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Philanthropy
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Shipping chief with a big heart for orphans

Baby dumped at train station makes mark on Tim Huxley in support for mainland charity

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Tim Huxley
Kate Whitehead

Philanthropy is a very personal decision - the who, what, why and how much of giving are determined by life experiences, and the very act of giving has an impact on the giver.

For long-time Hong Kong resident Tim Huxley, a board director of children's charity Half the Sky, it was holding a six-week-old orphan on the mainland that tweaked the heartstrings.

Abandoned at a railway station, the baby had been brought to the charity's Beijing centre to be cared for before being taken to hospital to have a tumour removed and her spine straightened.

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"She had gone through so much before she was even a few months old," says Huxley, who has been involved with Half the Sky for three years.

"I grew up in a vicarage in England, so charity was part of growing up," he says.

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The family lived near the sea and supported the Royal National Lifeboat Institution and the Mission to Seafarers. Huxley also recalls raising money for the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children.

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