2008/2009
Charities
 
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2008/2009 Charities
  1. Abby Kelley Foster House, Inc.
  2. Acme Theater Productions, Inc.
  3. Actors' Shakespeare Project
  4. Affordable Housing and Services Collaborative, Inc.
  5. A Baby Center
  6. Barnstable Land Trust, Inc.
  7. Beacon Academy
  8. Bird Street Community Center
  9. Boston Musica Viva
  10. The Bostonian Society d/b/a Boston Historical Society
  11. Boys & Girls Club of Lawrence
  12. Cape Cod Children's Museum
  13. Chameleon Arts Ensemble of Boston
  14. Chernobyl Children Project USA, Inc.
  15. Citizens for Juvenile Justice
  16. Community Boating Center, Inc.
  17. Community Outreach Group, Inc.
  18. The Community Software Lab, Inc
  19. Crispus Attucks Children's Center
  20. Diabetes Association Inc.
  21. Employment Options, Inc.
  22. Fair Housing Center of Greater Boston
  23. Forward in Health
  24. Framingham History Center
  25. Generation Rwanda, Inc. (Formerly Orphans of Rwanda, Inc.)
  26. Gloucester Stage Company
  27. Greater Lawrence Community Boating Program, Inc.
  28. Ibis Reproductive Health
  29. Jones Library ESL Center
  30. Little Brothers-Friends of the Elderly
  31. Martha’s Vineyard Donors Collaborative
  32. Mass Humanities
  33. Massachusetts Clubhouse Coalition, Inc.
  34. Massachusetts Coalition for the Prevention of Medical Errors
  35. Massachusetts State Science & Engineering Fair, Inc. (MSSEF)
  36. MissionSAFE: A New Beginning, Inc.
  37. MMAS, Inc.
  38. New England Forestry Foundation, Inc.
  39. People Making a Difference through Community Service, Inc.
  40. Photographic Resource Center at Boston University
  41. Pro-Choice Massachusetts Foundation
  42. The Progeria Research Foundation, Inc.
  43. Safe Havens Interfaith Partnership Against Domestic Violence/Third Sector New England
  44. South Coast Chamber Music Society
  45. Southeastern Massachusetts Agricultural Partnership, Inc.
  46. Springfield Symphony Orchestra
  47. Strategies for Children, Inc.
  48. SuAsCo Watershed Community Council
  49. The Theater Offensive
  50. Theatre Espresso
  51. Urban Edge Housing Corporation
  52. World Connect (formerly Infante Sano)

All Charities
 

Boston.com / News / Boston Globe / Editorial / Opinion / Op-ed / Generous helping
THIS STORY HAS BEEN FORMATTED FOR EASY PRINTING
GLOBE EDITORIAL

Generous helping

FRIDAY IS the unofficial holiday for seasonal shopping. Cash registers and credit cards will be hot with use. Fat shopping bags of great buys will be crammed into car trunks.

Consumers who are spending all this money anyway should stop and see if they've got a few bucks left over for a philanthropic cause. That's because Friday is also Giving Massachusetts Day.

Put away any sense of guilt or obligation. Don't bother feeling sad about tough social problems. Instead, think like a captain of generosity and figure out where it would be fun to invest your money.

Good advice on where to give can be found on the Catalogue for Philanthropy's website, www.catalogueforphilanthropy.org. This site focuses on organizations in Massachusetts with budgets of less than $2 million.

There are suggestions to please many personalities. One can give to Aid to Incarcerated Mothers, a Boston program that supports the families of women in jail, or to Jeannie Lindheim's Hospital Clown Troupe, founded in 1997 and based in Brookline.

The catalog also invites people to become venture philanthropists, donating major funds, time, and expertise to help organizations solve problems. Consider Snappy Dance Theater in Cambridge, which is trying to free its dancers from the burden of working day jobs while being paid little for dance performances and nothing for rehearsals. One emerging solution for a creative venture philanthropist is to send the dancers on tour to develop a national audience and generate enough revenue to pay them fairly for their work.

As the world becomes a poignantly -- and sometimes painfully -- smaller place, it's important to cross national boundaries when making donations. According to the catalog, international philanthropy makes up only 2 percent of total personal giving and is growing slowly. Great care must be taken. But the catalog offers several vetted suggestions, including Romanian Children's Relief, an organization in Southborough that helps children with AIDS who have been orphaned or abandoned by their parents.

Rugged individualists may well spot their own philanthropic causes. Maybe it's those annoying blemishes on the ceilings of a favorite church, synagogue, or mosque. Maybe a well-programmed but dreary looking after-school center could use an architect's dramatic makeover. The result could be first-class space as well as the chance to educate students about the power and elegance of design.

Because the economy is dragging and so are philanthropic gifts, now is an ideal time to give. Hard economic times crave the lively tonic of optimistic generosity. Because the economy is dragging and so are philanthropic gifts, now is an ideal time to give. Hard economic times crave the lively tonic of optimistic generosity.

© Copyright 2003 The New York Times Company

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