December 5, 2024
This new center will provide Dominican students with opportunities to develop careers in the arts.
Yesterday, the Cigar Family Charitable Foundation (CFCF) celebrated the opening of its new Cigar Family Academy of Arts. With generous support from Hublot, this new center furthers the Fuente and Newman families’ goals of providing children in the Dominican Republic a diverse range of educational and career opportunities. Located in the 23-acre Cigar Family project in Bonao, Dominican Republic, the Cigar Family Academy of Arts includes four new buildings for music, arts, and dance programs along with an amphitheater for performances. The Cigar Family Academy of Arts will allow CFCF to expand its curriculum to support students who wish to pursue careers in the arts.
“I am enormously grateful to my friends at Hublot for supporting the creation of our new Academy of Arts,” said CFCF co-founder Carlos Fuente, Jr. “This beautiful, state-of-the-art facility will give new opportunities to children in the Dominican Republic to pursue their passion and talent in the arts.”
The grand opening celebration was attended by 100 people, including the Fuente and Newman families, executives from Hublot, local dignitaries, and Grammy Award-winning Artist Arturo Sandoval, who inaugurated the new amphitheater with a performance. The Music School at this new academy will be named in honor of this legendary musician. Arturo Sandoval is a multi-award-winning jazz trumpeter, pianist, and composer. He has received the Latin Grammys Lifetime Achievement Award, multiple Grammys, the Presidential Medal of Freedom and is a Kennedy Center Honors recipient. Arturo has been a passionate supporter of CFCF, and he will be an inspiring mentor and guiding light for the music students at the new Cigar Family Charitable Foundation Academy of Arts.
“I want to thank all of the cigar enthusiasts around the world who support CFCF and the children and families it serves through their generous donations or by purchasing a Toast Across America pack,” said CFCF co-founder Eric M. Newman. “Because the Fuente and Newman families underwrite all of CFCF’s operating costs, every dollar raised goes directly to help children in need.”
This year, 440 students are attending CFCF’s primary school, high school, technical school, and arts academy. Since 2004, CFCF has invested more than $20 million to support these programs. The Cigar Family project has received numerous accolades from the government of the Dominican Republic, the United Nations, and others. It has been showcased as an example for how businesses and consumers can come together to provide transformational opportunities to improve the lives of low-income children and their families.
“Today was a very special day, a day that should make all of us proud,” said CFCF CEO Scott Lewis. “Words and pictures cannot convey how wonderful this project has turned out. The Cigar Family Academy of Arts will give our students the opportunity to express their creativity in so many ways while they learn and challenge themselves in each of these disciplines.”