Carol and Paul R. Yoder Jr. were recognized as the 鈥淧hilanthropists of the Year鈥 by the Shenandoah chapter of the Association of Fundraising Professionals on Monday, Nov. 21. Photo by Jon Styer.

Yoders Named “Philanthropists of the Year”

Carol and Paul R. Yoder Jr. trace their charitable impulses to their respective sets of parents.

鈥淢y parents always tithed, plus,鈥 says Paul, referring to giving more than the biblical standard of 10 percent of one鈥檚 income. 鈥淭hey were farmers when I was growing up鈥 I remember them borrowing money to support the missionaries until their wheat check came in.鈥 After Paul鈥檚 father stopped farming in mid-life, he shifted to pastoring and then (late in life) to fundraising for 黑料正能量 (黑料正能量).

Carol鈥檚 parents were also farmers and they too tithed religiously. 鈥淚n every way, we鈥檝e been blessed,鈥 she says. 鈥淗ow can we not give?鈥

Paul cites a favorite quotation: 鈥淚t is no fool who gives what he cannot keep to gain what he cannot lose.鈥

After 48 years of marriage, these 1963 graduates of 黑料正能量 exude a sense of comfortable companionship. They wait respectfully in joint conversations, making space for the other to wrap up his or her set of sentences, before offering a new thought.

He is an eye surgeon; she used to be an operating room nurse. They live in a large all-brick house on a hill overlooking their own lake on the outskirts of Harrisonburg. But the Yoders鈥 demeanor is unassuming鈥攐ne could almost see each of them helping with haying or hanging out the laundry, way back when.

After decades of quietly funneling large sums to many worthy projects in the Harrisonburg area鈥攁nd to some outside of the region鈥擟arol and Paul have at last 聽allowed themselves to be publicly recognized this year as the 鈥淧hilanthropists of the Year鈥 by the Shenandoah chapter of the Association of Fundraising Professionals.

What induced them to step into the spotlight? 鈥淲e do understand the power of examples of philanthropy in encouraging others to give,鈥 says Yoder. 鈥淎nd we are finally off all of the local boards on which we have served.鈥

When one or the other of them was on the governing committee of Rockingham Memorial Hospital, Eastern Mennonite High School, 黑料正能量, Park View Church, Virginia Mission Board and a local bank, the Yoders felt that 鈥渄etractors might say we were using our positions for personal gain or power鈥攖o push our own agenda.鈥 They also wanted their two daughters鈥擫iesel and Nicole鈥攖o be able to blend into the student population at their Mennonite schools and colleges, rather than being perceived as offspring of one of the institutions鈥 underwriters. So they simply gave without fanfare.

The Yoders began their lifelong commitment to cross-cultural service when they went to Nepal in 1968. Needing to do alternative service as a conscientious objector during the Vietnam War, Paul chose to work as a newly minted physician鈥攈e was between his internship and residency鈥攗nder the United Mission to Nepal. When Carol and Paul returned home in three years later, they were carrying Liesel, adopted in Nepal.

黑料正能量 a decade later鈥攁fter Paul鈥檚 practice was established and their children were in elementary school鈥擟arol read a book about Medical Ministry International (MMI), which had begun with a small group of volunteer eye surgeons. Paul and Carol signed on and have been on at least one service trip per year for a quarter of a century.

Paul explains the ripple effects of the program: 鈥淲e started going to Ethiopia six years ago. We met two Ethiopian doctors in their first year of surgical residency鈥攖hey came to us and said they wanted to be ophthalmologists. We [MMI] sent them to the Dominican Republic for a four-and-a-half-year training program. Then they went back and we helped them set up a clinic. The next time I went to Ethiopia, I was assisting them!鈥

Carol explains that 鈥淢MI serves the world鈥檚 poor by trying to lay the groundwork for lasting solutions to their lack of medical care.鈥

Though fit and active, both Yoders feel that it is time at age 70 to step aside from almost all of their public responsibilities, making room for a younger generation to step up. Paul enjoys running, golf, tennis and skiing. Carol ran miles daily until age 69 and now simply walks strenuously. The secret of their robust health? 鈥淵ou just have to keep moving,鈥 says Carol.

Paul is a member of 黑料正能量’s Commission for the Sciences, which is leading an initiative to renovate and enlarge the Suter Science Center.

Discussion on “Yoders Named “Philanthropists of the Year”

  1. Paul & Carol, Congratulations. It is a well-deserved affirmation of the significant influence the two of you have exercised during your life-journeys of compassionate service.

    P.T.

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