Grameen Foundation : Resource Center : Print Newsletter : Fall 2006 : Alfonso Soriano: Fighting Against Poverty
Alfonso Soriano: Playing To Win The Fight Against Poverty
U.S. major league baseball superstar Alfonso Soriano knows baseball as well as what it’s like to live in poverty. That’s why Mr. Soriano is partnering with Grameen Foundation (GF) to help thousands of the poorest individuals in the Dominican Republic, his native country, to escape poverty through microfinance. Long-time GF supporter Mona Bentz had a chance to sit down with Mr. Soriano to discuss his interest in microfinance and how the Andrea Soriano Fund, named after his mother, is benefiting the extreme poor in the Dominican Republic.
MS. BENTZ: Mr. Soriano, the nation knows you as a great
baseball icon, playing with the Yankees, the Rangers, and now the Nationals.
What many people don’t know is that Washington,
D.C. is not just the home of the
Nationals, but also the home of a fund you set up in association with the Grameen
Foundation. Can you tell us a little bit about that fund?
MR. SORIANO: The purpose of the Andrea Soriano Fund
is to provide financial and technical assistance to organizations in the Dominican
Republic that provide tiny loans to critically impoverished individuals to
start or expand their businesses. The fund was named after my mother, in honor
of poor women in the Dominican
Republic who will benefit through donations
to it.
MS. BENTZ: How did you become involved with microfinance?
MR. SORIANO: When I was playing with the New York
Yankees, a Grameen Foundation board
member, Steven C. Rockefeller, Jr., approached me about the
organization. I was very interested from the beginning because I can easily
relate to the families that are touched by microfinance. The more I learned about microfinance, the
more impressed I was, and in 2005 I decided I wanted to work with Grameen Foundation
to provide microloans, together with related financial services to women in the
Dominican Republic’s
poorest areas.
MS. BENTZ: Can you tell us more about growing up in
poverty?
MR. SORIANO: Well, as you know, I was born and
raised in the Dominican
Republic. I grew up in a little village
called Quisqueya. I saw how hard every member of my family had to work to put food
on our table, and looking back, sometimes we had unbelievable hardship. When I
see these families trying to build a dream—hope for their children—I see my own
family. Without hard work and tremendous
sacrifice, my own dream, and my family’s dream of a better life for me,
could not have become a reality. I feel incredibly honored to have the opportunity to help in some way to
empower my fellow countrymen to create a better life for themselves and their
children.
The Andrea Soriano Fund is a
fundraising endeavor that engages donors interested in supporting programs in
the Dominican Republic. Since it was established, the Andrea Soriano
Fund has raised over $100,000 from a diverse community of donors. Support from the Andrea Soriano Fund has
helped our partner Esperanza, which
means “hope” in Spanish, to bring access to
microfinance, educational training, and preventative healthcare to more than
5000 underserved individuals.
Current plans, to be achieved only if adequate funding is obtained,
would directly reach 18,000 individuals, and benefit an additional 80,000 family
members of the borrowers by 2008.
To learn more about
the Andrea Soriano Fund and how you can support it, contact dsuleri@grameenfoundation.org.
Grameen Foundation : Resource Center : Print Newsletter : Fall 2006 : Alfonso Soriano: Fighting Against Poverty