Autobiography of a Philanthropist
November 23, 2006 | Read Time: 1 minute
NEW BOOKS
Half-Life of a Zealot
by Swanee Hunt
โIโve always been a zealot,โ writes Swanee Hunt in her autobiography, โchampioning causes, waving banners, persuading, cajoling, insisting.โ
Ms. Hunt describes her life as the daughter of the ultra-conservative Dallas oilman H.L. Hunt and as president of the Hunt Alternatives Fund, a philanthropy in Denver that Ms. Hunt founded with her sister, Helen.
She recalls her early life, as her father railed passionately against Communism and civil rights, and how she moved from a conservative, antiphilanthropy background to using her inheritance to help the needy.
โIโve rejected most of Dadโs social and political values, while trying not to reject him,โ she writes.
Ms. Hunt, who is also the director of the Women and Public Policy Program at Harvardโs Kennedy School of Government, describes the struggles she experienced as a philanthropist.
โSometimes my life didnโt fit my funding,โ she writes. โWhile my children enjoyed the benefits of private schooling, we supported a dozen efforts in the public-school system. When we wanted to help the new superintendent build trust with the minority community, he arrived late at our meeting because of a demonstration outside his building organized by one of our grantees.โ
โZealots can be blind,โ she concludes. โBut we neednโt be. We can be open to unexpected pressures that rudely reshape our most carefully constructed world view.โ
Publisher: Duke University Press, P.O. Box 90660, Durham, N.C. 27708; http://www.dukeupress.edu; 400 pages; $29.95; ISBN 0-8223-3875-0.