Three events in Andy Astrachan’s life informed the three pillars of philanthropy of his charitable foundation that bears his initials. The first was an invitation by the principal of the 112th Street Elementary School in South Central Los Angeles to mentor a group of students and help the school obtain resources. The second was a trip to Africa to participate in the digging of a water well in a remote rural village. The third was his own cancer diagnosis.
About
AJA Foundation
Mission
AJA Foundation seeks to help those who have done everything society asks of them, yet for whom access to essential resources and the probability for advancement that comes from them remain elusive at best and structurally impossible at worst.
We know that the “playing field” of opportunity tilts substantially and unfairly towards those coming from advantage and that nobody succeeds on their own. AJA Foundation is dedicated to leveling the playing field by investing globally in organizations addressing what we see as fundamental human rights with a focus on equal access to clean water, quality education and essential healthcare.
Connecticut – Pathfinder (New Haven)
Massachusetts – Steppingstone (Boston)
Building Foundations:
Mentorship to Global Impact
Andy Astrachan's journey into philanthropy began with his adoption of the 112th St. Elementary School in South Central Los Angeles in 1990, the mentoring of many of its students and the friendships he formed with many parents and grandparents. This hands-on experience, combined with a life-changing trip to Zambia in 2009 to dig a water well deep in the bush inspired him to establish and fully fund the AJA Foundation, which bear his initials.
Recognizing that nobody achieves success on their own and believing that all of us have a moral obligation to help lift up those less fortunate, the AJA Foundation is the result of Andy's desire to pay forward the immeasurable help and support he received.
Driven by our steadfast belief that everyone deserves the opportunity to reach their fullest potential, our primary focus is providing access to clean water, affordable healthcare, and quality childhood education globally.
We invest in these areas because we believe them to be essential human rights fundamental to human development that must be equitably distributed, not skewed towards wealth and privilege.
Our Team
Andy Astrachan
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Education
Andy Astrachan’s journey into active philanthropy began with his “adoption” of the 112th St.Elementary School in South Central Los Angeles in 1990, the mentoring of some of its students and the decades-long friendships he formed with many students, parents and grandparents. He says “I was gifted a hands-on front row seat to the massive gap between the resources available to students and their families where I lived versus those available in Watts. The most disturbing thing was that the gap in resources had no correlation to the potential of the children in elementary school. The only thing it correlated to was the gap in affluence.”
Water
In 2009, Andy traveled deep into the Zambian bush to participate with a team of Zambians in the digging of a water well located at a school. He witnessed life before the well which required women and girls to walk miles every day to fetch dirty water from a water hole in a dried out river. Andy also saw firsthand the profound impact ready access to clean water has on health, education, gender equality and the economy. He says “The sheer joy on the faces of the children when the first clean water came out of the spout is a moment and a feeling that is seared into my memory. I am unaware of any investment in people at any cost with the power to change peoples lives as greatly. And this investment costs only $20 a person – far less when you consider the many generations that will benefit too.”
Healthcare
In 2004, Andy was diagnosed with what turned out to be metastatic cancer. This led to deeply personal contemplation of the importance of health and reflection on the overall availability of quality health care. AJAF has and will continue to invest in the democratization of cancer treatment in the United States and the search for new cancer drugs.
Where we The AJA Foundation feels we can have has the greatest focuses their impact in healthcare is in the developing world where often, people are dying people often die from conditions that are routinely treated elsewhere and conditions that are preventable with basic precautions. AJAF is particularly drawn to fund volunteer clinics where treatments can average as little as $1 per patient visit. Andy says “It is hard to wrap your head around the fact that people can be successfully treated for a wide variety of conditions for $1. But thanks to the generosity of so many doctors, nurses and other health professionals who volunteer their time and money, they can be.”