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Jacques-Philippe Piverger And 'The Haiti Project' Of The Global Syndicate Directs Funds To Help Rebuild Haiti

Haiti Investment Aid

The Huffington Post   Carly Gillis First Posted: 01/10/11 09:45 PM ET Updated: 05/25/11 07:25 PM ET

Jacques-Philippe Piverger deals with money.

In his professional life, he's managed billions of dollars in assets as an analyst in venture capital and deals extensively in private equity, hedge funds, and fixed income platforms.

However, in his spare time, he puts his money where his mouth is.

He works with The Global Syndicate, an organization of financial professionals and friends that connect currency to causes by planning and executing fundraising events worldwide. They collect funds from interested investors and impart them via grants to existing nonprofit organizations.

Specifically, he's dedicated his time to "The Haiti Project," the pilot initiative of the Syndicate. Piverger started it in 2008, over a year before the earthquake, after witnessing the country's tumult over food cost during a visit to his family.

"Being there for those riots made it clear. It was inappropriate for me, and others like me, not to be involved."

Piverger spent his childhood summers visiting relatives in Haiti, so he said it was only natural for him to feel concerned for the country's situation. But when the earthquake hit in January 2010, he said he "didn't have a choice" but to intensify his efforts.

When he visited Haiti in March 2010 after the earthquake hit, he felt the destruction firsthand. Some of Piverger's extended family died in the earthquake and his mother's house, which had been in the family for decades, was destroyed.

"It was really difficult. It hit home in a real way. It's one thing to hear and see it on TV, but it's another thing to touch, feel and smell it."

Seeing the destruction strengthened his resolve, but finding solutions (and money) is difficult, even for a director of an investment house. He emphasized that Haiti's problems are comprehensive, and that commitment is key.

"There really isn't an end in sight. One individual doesn't have the resources. I don't have the resources now. Nobody does. It will take patience, resolve, and a willingness to be realistic regarding a time frame."

The goal of his nonprofit organization is to bolster relief in Haiti's economic, educational and health care arenas, bridging partnerships for those who want to invest in the country's future.

Since the earthquake, he and his team have been planning extensively to "double-down" their efforts. However, based on his visits and what he's learned, he emphasized that the first thing needed is patience.

"The one thing about our society is that it has a short attention span. We're not able to focus. It's going to take a long time. It's not going to be before another four or five years that we'll see actual change in Port-au-Prince."

Even so, Piverger is optimistic.

"We're implementing venture capital in philanthropy. We've selected a strong team of conscientious investors and we've paired that with strategic awareness."

He invites others to join his team. Although they're focused on funding, which is their area of expertise, they are also just as appreciative for gifts of labor.

"Beyond money, time is a huge asset. We're always looking for volunteers, even if you have 30 minutes a week, we'll take that."

The Global Syndicate is currently promoting a book by renowned photographer, Wyatt Gallery. In "Tent Life: Haiti," Gallery captures the sprawling tent cities that have developed since the 2010 earthquake. It can be purchased directly from the Syndicate's website.

To learn more or make a donation, follow the Impact links below:

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Jacques-Philippe Piverger deals with money. In his professional life, he's managed billions of dollars in assets as an analyst in venture capital and deals extensively in private equity, hedge funds...
Jacques-Philippe Piverger deals with money. In his professional life, he's managed billions of dollars in assets as an analyst in venture capital and deals extensively in private equity, hedge funds...
 
 
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10:33 AM on 01/12/2011
I'm 29 years old; I have been sending money to my family in Haiti for over 11 years. And with that money my family was able to build a home and have food on the table every day until this disaster.
More than 80% of Haiti's economy is supported by the Haiti-Americans who send money to their love ones on weekly bases. The problem lies in the fact that Haiti Relief funds weren’t given to the people, it was given to the government and we see how that worked out.
If you want to really help Haiti, help the people not the politicians.
05:27 PM on 01/11/2011
Oddly enough, that picture could have been taken one year before the quake...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jahbundance
Fanatically Independent
05:02 PM on 01/11/2011
At the risk of sounding like a broken record, the current situation is no surprise to any West Indian, we knew it would be this way. The ruling elite immediately grabbed the control of all recovery using the principle of sovereignity, demanding fees and vigorish for every movement. From the first weeks, charity relief shipments of food and water were held hostage by Haitian warehouse owners demanding cash tribute, heartlessly blind to the desperation of their countrypeople. A group I belong to tried to deliver bottled water by boat from The Bahamas and were turned back by armed Custom "officers" when the thousand US dollars they demanded didn't materialize. It was business as usual for Haitians even in the worst disaster imaginable. This piratical me-first attitude has always permeated the ruling elite and sadly trickled down to much of the ruled.

What spurs desperate Haitains to take to stormy seas in leaky sloops seeking new lands is not the great climate and not the rich folk culture. They risk their life (and their children's) to escape their Haiti Cherie because of the abusive treatment by the Haitains who rule them. And right now those elite are getting richer than ever from the world's charity while the lot of the ruled stays barely miserably survivable.

Until and unless an independent, outside, NON-HAITAIN-CONTROLLED, group or organization takes over the recovery, the poor in Haiti will stay in their present situation. Everything else fails.
08:49 AM on 01/12/2011
Haiti needs a vigorous dose of serious egalitarian communism.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jahbundance
Fanatically Independent
03:21 PM on 01/12/2011
No, not that such a thing exists except maybe in China, and the Chinese are culturally accepting of that (so far). Corrupt leaders, as in Haiti, love a republic form of government; it seats the power in their hands for years without having to worry about elections; it gives them time to get theirs and/or enforce their personal will on the people. Example: George Bush taking America to war against Iraq. Historically, developing countries evolve societally far more consistently in a truly democratic form of government(representation by population) modeled after the Westminster form, where leaders have no guaranteed term and are removed when the people are dissatisfied. That's why the U.S. puts the Westminster system in every country they defeat from Japan to Iraq. Of course the success of this system rests on the county's security forces buying in. For Haiti, I see their only chance being a benevolent dictator who rebuilds the infrastructure and then forms a democracy. Such men have existed, the latest being General Pervez Musharref who took over Pakistan for 3 years, then turned it over to elected leadership. It ain't pretty or perfect, but nothing is in the struggling third world.
04:57 PM on 01/11/2011
It is a shame to watch. As another poster said, supplies on the ground, stuck in the proverbial red tape, as a nation suffers. People going hungry, exposed to the elements, and dying, all the while, what is needed, in some instances, is a short distance.

One reputable organization, making a difference in Haiti, as well as elsewhere in the world, is
can-do.org

At their web-site you can track how all monies are applied and to what projects.
03:14 PM on 01/11/2011
Clinton and Bush did a heck of a job for Haiti.

Great pick, Obama.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jahbundance
Fanatically Independent
04:44 PM on 01/12/2011
your hatred for our first black president is so pathological that you look for ways to let it out....since when was Haiti's recovery Obama's responsibility?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ivoteforsmartpeople
There Ain't No Such Thing As A Free Lunch!
03:05 PM on 01/11/2011
This poor country has been looted and polluted by it's government and wealthy class forever!

What it NEEDS is a Responsible and Ethical and Honest Government to Coordinate and RUN things!!!

How many of us have donated our hard earned money to relief efforts only to find out that it isn't getting to the victims in many cases - and very little progress is being made in cleaning up and making homes again.

It is heartbreaking and frustrating to watch - much less Live In!
04:09 PM on 01/11/2011
The problem is how do you regulate the government of another country?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ivoteforsmartpeople
There Ain't No Such Thing As A Free Lunch!
04:13 PM on 01/11/2011
You can't! They have to do it themselves!

Heartbreaking!
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Slybuck
Have I ever let you down more than once a week? No
02:41 PM on 01/11/2011
Where the heck is Sarah?
01:08 PM on 01/11/2011
Good luck to the project.

But I hear the sweat shops are already being built.
The way has been paved for the disaster capitalists.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Proud Progressive
TP Slogan: Hey Y’all, Watch this!
11:57 AM on 01/11/2011
I wonder how that 'small government' idea is working for the Haitians?
How about 'trickle down' economics??
04:09 PM on 01/11/2011
I wonder what happened to the hundreds of millions of dollars already sent to Haiti.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Proud Progressive
TP Slogan: Hey Y’all, Watch this!
07:38 AM on 01/12/2011
I guess that it hasn't trickled down yet
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PeterMelzer
10:59 AM on 01/11/2011
The establishment in Haiti has not not shown sufficiently competent leadership to date. In addition to reconstruction, we must focus on building safety, preparedness and early quake warning. The next quake is sure to come. Simple, affordable means of quake alert must be found. Every second advance warning may save many lives.

Read more here:
http://bra­inmindinst­.blogspot.­com/2010/0­1/neuroana­tomy-of-ea­rthquake.h­tml
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PeterMelzer
04:49 PM on 01/12/2011
I apologize the link above does not work for reasons I could figure out. Below is a functional one (looks the same, but works):
http://brainmindinst.blogspot.com/2010/01/neuroanatomy-of-earthquake.html
oilfield
large employer per obamacare
10:41 AM on 01/11/2011
haiti will return to the sinkhole it was before....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PeterMelzer
10:37 AM on 01/11/2011
The establishment in Haiti did not show competent leadership to date. In addition to sanitation and reconstruction, we should focus on building safety, preparedness and early quake warning. The next quake is sure to come. An affordable alert system must be found. Every second advance warning may save many lives.

Read more here:
http://bra­inmindinst­.blogspot.­com/2010/0­1/neuroana­tomy-of-ea­rthquake.h­tml
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
china6
10:30 AM on 01/11/2011
sadly the corruption still exists, the USA sent 1 billion to haiti and 1 million people are still homeless.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
namewithheld
Sorry, your micro-bio did not meet our guidelines.
11:48 AM on 01/11/2011
Is there any documentation the money actually got there? If it did, who got it? Blackwater? Bechtel? Custer Battles? Did it simply disappear into the hands of private contractors like the money sent to Iraq for reconstruction?
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BaronWVS
Democrats should not critcize the President
02:25 PM on 01/11/2011
We all know that the money went into the pockets of a select few. I hate to say it, but I think it may be impossible to help that country.
10:22 AM on 01/11/2011
The cameras are gone, the focus is gone and that means that the Left is gone as well. You won't see any Hollywood people there because no one cares anymore. The Left has moved onto something else where they will get the coverage, much like Gwyneth Paltrow coming out saying she is a cousin of Giffords...minor detail in that, they have never met or spoken before...but never let a publicized event go by without getting your name out there...Haiti will be fixed by the Right because they have the zeal, mentality and understanding that when the lights go out, their resolve remains.
10:37 AM on 01/11/2011
Just saw a story on Haiti and the 60 vehicles donated to Haiti after the eartquake are sitting at the airport covered in vegetation, what a waste of time money and effort. But you are correct now that the cameras are gone the left has no intrest.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Pennsanic
Be nice to the US or we'll bring you democracy too
11:03 AM on 01/11/2011
Sounds like another bullsh*t story. Clinton Foundation did a lot of work to acquire and then distribute donated vehicles from the WFP so it can be done.
04:11 PM on 01/11/2011
Think of all the cars they could have donated if they had not been destroyed during the cash for clunkers campaign.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Pennsanic
Be nice to the US or we'll bring you democracy too
10:58 AM on 01/11/2011
Seems to me that the "right" showed quite a lot of zeal when they tried their very best to punt the 9/11 first responders when those people needed medical help.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jebamoni4
10:13 AM on 01/11/2011
Nobody can fix Haiti and nobody has ever won Afgan war!!!! That is the hard core truth.
12:07 PM on 01/11/2011
define win