Thursday, September 09, 2010

A world of good

Barton Brooks with Cambodian children

His 'small' deeds add up globally

September 9, 2010
By RITA DELFINER
New York Post


It was a trip to Cambodia about five years ago that changed Manhattan real-estate broker Barton Brooks' life.

"There were a bunch of kids I fell in love with, orphans being taken care of by monks," he said. "I wanted to help."

Brooks, 38, came home and got donations of sporting equipment and school supplies, "and I saw how easy it is to help one person at a time."

He gave up his career and founded the nonprofit Global Colors, providing what he calls guerrilla aid: "You go somewhere, do something, and teach others to do the same."

On one visit to Cambodia, he asked what the people of a village needed.

"One woman said, 'If I had some water jars, some seeds and a bike, I could take care of my family,' " he said. "It took just $80 to take her from extreme poverty to lower middle class."

On a recent trip to earthquake-ravaged Haiti, Brooks -- who has been nominated for a New York Post Liberty medal in the Freedom category -- gathered volunteers and rebuilt two schools.

Brooks travels the globe doing small acts of kindness that have a big impact -- from donating 100 cows to destitute widows in Kenya, to helping create floating libraries that travel the Mekong River in Laos.

He inspires people "to actually be the change we wish to see in the world," said Valerie Mnuchin, who nominated him.

rita.delfiner@nypost.com

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

thank you for your contribution to the development of cambodia, whether through education, skill training, job trades, ideas, etc..., it all will help cambodia in the long run. god bless cambodia.

Anonymous said...

The world would be a better place if there are more people out there like Mr. Brook. Thank you for your act of kindness and may you always be blessed with kindness.

Anonymous said...

GOD BLESSED YOU!