Montreal Gazette

Lottery winner’s happiness comes from helping others

Instead of spending on herself, Piedmont resident uses winnings to benefit needy

- HERB ZURKOWSKY hzurkowsky@postmedia.com twitter.com/HerbZurkow­sky1

Money, indeed, can buy happiness, Rachel Lapierre will attest.

But in a strange twist to that age-old axiom, Lapierre has used her money, acquired from a 2013 lottery win, to benefit others rather than spending it on herself.

The 57-year-old Piedmont resident still lives in the same house. Although she purchased a new Subaru automobile last year, Lapierre did so only after her last car was stolen. And she laughed about it when sharing the experience.

“Honestly, helping (people) brings you happiness,” Lapierre told the Montreal Gazette in a telephone interview. “When you buy a new car, you’re going to be happy for a week, maybe two. After that, it’s part of your body. But when I hear about a mother of four with cancer and she’s crying and I give her food and love, this stays in my heart longer than two weeks.

“I don’t say nice things are not fun,” added the mother of four grown children who has received plenty of publicity the last five years but has remained level-headed. “I still appreciate a good bottle of wine. But I don’t need it to be happy. Happiness comes from the inside.”

Although Lapierre said she rarely buys lottery tickets, a voice in the back of her head told her to purchase one in 2013 while shopping at a St-Sauveur grocery store. She won Loto- Québec’s Gagnant à Vie, providing her with a weekly cheque of $1,000 for the remainder of her life.

Although she quit her job as an emergency-room nurse, Lapierre did so only to devote all her attention to her philanthro­pic work. She had been completing humanitari­an missions for more than two decades before establishi­ng a non-profit foundation, Le Book Humanitair­e. It co-ordinates volunteers worldwide with people in need, primarily working in emergency and crisis situations. Lapierre particular­ly has a soft spot for refugees.

Lapierre, born in Îles-de-la-Madeleine, said she believes she inherited this magnanimit­y from her mother. But she was quick to quash the suggestion this makes her a noble individual.

“I’m very lucky to be able to do it,” she said. “When you do a good deed, feel your heart and soul, it makes you feel very, very good. I feel I’m very lucky to be able to do a lot of good deeds every day.”

Lapierre is the founder and president of the non-profit foundation. She oversees a staff of 10 full-time volunteers, including her sister, Guylaine, the vice-president responsibl­e for Montreal.

Le Book Humanitair­e has 30,000 followers on various social media platforms, Lapierre said. Last year alone, she said, the foundation handled 30,127 cases, of which 98 per cent were resolved satisfacto­rily. No problem is considered too big or too small, even if it requires listening to a lonely person on the telephone, she has said.

The foundation works closely with hospitals, CLSCs and schools, uniting people who want to help with those who require assistance, whether that incorporat­es food, clothing or money for the homeless, sick or single mothers.

For more informatio­n, go to LeB ookHumanit­aire.com or phone 450-436-2665.

 ?? RACHEL LAPIERRE ?? Rachel Lapierre on a humanitari­an mission in Senegal this year. She created the non-profit foundation Le Book Humanitair­e.
RACHEL LAPIERRE Rachel Lapierre on a humanitari­an mission in Senegal this year. She created the non-profit foundation Le Book Humanitair­e.

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