepherd Conservation Society (anti-whaling in

Antarctica)

 

Wollen also hopes to get the Indian diaspora to support Indian groups. ``But

Indians in Australia have been parsimonious in supporting causes back home.

And some of them are very well off,'' says Wollen, never one to mince his

words. ``The Jews, Italians and Greeks have done it very well. I admire them

greatly.''

 

Let them fly

 

Wollen's Kindness House in Melbourne, provides modern office facilities for

about 150 NGOs from all over the world. Wollen has just one demand - that

the people who work there ``do not consume animals on its premises''. At the

entrance of Kindness House is a large bird cage whose bars have been ripped

open, the edges painted red. On one side is a couple of lines from William

Blake's Auguries of Innocence:

 

A robin redbreast in a cage

Puts all heaven in a rage

 

On the other side is the tenet that Wollen firmly believes in:

In their capacity to feel fear, pain, hunger and thirst, a pig is a dog is a

bear Š is a boy.

--

Kim Bartlett, Publisher of ANIMAL PEOPLE Newspaper

Postal mailing address: P.O. Box 960, Clinton WA 98236 U.S.A.

CORRECT EMAIL ADDRESS IS: <ANPEOPLE

Website: http://www.animalpeoplenews.org/ with French and Spanish

language subsections.

 

Something to think about: We believe that the Golden Rule

applies to animals, too. We don't accept the prevailing notion that

" people come first' " or that " people are more important than animals. "

Animals feel pain and suffer just as we do, and it is almost always humans

making animals suffer and not the other way around. Yet in spite of how

cruelly people behave towards animals -- not to mention human cruelty to

other humans -- we are supposed to believe that humans are superior to other

animals. If people want to fancy themselves as being of greater moral

worth than the other creatures on this earth, we should begin behaving

better than they do, and not worse. Let's start treating everyone as we

would like to be treated ourselves.

 

 

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