Billionaire's boost to Buddhist studies
by NICHOLAS KEUNG, Toronto Star, Aug. 26, 2006

Robert Hung-Ngai Ho has an ambitious plan to spread the seeds of Buddhism from 
the Far East to around the world.

Vancouver, Canada -- While the eastern religion commends frugality and 
abstinence from a life devoted to material things, it also teaches generosity 
and kindness - which is what the immigrant billionaire from Hong Kong tries to 
exemplify in his philanthropy. That includes this week's $4 million gift to the 
University of Toronto at Scarborough, the largest donation ever received by the 
satellite campus.


<< MICHAEL STUPARYK/TORONTO STAR
Retired billionaire businessman Robert Hung-Ngai Ho, who now makes his home in 
Vancouver, has gifted $4 million for Buddhist studies to the Scarborough campus 
of the University of Toronto.

Since 2000, Ho has donated millions of dollars to establish academic programs 
in Buddhism at universities in Hong Kong and Thailand in the name of Tung Lin 
Kok Yuen, a non-profit Buddhist group founded in 1935 by his late grandparents, 
who began the family fortune.

Now, the retired Vancouver-based businessman and one-time journalist hopes to 
encourage academic Buddhist studies in his adopted homeland. This week's 
announcement at the Scarborough campus, which will bolster the U of T's 
existing Buddhist studies program, followed an identical donation in February 
to the University of British Columbia.

"Our vision would be to see Buddhism not just as a religion predominant in Asia 
but to be more widely known and better understood by the international 
community," Ho told a luncheon held at the campus Wednesday in appreciation of 
Ho's generosity.

"Buddhism, like many of the other religions, has been an integral part of our 
global cultural development and will continue to grow in harmony with our 
society globally."

Born into a Buddhist family, Ho, 74, said he did not enjoy going to temples or 
Sunday religious school until he turned 40 and began seeking spiritual growth. 
After studying various religions, he felt Buddhism suited him best because of 
its principle of self-salvation.

"It teaches you to do everything on your own, to rely on yourself instead of 
any supernatural powers or gods," explained Ho, who retired in Canada in 1989 
after retiring as publisher of Hong Kong's Kung Sheung Daily Press. (A master's 
graduate of Columbia University's journalism school, he had worked at the 
Pittsburgh Press and National Geographic, for a time as White House 
correspondent, before returning to Hong Kong.)

`Our vision would be to see Buddhism ... widely known and better understood'

Donor Robert Hung-Ngai Ho

"Unfortunately, people mix up their superstitions with Buddhism, turning it 
into a mythical chop suey, so others think that Buddhists are a bunch of 
voodoos."

That's why Ho has put his energy and resources into building a strong global 
network of Buddhist studies programs at academic institutions, which can help 
debunk misconceptions about this ancient religion.

The gift will support a visiting professorship and lectureship program in 
Buddhist studies, as well as conferences, public lecture series and 
scholarships.

Professor William Bowen, chair of the humanities department at Scarborough, 
said the visiting lectureship will enrich interdisciplinary studies in visual 
and performing arts, religion, philosophy and more.

Studies of Buddhism and other eastern religions have proved popular, he said. A 
first-year course in religious traditions of the East has already reached its 
capacity of 500 students, and a second-year introduction to Buddhist philosophy 
course is filled with 86.

"But the most spectacular impact is that our students and the community as a 
whole will be exposed to a changing roster of international experts, and given 
immediate exposure to the vitality of research in Buddhist thought and 
culture," noted Bowen, adding that the Buddhist conferences and lectures will 
start in September 2007.

The soft-spoken Ho said he learned much about generosity from his grandparents, 
the late Lady Clara and Sir Robert Ho Tung, who headed what was perhaps Hong 
Kong's wealthiest family long before fellow billionaire entrepreneur Li Ka 
Shing became a familiar name to Canadians.

Born to a Dutch father and Chinese mother, Sir Ho made his fortune in real 
estate and commodities trading. Many parks, schools and buildings in Hong Kong 
have been named after him, and the Ho clan remains one of the most influential 
in Hong Kong's business community.

All the charitable giving, according to Ho, is simply "in accordance with Lady 
Clara's compassion and sacred vow to spread out beyond Hong Kong so that 
overseas Chinese and foreigners would be enlightened by the Buddhist doctrine."

Ho said he's also negotiating with a U.S. university to build a Buddhism study 
centre south of the border. He declined to name it, but Ho has already donated 
more than $30 million to his alma mater, New York's Colgate University, to fund 
projects in the sciences and Asian studies.



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