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HIGH FLYING: Grupo TACA executive
Bloch accompanied Pope John Paul II during part
of his Latin American travels in 1996.
Courtesy Jackie Bloch |
Federico "Fritz" Bloch
was “a man who dreamed big things and always built
them,” classmate Harry Chandler told those attending
a service in June at Memorial Church. Foremost among
Bloch’s visions was Grupo TACA, a consortium of
Latin American airlines. During a period of 25 years,
12 of which overlapped with his country’s civil
war, Bloch transformed a Salvadoran airline of three
planes into a $600-million-a-year regional operation
combining five carriers and more than 5,000 employees.
In 1999, he won the Tony Jannus Prize for contributions
to civil aviation.
Bloch, summoned by a cell phone call into the night,
was waylaid and murdered April 26 in El Salvador. He
had been shot in the head and chest, and was found in
his SUV on a highway south of San Salvador. Six young
men have been arrested in the murder investigation.
El Salvador posthumously awarded Bloch, active in educational
and charitable causes, its highest civilian honor. He
was 50.
Bloch earned bachelor’s and master’s degrees
in industrial engineering at Stanford and an MBA at
Harvard University. In his late 20s, he acquired an
interest in TACA International Airlines, which was largely
owned by the family of his boyhood friend and Harvard
classmate Roberto Kriete. Bloch quickly became a prominent
advocate of Latin American airlines and efforts to negotiate
open-skies agreements. By encouraging airline owners
in several countries to buy minority positions in each
other’s companies, he and TACA chairman Kriete
brought the flag-carriers of Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua
and Costa Rica into the TACA group. In 1994, as CEO
of TACA, Bloch started the Latin Pass frequent flyer
program, which involved 14 airlines. He served as executive
director of the Asociacíon Internacíonal
de Transporte Aéreo Latinamericano and was active
in the Young Presidents Organization, a group for international
executives.
Bloch, the second of five children and the only son,
was born in El Salvador to a physician father and a
mother active in community service. His sister Rebecca
Bloch-Lopez, ’78, MS ’79, says her brother’s
“intensity for life did not allow him to do anything
as a novice.” At the Stanford memorial service,
she recalled the neck brace he earned water-skiing on
the day of her wedding. He flew his own helicopter and
small plane and took up scuba and sky diving.
Chandler, in an e-mail circulated among friends after
Bloch’s death, wrote that “his smile was
contagious, he exuded charm, he always looked out after
everyone else’s well-being, he made your friendship
always feel fresh and important.” While Stanford
seniors, Bloch and five friends rented a house in Woodside,
complete with apple trees, swimming pool and hillside
views. The group became known as the Orchard Hill Gang,
and Chandler wrote of their “demi-frat”
spirit: the house was “legendary for our parties,
Latino spirit and joie de vivre! Who could
forget the birthday piñata that spewed forth
with glitter and 1,000 joints!”
In the decades since graduation, the Gang and their
families have gathered at far-flung locales, often celebrating
their friendship at extravaganzas Bloch planned. For
his wedding in 1980 to Jacqueline Laffite, a journalist
from Honduras, Bloch wrangled permission to illuminate
a church ruin in Guatamala. The ceremony took place
on newly laid pine needles amid musicians, doves and
fireworks.
With a passion for architecture, Bloch designed homes
and improvements at properties he owned, including a
house at the crater lake Coatepeque, a coffee farm north
of San Salvador, a Costa Azul beach house, and a small
Honduran island. He supported two projects Jackie Bloch
founded: a medical and dental clinic serving 20,000
people on the Honduran island of Roatan, and a children’s
museum in San Salvador, where the front half of a TACA
airplane is a popular exhibit.
The Blochs’ two sons, David and Eric, are Stanford
seniors. Ten days before his death, Federico Bloch had
retired as CEO of TACA to spend more time with his family,
especially David, who has been undergoing treatment
for bone cancer. The family loved global travel. Jackie
Bloch found among his papers a memo from his secretary
that researched the dates for possible Easter vacations
for the next 47 years. “When you traveled with
him, you had to be ready to be sleep-deprived, pushed
to the limit, but it would be extraordinary fun.”
Other survivors include his mother, Carmen Bloch Macias,
and his sisters Carmen Colburn, Evelyn Bloch and Lissette
Bloch-Quiros, ’88. A Federico Bloch Memorial Scholarship
to benefit undergraduate students from Latin America
has been established.
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