Cornelius Pieztner, currently a high-impact financial professional, spent the first 45 years of his life at Camphill - a network of intentional communities co-founded by his father Carlos Pietzner. The communities were designed for children and youth with intellectual and developmental disabilities. Through his interactions and work with teenagers with pronounced developmental disabilities, Cornelius realized that his primary work was not to fix the "other", but to work on himself to cultivate tolerance, acceptance, and love.
"The inner aspect of community" as he calls it, became one of the central inquiries of his life and work - "What would be needed for an aggregation of people to understand themselves and experience themselves as a community of people?"
For more than 30 years, Cornelius has carried this inquiry into leading roles at the intersections of philanthropy, investment, social impact enterprises, transformative education focusing on the well-being of the planet, and commercial ventures toward a human-centered economy. Currently, he serves as the CEO of Alterra Impact Finance GmbH, an impact investment, management, and advisory firm in Switzerland with private equity investments in several European companies. Until 2021, he served as Managing Director of Mind & Life Europe, founded by the Dalai Lama. He also served as Chief Financial Officer on the Executive Board at the Goetheanum, General Anthroposophical Society, Switzerland (2002-2011), with affiliates in 90 countries and approximately 10,000 related institutions in agriculture, medicine, and therapy, (Waldorf) education, ethical banking and business, and the arts. He was the President of Camphill (life-sharing) Communities in North America.
Growing up in a community that had no concept of individual ownership or income, Cornelius also developed a deep interest in understanding money and working with it in new ways to foster greater belonging. His earliest experiment was to set up a youth group fund with the principle, "put what you can, take what you need". His various leadership roles in finance have been guided by his vision of "positive economy" to catalyze a shift from consumerism to "enoughness", rationality to wisdom, and self-interest to compassion for others.
Cornelius is also the steward of the Pietzner Art Collection, composed of over 1,500 artworks from his father and several other revolutionary artists. He is a partner at NOW Partners and serves as a member of the Board of Directors of the Karl Konig Institute in Berlin Germany, among other privately held European companies. He has also served on Advisory Boards for Gross National Happiness Center in Bhutan, B Corps Europe, Partnering for Global Impact, and OOOM World. He is the author and editor of several books (Candle on the Hill, Village Life) and presents on various topics in conferences internationally. Born in Northern Ireland in 1957 and having grown up in Pennsylvania, USA, he received his degree (Highest Honors) in Political Science from Williams College, Mass., and was awarded a Thomas J. Watson Fellowship. Pietzner lives near Basel, Switzerland and Vienna, Austria.
Join Birju Pandya and Susan Clark in conversation with this remarkable agent of change, impact investor, and community builder.
"All real living is meeting"- Martin Buber, is a sentence that more or less sums up what makes me feel alive. The kind of meeting implied here is of the deeper kind, beyond the chit chat of everyday life, and where one feels that something essential, perhaps even eternal, is taking place. To have a deep human encounter, wherever, whenever and with whomever, is a profoundly rewarding and inspiring event that nourishes both the soul and spirit. As Goethe writes in his fairy tale of the Green Snake and the Beautiful Lily, 'it is conversation that is even more quickening than light, and light is more glorious than gold' (my paraphrase). Ultimately, the idea of spiritual friendship that supports creativity and positive action is a gift and a blessing, and in my life has led to things more substantial than what I alone could have managed. I have also been blessed with always being able to do work that has fully corresponded with my own values , whether living and working in intentional community together with people with special needs, working at the Goetheanum in Switzerland which is the worldwide center of the Anthroposophical Society and the various initiatives arising from the teachings of Rudolf Steiner (for example Waldorf Schools, bio dynamic agriculture, alternative holistic medicine, purpose-related social business and banking and more) and later my work in impact investing and then with Mind & Life Europe, which offered me exposure to the Buddhist community through the Dalai Lama, who founded Mind & Life together with the neuro-scientist Francisco Varela. The alignment of values, intention, attention and action combined with service (don't worry, I have never been a martyr of any kind) has simply helped me avoid schisms between my inner life and my outer life.
I've been around long enough to have had a number of turning points in my life. I was born into and raised in an intentional community (Camphill), first in Northern Ireland, and later in the USA. Growing up with people from all over the world, and with people whose intellectual capacities were hindered, but whose soul and social capacities were often superior, gave me a foundation for tolerance and acceptance of "otherness", and a sense that each person has something valuable to contribute to the whole. I experienced my childhood as ideal, giving me space to roam and explore, both literally and figuratively. And this in turn created trust in and enthusiasm for life itself, and the basic goodness of people.As a young adult, caring for some teenagers with pronounced developmental disabilities, I realized that the primary challenge I had to face was to work on myself, as the mirror(s) that they reflected back to me about my own (dis)abilities required me to examine my own shortcomings. This opened the complex world of self-development and inner transformation as a key to working effectively with others, whether in business, social work or anywhere else for that matter. It has been an insight that has accompanied me ever since.
Sometimes seemingly small and trivial acts of kindness can have a long-lasting impact and carry a profound message. And there have been many! As a teenager I went barefoot alot. On a little walk one day, I met a man whom I knew, and we stopped to talk. I happened to admire his sandals, Birkenstocks, which at the time were a new thing. Without saying a word, and to my great surprise, he simply took them off, and gave them to me. We parted, he barefoot, and me with new sandals. That stuck with me, because of his non-attachment to things, and him wanting to give me a joy. I have taken it as a life-lesson.Or when hitchhiking around Europe when that still seemed possible so many years ago, I was given an address by an acquaintance of some distant relatives he had in Paris, where I was headed. Upon arriving there unannounced, I was taken in so warmly by a family of modest means- but many persons-and invited to a lovely meal and overnight in a bed which meant that one family member had to sleep on the couch, that I was overwhelmed, and embarrassed by their kindness. The pure generosity to a stranger seemed of biblical proportions! I have taken this as an example that I try to emulate, and, I am afraid, not always successfully!
From time to time I have this idea to do something so out of my destiny stream as to be not me. Such as, work as a deckhand on a cargo ship for 3 months, sell my homegrown vegetables from a little boat in Cambodia, be a sheep shepherd in the Albanian mountains for a time, or live as a fish monger in the northwestern islands of Scotland for 6 months- that sort of thing. It is less important what it is, than that is so "out of character" as to seemingly belong to another life.
Find what you love to do, and go all in, as enthusiasm and gratitude make each of us happier and better, and are forces the world needs more of.