ArticleApril 10, 2024

Avnish and Anita Goyal

Yesterday, the House of Commons echoed the passionate discussions of an event organized by Asian Voice and Gujarat Samachar in association with the Royal Air Force.

Avnish and Anita Goyal are the driving force behind the Goyal  Foundation – created in memory of Avnish’s late parents who  arrived in the UK from India over 40 years ago with a vision  of a better life for their family. The chair of Care England and  founder of multi-award-winning care provider Hallmark Care  Homes, Avnish received a CBE in 2022 for his work during the  pandemic, while in 2021, Anita was awarded an MBE for her  services to diversity and female empowerment. The couple  are on a mission to help those less fortunate, in the UK and  abroad, and their foundation is involved in areas such as  anti-trafficking programmes, empowerment of women and  education of children from disadvantaged backgrounds.

 

HOW DID YOUR PHILANTHROPY JOURNEY START? 

Avnish: Giving back was always in our DNA and we always wanted to make a difference. I saw all these people  doing amazing work and thought, you know what, we’ve  got to do something. And I spent quite a lot of time trying  to convince the shareholders of my business that we should be contributing a certain percentage of our profits  to charity. 

WHAT INSPIRED YOU TO SET UP YOUR FOUNDATION? 

Avnish: I thought it could be a way of uniting the family together in our philanthropic endeavours. We worked with a number of charities and people started approaching us once they saw the work we were doing.  And then in 2013, I started raising money for kids and  doing small fundraisers. Each of us was really busy with  our work schedules. Anita would come home from her job  as a teacher, and I’d be like, “Come on, we’ve got a black tie  event in London.” And Anita was like, “I can’t do this.” So  I asked her to come and join the foundation. 

Anita: As a teacher, I’d been working with children who  were struggling with the curriculum, struggling with school, engagement and things like that. Bit by bit, I got  more and more exposure to the world of charity through  going to events and seeing the suffering of young people  and women especially, and I thought, there’s work to be  done here and I can help. That’s what started my journey – I joined the foundation and I’ve been involved ever since. It’s not only donating money – it’s doing fundraising events, raising awareness and social media, speaking to others,  encouraging others to give. And I started to do things around educating people. So we did conferences and fashion shows, and through those we talked about our  charities. 

DOES IT JUST MAKE YOU WANT TO DO MORE  WHEN YOU SEE YOU’RE MAKING SUCH A  DIFFERENCE TO PEOPLE’S LIVES? 

Anita: Yes, and we just get more and more excited. We are  always thinking, how can we evolve? Any conversation  you have when you meet people gives you ideas. And I  think you’ve got to share the work that you’re doing so your  networks just keep continuing to grow. But what’s really  exciting is that people from all walks of life can help us to  grow our work so we can help young people even more.  Every day we are faced with new opportunities – it’s just a  matter of keeping up with it. 

Avnish: We see philanthropy as not just giving your  money, but your time, your passion and your skills. It’s  easy giving when you’re a multimillionaire, because that  doesn’t impact you, but giving when you’ve got less – I  think it’s really powerful. That’s when you really know that  you have the heart and the generosity to do it. Most of the  charities we’ve got involved with haven’t just been about  signing a cheque – it’s been going to visit projects, whether  it’s a rehabilitation centre in Jaipur with the British  Asian Trust or the red light district of Mumbai to see how  our money is helping these ladies keep their children in  education, or to see the night care centres [for children at  risk] to see the work firsthand.  

IT MUST BE A HUGE RESPONSIBILITY TO KNOW  THAT YOUR MONEY IS GOING TO THE RIGHT  PLACES. 

Avnish: As I was growing up, my parents would say, “be  careful, because there’s lots of charlatans out there”, and  that their money doesn’t actually go to the right causes.  And I think people still have that narrative and sometimes  it’s almost an excuse not to give.  

You see lots of people in this rat race becoming more and  more affluent financially, and wealth creation is often a  marker for success – and competition. Who’s the highest  on the rich list, who’s going to make it to billionaire status  and who’s going to have their private jet and so on. 

I think the majority of people don’t realise that once  you get to a certain level, that extra million or whatever  isn’t going to give you the same joy and juice as the first  £10,000 or £100,000 that you make. It helps you to do  all the other things and give more to philanthropy, but  actually the joy of giving to great causes starts to trump  that wealth creation. 

HOW CAN YOU ENCOURAGE OTHER PEOPLE TO  GET INVOLVED IN PHILANTHROPY? 

Avnish: We are looking at how we can create a giving pledge for people who are not billionaires, who’ve got wealth and they commit to giving 50 per cent of their wealth to charity in their lifetime. Because giving your wealth to your children is one of the worst things you can do. Give them enough so they can have a reasonably good quality of life but not enough that they lose that hunger to work, because it’s the actual drive of wanting to create something and achieve something that really gives you that sense of self worth, that feeling of fulfilment. What’s the point of dying the richest man in the grave? Imagine what you could have done while you were living with that money. And the pleasure you could have got and the impact of opening an orphanage, curing a disease, building a village or an old people’s home for those that can’t afford it.

DO YOU FIND YOUNG PEOPLE ARE GETTING  MORE INTERESTED IN PHILANTHROPY?  

Anita: We always try to get the next generation involved.  Our youngest daughter is quite passionate about doing  charity events and we’ve taken our daughters to see  projects in India as well. I think the world of philanthropy  is really opening up, especially within the education sector.  With our Inner Spark programme, we’ve committed to  working with one million students over the next five years  and we’ve found that by going into schools and doing  workshops, it makes young people more aware of the  charities that are funding what they’re experiencing.  

DO YOU FEEL BY SHARING YOUR EXPERIENCES,  YOU WILL INSPIRE OTHERS? 

Avnish: Yes. I’m here because I was inspired by others  and I believe it’s my duty to inspire others through role modelling and by people seeing what you’re doing, and seeing the satisfaction that you’re getting. Anita and I  have very fulfilled lives – we count our blessings every  day. We are lucky to have each other and have our health  and that’s priceless. Money doesn’t buy that. The money  can disappear tomorrow and we’d still be happy. Any  philanthropist will tell you that the more that you give,  the more comes back to you. No one ever got poor by  fundraising. In fact, you get richer. 

Share