13
        
        
          Sphere
        
        
          
            Opposite:
          
        
        
          Mr Li Ka-shing gives a
        
        
          warm welcome to the enthusiastic
        
        
          winners of the first
        
        
          
            Love Ideas, Love HK
          
        
        
          programme.
        
        
          Two words sum up the overwhelming feeling at the
        
        
          Love Ideas, Love HK
        
        
          Sharing
        
        
          Session in December – joy and passion. Representatives of the 177 winning projects
        
        
          in this community-spirited programme were overjoyed at having won enough votes
        
        
          to put their ideas into action through the generosity of the Li Ka Shing Foundation
        
        
          (LKSF) and every one of them was truly passionate about those projects.
        
        
          Perhaps the electricity and excitement in the air should not have surprised anyone
        
        
          – for since its launch in September last year, LKSF’s
        
        
          Love Ideas, Love HK
        
        
          programme
        
        
          has lit a spark in this city – a spark of altruism and community spirit that some
        
        
          doubted even existed.
        
        
          Hong Kong has a reputation for its wealth creation, so it is inspiring to see how
        
        
          Love
        
        
          Ideas, Love HK
        
        
          brought out a different aspect of the city’s character – social entrepre-
        
        
          neurship instead of financial entrepreneurship. The programme is actually reshaping
        
        
          the way people think about caring for others.
        
        
          Comedian/radio DJ Lam Chiu-wing, who won funding for his idea to cheer up
        
        
          patients by doing stand-up comedy in hospitals, summed it up when he said: “The pro-
        
        
          gramme has really got people thinking creatively about how to help their community. It
        
        
          has created a platform for selflessly helping others and provided the means to do so – I
        
        
          think that’s why it has sparked a whole new way of thinking in Hong Kong. It’s truly
        
        
          inspiring to see the innovative ways people have found to help those in need.”
        
        
          Mr Li Ka-shing made a speech at the sharing session in which he quoted former
        
        
          United States President Theodore Roosevelt’s famous
        
        
          In the Arena
        
        
          speech, originally
        
        
          delivered at the Paris Sorbonne University in 1910, that “The credit . . . belongs to the
        
        
          man who does actually strive to do the deeds.”
        
        
          For that is what this HKD300 million philanthropic campaign, whose umbrella title
        
        
          is
        
        
          Love HK Your Way!
        
        
          is all about: giving people the means to help each other. It goes
        
        
          further than just financial support, too. At the sharing session, representatives from
        
        
          Hong Kong Council of Social Service (HKCSS) and charitable body St James’ Settle-
        
        
          ment (SJS), were on hand to advise people how to implement their plans success-
        
        
          fully, and these two bodies will actively help winners to put their ideas into
        
        
          action.
        
        
          After all, most of the winners are new to philanthropy and do not
        
        
          have experience in running a charitable programme. During a
        
        
          speech Josephine Lee, Senior Manager of Corporate Venture-
        
        
          Partnership & Alliance at SJS, talked about what it means to
        
        
          be a charity. She said the
        
        
          Love Ideas, Love HK
        
        
          programme
        
        
          advocated care for the community and encouraged
        
        
          creativity, which dovetailed nicely with SJS’s own objec-
        
        
          tives. She also offered practical advice, reminding
        
        
          people to plan carefully how to allocate the money.
        
        
          “Be clear about your objectives, stick with your
        
        
          original plan.”
        
        
          The programme has also been given the sup-
        
        
          port of the HKCSS, whose Business Director Cliff
        
        
          Choi said at the sharing session the Council was
        
        
          delighted that the programme connected and
        
        
          mobilised the public to be more thoughtful to
        
        
          those in need. He urged the winners to call the
        
        
          Council if they ran into difficulties and needed
        
        
          help. “Tell us early if you discover you will have
        
        
          cash left over from your project. We can advise you
        
        
          how best to use it to further the benefits to others,”
        
        
          he said.
        
        
          Ms Lee from SJS also warned that the work can be
        
        
          tiring, but added: “Please call us immediately if you
        
        
          “[The programme]
        
        
          has created a
        
        
          totally
        
        
          original
        
        
          way
        
        
          for corporations,
        
        
          individuals and
        
        
          social organisations
        
        
          to
        
        
          work together
        
        
          .”