The Shapiro Family Foundation, which saw half its holdings disappear in the Madoff scandal, vows to honor all its previously announced funding commitments.
Their donations have helped build Boston. Anywhere and everywhere you look, you can see the results of their generosity.
I live across the street from the Huntington Theater Company's new home, built with the support of the Shapiros.
I went to an opening at the Museum of Fine Arts last Tuesday and walked through the Shapiro Rotunda.
On Thursday, I had an MRI at the Shapiro Center, at Beth Israel Hospital.
From museums (Children's, Museum of Science, ICA, MFA) to health centers (Whittier Street, Boston Medical Center, Brigham & Women's, BI/Deaconess) to Jewish-focused charities, their support can be seen, and felt.
In 2007 alone, their foundation gave out money to over 130 organizations, most of them in or near Boston.
Mr Shapiro is 95 - 95!!! What a shock this must be to him and his entire family. And a terrible disappointment that must feel hopeless, to those who have benefited from his generosity.
It's cliched but true: there's a special place in hell for people like Mr Madoff.
Comments
A true tragedy
This is just tragic.
Their donations have helped build Boston. Anywhere and everywhere you look, you can see the results of their generosity.
I live across the street from the Huntington Theater Company's new home, built with the support of the Shapiros.
I went to an opening at the Museum of Fine Arts last Tuesday and walked through the Shapiro Rotunda.
On Thursday, I had an MRI at the Shapiro Center, at Beth Israel Hospital.
From museums (Children's, Museum of Science, ICA, MFA) to health centers (Whittier Street, Boston Medical Center, Brigham & Women's, BI/Deaconess) to Jewish-focused charities, their support can be seen, and felt.
In 2007 alone, their foundation gave out money to over 130 organizations, most of them in or near Boston.
Mr Shapiro is 95 - 95!!! What a shock this must be to him and his entire family. And a terrible disappointment that must feel hopeless, to those who have benefited from his generosity.
It's cliched but true: there's a special place in hell for people like Mr Madoff.
Today on WBUR's "Here and Now" at noon
a "hospital CEO" talks abuot the Madoff fraud's impact on Boston. I presume that'll be our Paul Levy of Beth Israel.