This memorial fund was started to continue John’s generosity
towards the children in the countries he would travel to. As anyone
who had been in contact with John would know, he loved the kids
he encountered. Looking back over photos from each trip, you would
undoubtedly find a few of John either playing with the kids or
handing out a hearty lunch. He did things like that because that’s
who he was. He was so humble about his generosity that many of
his family and friends only learned of it at his memorial.
Our plan is to continue to give to those children less fortunate
than ourselves. We will donate through Heifer
International in John's name.
| Heifer's
Mission to End Hunger
Heifer
envisions…
A world of communities living together in peace and
equitably sharing the resources of a healthy planet.
Heifer’s
mission is…
To work with communities to end hunger and poverty
and to care for the earth.
Heifer's
strategy is…
To “pass on the gift.” As people share
their animals’ offspring with others –
along with their knowledge, resources, and skills
– an expanding network of hope, dignity, and
self-reliance is created that reaches around the globe.
Heifer’s
History
This simple idea of giving families a source of food
rather than short-term relief caught on and has continued
for almost 60 years. Today, millions of families in
115 countries have been given the gifts of self-reliance
and hope.
Read
more about Heifer’s History. |
|
If you would like to make a donation...
Send checks made out to “Heifer International and
in memory of John Saliba III” to:
PO BOX 8058, Little Rock, Arkansas 72203
Or, you can call Heifer International at 1-888-5-HUNGER
and make a donation in memory of John Saliba III.
KamiKiwi will also donate a portion of the profits from each tour
we book as our ongoing contribution. Our plan is to continue John’s
amazing generosity and compassion for the children in the remote
regions that he visited.

Blair and John with the children and staff of Batopilas
Orphanage, Chihuahua
JOHN SALIBA
Written by Mary Saliba
My brother, John Saliba, filled every second of his 33
years with adventure, love, humor and friendship. He created a
fantastic world for himself, and invited us all in.
John hands out snacks to children
at Cusare Falls, Mexico
A competitive skier in high school, he never lost his love for
the outdoors. In college he began traveling, spending a year in
Kenya. He later earned his MBA at Thunderbird, majoring in International
Marketing. It was during one particularly tedious temp job, possibly
the last time John wore a suit and lace-up shoes, when he designed
a business plan that would become World Trek Expeditions. He tried
to figure out how he could travel and ride his bicycle and be
with his friends – for a living. Downhill Mountain Biking
was born.
He began leading day trips to his favorite out-of-the-way places
in Colorado. His number one motive was to have fun – and
that meant everyone had fun. Eventually, he began leading longer
trips. He and his friend, Blair Windley, would go on exploring
trips to Mexico, Peru, Honduras… they would find strange,
undiscovered corners of the world and bring people to them. With
John and Blair, people found themselves leaping off sand dunes
in Baja, riding kayaks up to gray whales, riding mountain bikes
along the rim of Copper Canyon and flying down to the bottom under
the blazing blue Mexican skies. He was never lost, he just changed
his plans from time to time… for example, on one of his
exploration trips, he and Blair drove several hundred miles in
the wrong direction – West instead of East. When John discovered
this he said “Heck with it, let’s go to California,
then!”
When John died, while traveling in Thailand, so many people felt
their hearts break right then. For John, every day, every week
was an adventure. But to those of us who went on his journeys,
that one week spent with him was maybe the best, most exciting
week of our lifetime. So many people have said that John taught
them how to live – how to make every day count. John was
a generous spirit; with his time, and in other ways. He always
managed to find room in his over-stuffed van for a box of Frisbees
and candy for the orphans of Batopilas, Chihuahua. He had a love
of fun and of life and of all the possibilities of the day, and
he wanted to bring that to the children of this country he loved
so much.