About Us

Our work focuses on helping eradicate extreme poverty, which the UN and World Bank define as living on less than US $1.25 per day. According to economist Jeffrey Sachs, extreme poverty is the inability to meet basic needs such as adequate nutrition, access to safe water, access to basic education, access to primary health services, and a livelihood that can generate an income to meet these basic needs. By either definition about 1 billion people worldwide currently live in extreme poverty.

Funding

SVQF is not a fully funded organization and must raise funds to carry out its programs. We have instituted strict stewardship of donor funds and adhere to high standards of transparency. SVQF does not hold funds long term in its accounts and releases all funds to projects at least once a year.

Partnerships

  • We bring together reputable, expert organizations to leverage synergies and maximize impact.

  • We work with partner organizations to cultivate active community and stakeholder involvement and ownership of projects.

  • We align ourselves with organizations that share our belief in practical targeted efforts yielding measurable results in the eradication of extreme poverty.

  • We require our non-profit implementing partners to be non-partisan, reputable, and experienced 501(c)3 organizations with ground-level knowledge and local contacts.

Initiatives

We invest in programs with focused agendas that address the root causes of extreme poverty. We require regular and detailed reports from our partners on the initiative’s progress and results.

Tangible Results

Traditionally, philanthropy was measured and defined by the amount of money raised or applied to a problem. SVQF instead takes an investor-oriented approach that focuses on the use of the funds and its concrete social impact.

Community Involvement

The initiatives are not imposed upon communities. In each case, the community itself is actively involved in seeking, supporting, and sustaining the initiative.

Sustainability

SVQF seeks to create lasting and sustainable improvements, not quick fixes. The beneficiary community takes ultimate responsibility for independently maintaining the progress made.

Scalability

An initiative effective for a community of 100 inhabitants should be capable of being scaled up to serve a community of 10,000 inhabitants.

Replicability

The initiatives can be replicated in another community or another country.

A Letter from the Founder

I can divide my life into roughly three parts so far. The first decade of my life was filled with great luxury in Tehran, which came to a screeching halt when the 1979 Revolution forced my family to flee without preparation and without belongings. During the second decade of my life I faced financial adversity, first sharing a small studio in Paris for several years with six members of my family — spanning three generations — and then moving to a life of subsistence and loans in Los Angeles. The third and current part of my life, is once again filled with life’s comforts and successes. This time, however, I am armed with the knowledge of how unpredictable life can be despite education, good health, friends, wealth, and other advantages that can make one feel secure. I now believe it is mere happenstance that we are in a particular place in life, and that everything can change in the blink of an eye.

In addition, I believe we are part of the global human family. Our shared humanity knows nothing of borders or blood lines, geography or genealogy. Science has demonstrated we are all truly one people, that our supposed differences are genetically insignificant – mere shadings of the same human essence. We are each other’s extended family, and still, half the world lives on less than 2 dollars a day and millions of children die of preventable and treatable diseases. Inequality abounds.

No one is protected against poverty and adversity until everyone is protected against them. Extreme poverty affects every one of us, even if we are geographically removed from the source. Disease and social unrest know no boundaries. The well-being of humanity is the joint responsibility of all humans.

So I decided to invest in those who have always been and still remain in a vulnerable place in life, the ones who suffer the most from inequality and extreme poverty. I don’t believe in band-aid donations. I believe in thoughtful, specific investments. In the words of the great economist Jeffrey Sachs, I want to help them “get a foot on the first rung of the development ladder” and at the same time, document their hard realities and reliable progress so that I can share them with you.

I was looking for ways to begin my work when I met President Bill Clinton, who had just launched the Clinton Global Initiative. I expressed my interest in joining his epic movement, and he invited me to become a CGI member. Within weeks, I met some of the most amazing leaders of the world in lengthy working sessions, started this Foundation and began forming strong partnerships with key individuals and expert organizations.

I first traveled to Kenya in 2007, where SVQF was supporting a village in its movement toward sustainable development. I felt that since we are inviting you to participate in SVQF’s work, I needed to be on the ground to witness first-hand the improvements and to see the faces of the people whose lives are being affected — for the better and, I hope, forever. It was on this first trip to Africa that I realized “tangible philanthropy” really benefits everyone involved: measurable results for the communities striving to remove themselves from extreme poverty, and the opportunity to see it, touch it, and feel it for you.

Sanam M. Vaziri