James Haven is a proud (and protecting) uncle to sister Angelina Jolie’s children.
“I think it’s herbal and that’s where [my bond] all began, it began with the security of her and the direct her children — my nieces and nephews [all over] those massively formative years,” Haven, 52, mentioned all over a New Year’s Eve appearance on the “90who10” podcast. “They’re becoming younger adults [of their] early 20s. But, I simply want to be there there [for them], very like my mother.”
He added: “Anytime I’m blessed to be of their presence, I wish to be in their presence.”
Jolie, 48, and ex-husband Brad Pitt share six children: Maddox, 22, Pax, 20, Zahara, 18, Shiloh, 17, and twins Vivienne and Knox, 15. Jolie and Pitt, 60, break up in 2016, subsequently scuffling with for custody in their minor youngsters.
Regardless of the courtroom drama, Haven makes sure to make stronger his nieces and nephews then again and each time he can.
“I set my existence up so I will be provide with regardless of the situation [is],” Haven, who is the son of Jon Voight and ex-wife Marcheline Bertrand, added. “As I said, [they're of their] formative years and [are] younger adults. I want to be there for them, or for her, whatever she’s going via.”

Haven, who also works as an actor, gushed that he and Jolie have “very mutual interests” on the subject of her youngsters’s well-being “especially if it specializes in tips on how to help the kids.”

“She’ll say something [and] I’ll herald, I’ll say, ‘Well, then the most productive thing we may do is this or that’d be good after which we will do this,’” he added. “I do know there’s going to be many things in the future that we’ll most likely be operating on which we’ve never completed publicly.”
Haven cites an interest in giving back and philanthropy that bonded him and Jolie.
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“I don’t need to give all of the credit to my mother, but there was once any such center that she had that then I think it used to be an automatic that we had a center for,” he stated. “I will’t discuss for my sister I will only speak for myself, [but] when you have certain upbringings, especially if you happen to don’t like what you’re feeling [or] should you’re going thru positive issues [like] divorce, circle of relatives [or] your personal trauma, you need to raised the future so others don’t have to move thru that.”
Voight, 85, and Bertrand, who died in 2007, had divorced in 1980.
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