“Only great souls know the grandeur there is in charity.” – Jacques BeNigne Bossuet
This holiday season, Americans will spend nearly $500 billion dollars on holiday gifts. This past weekend alone, Americans spent $52.4 billion dollars on holiday shopping.
The money will be spent on electronics, clothes, books, toys, vacations, jewelry, gift cards, video games, DVD’s, CD’s, and cookware. Some gifts will meet legitimate needs (for example, my son will open some new clothes this holiday season). But let’s face it, most gifts will try to satisfy wants: a new Barbie for your daughter, the newest video game for your son, or a K-cup coffee maker for your mother-in-law. Worse yet, many holiday shoppers will spend hours trying to find just the right gift for the “guy who already has everything.”
Meanwhile, there are countless charitable organizations all over this country meeting very real needs of people that will go without holiday gifts. These charitable organizations are providing food and shelter to those without any. They are protecting battered women. They are offering educational assistance to those who most need it. They are offering new opportunities at life for those who have had it taken it from them. And they are counting on year-end giving to keep their doors open for another year.
In short, they are not providing wants. They are meeting needs.
I’m not against giving gifts. In fact, I think that a well-thought-out, timely gift can communicate love and appreciation to a loved one. But I am against foolishly spending all of my holiday spending on those who already have much… when there are so many in desperate need.
Consider just a sampling of some local charitable organizations and the work they are doing to meet the needs of very real people…
- Bicycles for Humanity – Bicycles for Humanity enables people to raise funds and collect unwanted bicycles to send to reliable partners in developing countries.
- Blind Babies Foundation – When an infant or preschooler is identified as blind or visually impaired, Blind Babies Foundation provides family-centered services to support the child’s optimal development and access to the world.
- Brain Injury Adventure Camp – The Brain Injury Adventure Camp, Inc. (BIAC) is an organization that provides activities and education to persons suffering from a traumatic brain injury.
- City Harvest – City Harvest collects excess food from all segments of the food industry, including restaurants, grocers, corporate cafeterias, manufacturers, and farms. This food is then delivered free of charge to community food programs throughout New York City using a fleet of trucks and bikes as well as volunteers on foot.
- Comfort Cafe– The Comfort Cafe is a not-for-profit gourmet restaurant that offers gluten free, vegan, and other dishes, using local, fresh, organic ingredients – on a pay-as-you-can basis – allowing people of all social classes to enjoy food, community, and comfort.
- The Connection – The Connection Youth Services provides help to teens and families in crisis in Howell, MI.
- Dare to Dream Children’s Foundation – Dare to Dream recruits and trains volunteers to educate, inspire, and mentor wounded youth in group homes, shelters, orphanages, and detention centers in Dallas, TX.
- Days For Girls – Days for Girls International works to get washable feminine hygiene kits into the hands of those that would otherwise go without allowing them to attend school, work, etc.
- Eat Art – Eat Art is an eclectic collection of photographers, painters & designers committed to artfully ending hunger. When you purchase any art or apparel, meals are sent to hungry children around the world. You get the art. The kids get to eat.
- Essex CHIPS – At Essex CHIPS, youth work in collaboration with adults to deliver youth programming, parent education, substance abuse prevention campaigns and direct local healthy living initiatives for local teens in their community.
- Feed the Need – Feed the Need is a volunteer organization dedicated to promoting education and awareness of local hunger issues by sponsoring physical activities and events.
- Girls Think Tank – Girls Think Tank inspires, empowers and organizes its community in San Diego to advance basic human dignity through activism and advocacy.
- Growing Home – Growing Home’s mission is to operate, promote, and demonstrate the use of organic agriculture as a vehicle for job training, employment, and community development.
- Hoops for Hope – Started by middle-school student, Austin Gutwein, Hoops of Hope is the world’s largest free-throw marathon. Similar to a walk-a-thon, participants raise awareness and funds for children who have been orphaned by HIV/AIDS by shooting free throws.
- The Hunger Task Force – Hunger Task Force in Milwaukee, WI believes that every person has a right to adequate food obtained with dignity. Hunger Task Force works to prevent hunger and malnutrition by providing food to people in need today and by promoting social policies to achieve a hunger free community tomorrow.
- Living Yoga – Living Yoga is an outreach program teaching yoga as a tool for personal change to disadvantaged individuals in prisons, drug and alcohol rehabilitation centers, and transitional facilities in Portland, OR.
- Maggie’s Place – Maggie’s Place is a community that provides houses of hospitality for expectant women in Phoenix, AZ who wish to achieve their goals in a dignified atmosphere.
- Mary House – Mary House is a community based organization that provides transitional housing services, shelter and support programs to homeless and struggling families, while providing a safe haven that allows families to reclaim their dignity.
- Nebraska Children’s Home Society – Nebraska Children’s Home Society provides safe and loving care to children of all ages throughout the state of Nebraska.
- New Beginning Center – The mission of New Beginning Center is to foster an environment of safety, support and respect for families affected by domestic violence.
- Open Door Mission – Open Door Mission provides men, women and children in Omaha living in poverty with safe shelter beds, nutritious meals daily, and preventive measures.
- Pencils of Promise – Pencils of Promise builds schools in the developing world and trains socially conscious young leaders to take action at home and abroad.
- Plant with Purpose – Plant With Purpose reverses deforestation and poverty around the world by transforming the lives of the rural poor.
- Rocky Mt Children’s Law Center – The mission of the Rocky Mountain Children’s Law Center is to protect and save the lives of abused and neglected children through zealous legal advocacy, innovative programs and public policy reform.
- Sarah’s Circle – Sarah’s Circle’s serves the women in Chicago Uptown’s community who are homeless or in need of a safe space by offering comprehensive physical services, permanent supportive housing, clinical services, a network of resources, and community.
- Second Harvest Food Bank – Second Harvest Food Bank of Santa Clara serves an area stretching from South San Francisco to Gilroy and from the ocean to the bay helping ensure that those who need food have access to it.
- Slam Diabetes – Slam Diabetes’ mission is to help kids with type 1 diabetes and their families deal with this unrelenting disease through empowered living: better glucose management, exercise, diet and education and by raising funds for scholarships, grants and sponsorships for kids and their family members to attend camps and conferences created to help them develop skills and practices.
- Spectrum Youth and Family Services – Spectrum empowers teenagers, young adults, people with a history of violence, and their families in Burlington and throughout Vermont to make and sustain positive changes through prevention, intervention, and life skills services.
- Sunny Hills Services – The mission of Sunny Hills Services is to engage vulnerable children and youth, enrich their connection with family and community and empower them to lead healthy, rewarding lives.
- Warren Village – Warren Village is a unique family community helping motivated low-income, previously homeless single-parent families move from public assistance to personal and economic self-sufficiency through subsidized housing, on-site nationally accredited child care, advocacy/case management, educational guidance and career development.
- Women’s Bean Project – The Women’s Bean Project transforms the lives of women by teaching job readiness and life skills for entry-level jobs through employment in our gourmet food production and handmade jewelry manufacturing businesses.
- Your Local Charity. – Dedicated to meeting the needs of real people in your local community.
Robert Wall says
I’d just like to toss in that even if somebody doesn’t have money to make a donation, fifteen minutes of calling local churches will usually yield contacts for a number of charities that need people to hand out food, ring bells, make deliveries, put up posters, and a dozen other misc. little things that make their charity work.
This isn’t just during the holiday season – people are needed all year!
365declutterchallenge says
Great list! This idea works great for other events, like weddings and births. Just have a ‘charity registry’ instead of a regular registry. You can even make an amazon registry and only add charities — just use the universal registry button.
Andrew Markelz says
I was so excited when I read this article. This is exactly what my wife and I have been working on and the reason behind CharityGiftMarket.com. There are so many great organizations that are supporting and making a difference in real people’s lives. Last Christmas we were wanting our shopping to make a difference and support charity. We found so many great organizations selling products to support their causes, however, the ease in shopping for these products was not there. We realized that there needed to be a marketplace for charities to post their products and for shoppers to access these unique gifts. That’s exactly what we have been building ever since.
Pat says
good ideas. Only people that are going to get money for gifts are my college age daughter and son. We’ve spent so much money supporting her at college, I can’t stand the thought of giving her anymore for Christmas. Also gave my son’s baby-mama and thier baby a ticket to visit him/us during the holidays. Plus neither one of my kids really appreciate anything we give them. It takes away from the joy of giving when people don’t really care, or expect it. So yes, giving to something else (i love giving to Toys for Tots) would be an cool option. Just don’t know what the hubby would think.
Meg says
I love this. I hate all the consumerism around the holidays. I still boycott shopping anywhere near “black” Friday. This year I have decided to hand make all my gifts and I may have to give some of these organizations a call. Thanks for doing the leg work for me! :)
Andrew Markelz says
Be sure to check out http://www.charitygiftmarket.com :)
Naveen Kulkarni says
Wow,
Such a comprehensive list.
Thanks for sharing.
Miranda says
Love the list, thanks for sharing. We’ve pretty much gone “no gifts” for Christmas, but there are some close friends and a few family members that I’d like to give something. I love the eat art page, I’ll be buying several photos!
Rebekah Burcham says
Thank you so much for your wonderful list!
I hunger to find a way to celebrate a minimalist Christmas while still creating a lush celebration and honoring each of my friends and family members. It’s hard to break away from tradition. Maybe shifting my focus from feeding wants to feeding needs is a first step toward reforging Christmas.
Katy says
Love this post. We have a two year old and finding ways to celebrate and give…and conveying to generous friends and relatives that they need not spoil our child, without sounding like we want to “cancel Christmas” has been tricky. Your post does a good job of summing up what I’ve been feeling, without coming off sounding too grumpy or judgmental.
Tali says
Wow. Thank you for this informative and extensive list of options for this holiday season. Really touches me that So many amazing people are out there trying to help people and our planet. Your word are very encouraging as well. Will be passing your post along to as many people as i can reach! Great post and thanks so much.
Tali