Sabans Give $10 Million to "Lifesaving" Free Clinic
Walking through the doors of the Los Angeles Free Clinic was much
easier for Cheryl Saban last week than it was 25 years ago. Back then,
she was a newly divorced mother of two young girls with little child
support and a poor paying job as an office administrator. With an
apartment, groceries, gas, clothes and all those other necessities,
health insurance seemed a luxury she couldn't afford.
"I was a divorced mom of two, and I had an hour commute, and the job I
was working didn't have health care or pay very well," she said,
recalling a much different time in her life. "I was living hand to
mouth."
That meant sizable doctor bills when her daughters got sick and no medical attention when she did.
On her way to work every day, though, she drove past the L.A. Free
Clinic on Beverly Boulevard. But even while battling a virus she
couldn't shake, Cheryl refused to enter the building. She assumed the
clinic, which requests only "donations" from patients, was only for the
indigent, and she felt guilty about taking away from those who were in
greater need.
"Finally, I didn't have any other options, so I came here," she
recalled, surprised to find that the clinic was a real medical office
and that she didn't feel judged for using its services. "It was a
lifesaver for me, in a world where not many life rings get tossed out.
Angels definitely were working here."
And Cheryl didn't forget it. Earlier this month, she and her husband,
Haim Saban, chair and CEO of Saban Capital Group and chair of Univision
Communications, committed $10 million to the Free Clinic, the largest
gift in its 41-year history. And this spring, the facility will be
renamed the Saban Free Clinic.
The gift is an unrestricted endowment, which means it can be used for
whatever administrators see fit. Constituting about 70 percent of the
clinic's annual budget, the money likely will be used to supplement
reduced government funding, a constant concern as the state grapples
with a $16 billion budget shortfall and the economy teeters on the
brink -- or may already be in the midst -- of recession.
"When the state might be cutting or someone else will be cutting, it
will allow us to survive," said Abbe Land, the clinic's co-CEO. "It
will give us that cushion for sustainability."
For Cheryl Saban, the gift, one of many the Saban Family Foundation has
given to the Free Clinic since the early 1990s, marked how much her
life has changed in the past 25 years. Most of that transformation
occurred within three years of her handful of visits to the clinic,
when she went to work for, and then married, Saban.
Saban was born to a modest Jewish family in Egypt that fled to Israel
in the 1956 Suez War. He later found a home as a television producer in
Hollywood, best known for the live-action kids show, "Mighty Morphin
Power Rangers." The Beverly Hills resident, who founded Saban
Entertainment and Fox Family Worldwide, now ranks 102nd on Forbes' list
of richest Americans, with a reported net worth of $3.4 billion.
Together, Cheryl and Haim Saban have focused their philanthropy on
Israel -- they have sent millions to Soroka Medical Center and, among
other programs, an organization that provides physical and
psychological rehabilitation for disabled veterans and terror victims
-- and health care, evidenced by the $40 million their foundation gave
to Childrens Hospital of Los Angeles, home of the Saban Research
Institute.
The Free Clinic, which has four facilities and handles 100,000 patient
visits each year, provides physician services, disease testing,
prescription filling and nutritional counseling.
For people like Kris Carter, an unemployed 41-year-old woman struggling
with Type-II diabetes, the clinic is the only thing keeping her out of
a county hospital emergency room.
"We have always been impressed with the Los Angeles Free Clinic and the
work it does for those in need," Saban said. "Our greatest wish is that
it inspires other donors to recognize the important role of the clinic
in providing health services to the uninsured in Los Angeles. Anyone
can fall through the insurance safety net."
In fact, Land said, Cheryl Saban's story is not that unique -- aside
from the size of the gift. It's common for people who once came to the
clinic in need to return years later as volunteers, even physicians.
Meeting at the clinic last week for an interview, Cheryl Saban grew
teary-eyed as she reflected on harder times. The image that sticks in
her mind is not of her first visit to the clinic but of a pale-skinned
woman with fiery red hair and puffy red eyes. She'd seen her while
volunteering at a homeless shelter in the San Fernando Valley a few
years after she remarried. The woman had two sons with her, and Cheryl
couldn't help but feel that but for the smallest adjustment in the
universe, that could have been her.
"Life is just not fair," said Cheryl, who has written several books on
parenting, marriage and children advocacy and founded the nonprofit, 50
Ways to Save Our Children. "And since it isn't fair, I am of the
mindset that we have to make it fair."
She later added: "I saw how easy it is to fall off the edge."
Code found on page 295 of the book.
The most important thing for a woman to remember is that true worth comes from within -- not from what others think of us, but from what we think of ourselves.
Trish Ploehn
New Jersey, USA
What defines a woman's worth? You are what you think you are worth.
Cindy F.
Johannesburg, South Africa