
The daughter of the founder of "Mother's Choice," born and raised in Hong Kong, she has been a volunteer there since childhood. In 2012, she became the CEO of "Mother's Choice." By 2018, she had overseen the care and support of 137 young women facing unplanned pregnancies, providing over 2,761 cases of counseling, communication, and assessments, striving to break the cycle of adversity. She works to raise public and governmental awareness of family issues and response strategies, meticulously documenting and analyzing successful cases to share them freely with Mainland China and Southeast Asia.

Captain of the TSMC Charity Foundation, a renowned philanthropist in Asia, and an internationally acclaimed painter. She has long been dedicated to social grassroots issues, actively engaging in education, environmental protection, arts, and cultural initiatives. In 2017, the foundation launched its charitable programs with four key pillars: caring for the elderly living alone, promoting filial piety, supporting the underprivileged, and strengthening environmental awareness. She hopes to share her time and resources with those in need, likening her efforts to planting a seed that may one day grow into a flourishing forest.

Born in 1941 in Bretagne, France, he joined the Missions étrangères de Paris at a young age and arrived in Taiwan at the age of 25, dedicating over 50 years of his life to serving remote communities. Committed to the well-being of indigenous peoples and environmental protection, he supported the underprivileged through recycling initiatives. At the age of 75, he applied for Taiwanese citizenship, becoming an honorary resident and choosing Hualien as his lifelong home. His mission: "Nothing is useless; we just haven’t learned how to use it. No one is worthless; we just haven’t truly known them yet."

He is the President of the China Global Philanthropy Institute and the Director of the China Philanthropy Research Institute at Beijing Normal University. Since 2015, he has served as the president of the Shenzhen International Philanthropy Academy, where the motto is "Universal Love and Teacher's Benevolence." He is committed to nurturing global models of philanthropy and guiding social development through charitable work. He states, "My mission is to be the stepping stone for the progress of China's philanthropic sector, contributing to the advancement of Chinese charity and the integration of Chinese culture into the global philanthropic movement."

At the age of 18, she entered a factory as an apprentice. During her time as a union officer, she frequently visited the poor and pondered how to establish herself by the age of 30. In her moments of struggle, she came across the story of Mother Teresa and was inspired to resign and establish the country’s first private special education school. Since then, following Mother Teresa’s example, she has dedicated her life to charity. To this day, she has established “Hui Ling” in 30 cities across China with 120 service points, making it the largest intellectual disability service organization in the country. Her mission is: “To promote community-based service models and improve the quality of life for people with intellectual disabilities.”

He was the former assistant editor-in-chief of Outlook Oriental Weekly at Xinhua News Agency and worked as an investigative reporter for 12 years, always focusing on the fate of those at the bottom of society. In 2008, he initiated the "Veterans Returning Home" project and in 2011, established the Shenzhen Longyue Charitable Foundation, the first peace organization in China focused on the war domain. He has published books such as Soldiers Who Never Returned Home, Exotic 1945, and In the Name of Citizenship. Having been involved in the war field for over a decade, he has seen the harm that war brings to humanity and hopes to spread the concept of peace on a larger scale and promote human civilization.