AUGUST 2017 FORBES INDONESIA | 71
cookies and business cards. He’s also
been a steady contributor to the inter-
national relief group Food for the Hun-
gry. Since donating $110,000 in 2008 to
help North Korean children, his dona-
tions have reached nearly $1.2 million.
Kw o n O h - S e o b 57
FOUNDER & CHAIRMAN,
L&P COSMETICS
Gave $10.4 million last November
to his alma mater, Korea University,
which will use the money to finance a
new building for its College of Science
named after his Mediheal brand. His
company produces skin-care masks
made of gel sheets. Its popular Mediheal
line is among the country’s top sellers.
Lee Young-Lim 76
FOUNDER & DIRECTOR, YOUNGLIM
ORIENTAL MEDICINE HOSPITAL
Pledged $110 million in December to
Kyunghee University, her alma mater.
She called on the university to contin-
ue making advances in Oriental medi-
cine and take a step toward becom-
ing a world-class university. With her
donation, it plans to create a research-
and-development center focused on
Oriental medicine and renewable en-
ergy. She originally majored in West-
ern medicine but switched to Orien-
tal medicine after suffering from liver
parasites. After spending much of her
career in Iran, working as a doctor
for top government officials and also
starting a construction company, she
returned to South Korea and started
Younglim hospital in Seoul in 1994.
TAIWAN
Chang Hui-mei 44
POP SINGER
Best known by her stage name, A-
mei, she donated $66,000 to Tai-
tung County in eastern Taiwan for
disaster relief and reconstruction
after Typhoon Nepartak wreaked
havoc on her hometown last July.
Before that, she had donated some
$273,000—proceeds from one of her
concerts in 2012—to St. Mary’s Hos-
pital in Taitung. Long a supporter of
same-sex marriage, she has helped
organize two star-studded concerts
to rally support and raise funds for
lesbian-, gay-, bisexual- and transgen-
der-rights groups. In May the island’s
top court ruled in favor of legalizing
same-sex marriage. In 2009 she start-
ed the Dream Fulfillment Scholar-
ship project with an initial donation
of $16,600 to World Vision, which
sponsored hundreds of indigenous
students for a year.
Chuang Yung-Shun 65
CHAIRMAN, AAEON TECHNOLOGY &
ONYX HEALTHCARE
Last month, pledged $3.3 million to
China University of Technology for
scholarships and faculty benefits and
to establish an e-learning system and
a Chinese-language center. In 2009,
he donated $6.6 million toward the
construction of an 11-story building at
his alma mater, the National Taiwan
AUGUST 2017 FORBES INDONESIA | 71
cookies and business cards. He’s also
been a steady contributor to the inter-
national relief group Food for the Hun-
gry. Since donating $110,000 in 2008 to
help North Korean children, his dona-
tions have reached nearly $1.2 million.
Kw o n O h - S e o b 57
FOUNDER & CHAIRMAN,
L&P COSMETICS
Gave $10.4 million last November
to his alma mater, Korea University,
which will use the money to finance a
new building for its College of Science
named after his Mediheal brand. His
company produces skin-care masks
made of gel sheets. Its popular Mediheal
line is among the country’s top sellers.
Lee Young-Lim 76
FOUNDER & DIRECTOR, YOUNGLIM
ORIENTAL MEDICINE HOSPITAL
Pledged $110 million in December to
Kyunghee University, her alma mater.
She called on the university to contin-
ue making advances in Oriental medi-
cine and take a step toward becom-
ing a world-class university. With her
donation, it plans to create a research-
and-development center focused on
Oriental medicine and renewable en-
ergy. She originally majored in West-
ern medicine but switched to Orien-
tal medicine after suffering from liver
parasites. After spending much of her
career in Iran, working as a doctor
for top government officials and also
starting a construction company, she
returned to South Korea and started
Younglim hospital in Seoul in 1994.
TAIWAN
Chang Hui-mei 44
POP SINGER
Best known by her stage name, A-
mei, she donated $66,000 to Tai-
tung County in eastern Taiwan for
disaster relief and reconstruction
after Typhoon Nepartak wreaked
havoc on her hometown last July.
Before that, she had donated some
$273,000—proceeds from one of her
concerts in 2012—to St. Mary’s Hos-
pital in Taitung. Long a supporter of
same-sex marriage, she has helped
organize two star-studded concerts
to rally support and raise funds for
lesbian-, gay-, bisexual- and transgen-
der-rights groups. In May the island’s
top court ruled in favor of legalizing
same-sex marriage. In 2009 she start-
ed the Dream Fulfillment Scholar-
ship project with an initial donation
of $16,600 to World Vision, which
sponsored hundreds of indigenous
students for a year.
Chuang Yung-Shun 65
CHAIRMAN, AAEON TECHNOLOGY &
ONYX HEALTHCARE
Last month, pledged $3.3 million to
China University of Technology for
scholarships and faculty benefits and
to establish an e-learning system and
a Chinese-language center. In 2009,
he donated $6.6 million toward the
construction of an 11-story building at
his alma mater, the National Taiwan
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