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US billionaire gives the gift of wildlife

By Yu Ran | China Daily Africa | Updated: 2016-10-28 07:27
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For 88-year-old American billionaire and philanthropist Kenneth E Behring, donating animal specimens to museums all over the world is just one of the ways to help children explore the natural world.

Since 1997, Behring has donated countless specimens to the Washington-based Smithsonian Museum of Natural History and helped with the reconstruction of the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History.

Starting in 2003, Behring has donated animal specimens worth more than $100 million to museums in dozens of cities across China, including Beijing, Dalian and Tianjin. Most recently, he gave 307 specimens from Africa, valued at more than $30 million, to be showcased at the opening of the Shanghai Natural History Museum in April last year.

"I've donated specimens to museums because I believe they are platforms that can help educate, inspire and develop the future generations of public and private-sector leaders around the world," says Behring, who has been working with world-class museums for more than a decade.

He is also the founder and chairman of the Global Health and Education Foundation, which launched Global Natural History Day in 2012, a competition that aims to teach natural history and sciences outside the classroom and to connect schoolchildren with their peers around the world. More than 7,138 students have taken part in the annual event, which has expanded from the United States to Asia, including to China.

"This event has encouraged children to articulate their findings after exploring the world, and this has changed their way of learning. Children get to conduct primary research and learn things that are not traditionally taught in schools," Behring says.

"We are trying to help young people think independently. Wherever the problem is, don't go to the textbooks. You have to think and develop your mind in order to become a great leader in the future."

Behring is currently planning to take groups of children from different countries on African safaris, as he believes such trips are the best way to get close to wildlife.

While he may be one of America's richest businessmen, owning a private jet and the Seattle Seahawks of the National Football League in the United States, Behring is also well-known for his philanthropic efforts, especially in China. The successful real estate developer flies to China about four times every year to help the needy.

"I firmly believe that I was Chinese in a previous life. I feel more comfortable in China than anywhere else in the world," Behring says.

The incident that inspired him to become a philanthropist took place in 1999 when he donated a wheelchair to an elderly man in a Romanian village. Touched by the man's tearful gratitude and relief that he could finally leave his home and be with his friends, Behring was inspired to do more to give back to society.

"It was the first time in my life that I realized such a small thing as a wheelchair could change one's life and bring freedom and the courage to live," he says.

The incident also spurred him to establish the Wheelchair Foundation in California in 2000. The organization has since donated more than 1 million wheelchairs to people in 155 countries.

In 2001, Behring established a partnership with the China Disabled Persons' Federation to help distribute wheelchairs in China. Since then, he has distributed more than 325,000 wheelchairs in more than 40 cities and towns in China. Some of the recipients include the 500 survivors of the 1976 Tangshan Earthquake.

"Xie Yanhong, a man from Dalian, Liaoning province, received a wheelchair from me in 2003, and he started to pursue his passion for swimming. One year later, he became the first disabled Chinese person to swim across the English Channel," Behring says after being asked about memorable incidents.

Together with local governments, Behring has also launched a safe drinking water project in Northwest China to help eliminate water-borne diseases and impurities by carrying out feasibility studies and purchasing water purification systems.

"My goal is to start a movement, and have everyone start helping each other," he says.

(China Daily Africa Weekly 10/28/2016 page21)

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