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§ Private Profile · 1735 E Bayshore Rd Ste 30B, Redwood City, California 94063, US
PARSA Community Foundation is a company.
Key people at PARSA Community Foundation.
PARSA Community Foundation was founded in 2005 by Noosheen Hashemi (Founder and Chair).
PARSA Community Foundation was the first Persian community foundation in the United States, a leading philanthropic institution focused on strategic giving and social entrepreneurship. It managed a significant independent endowment, enabling donor contributions and distributing grants to nonprofits. Efforts centered on preserving Persian arts and culture, developing community leaders, and promoting civic engagement.
Co-founded in 2006 by Noosheen Hashemi, Omid Kordestani, and Anousheh Ansari, the organization emerged from a commitment to establish an enduring, professionally managed entity. This founding insight aimed to strategically deploy philanthropic capital for the global Persian community's cultural and social development, addressing a crucial need for structured support.
The foundation supported donors and nonprofit organizations engaged in cultural, educational, and civic sectors within the Persian diaspora. Its mission was to strengthen the Persian community by funding projects that advanced heritage, cultivated leadership, and enhanced civil society. The foundation fulfilled its objectives before concluding operations in 2011.
PARSA Community Foundation was founded in 2005 by Noosheen Hashemi (Founder and Chair).
Key people at PARSA Community Foundation.
PARSA Community Foundation is a U.S.-based Persian community foundation that practiced strategic philanthropy, supported Persian arts and culture, leadership development, and civic engagement, and operated as a 501(c)(3) nonprofit (it completed grantmaking and was dissolved in 2011 according to some accounts). [1][4]
High‑Level Overview
Origin Story
Core Differentiators
Role in the Broader Tech / Nonprofit Landscape
Quick Take & Future Outlook
Sources: PARSA’s own About and Mission pages and third‑party nonprofit archives and histories are the primary sources for the above summary and for the note that PARSA wound down grantmaking and was dissolved after 2010–2011.[1][2][4]