"No force changes the world more than a girl with a book.” - Nicholas Kristof
When she thrives, we all thrive
Together this giving season, we can make a difference that ripples outward to benefit everyone.
"No force changes the world more than a girl with a book.” - Nicholas Kristof
Since 2009, New York Times columnist and two-time Pulitzer Prize winner Nicholas Kristof has written an annual “holiday gift guide” column to bridge a philanthropic gap: readers who wanted to help but didn’t know how, and heroic individuals and organizations who desperately needed resources but were off donors’ radar.
Kristof’s 2020 column selected CAMFED as the Grand Prize Winner, and CAMFED has received donor funding to match dollar for dollar the first $500k raised through this campaign.
Girls’ education is key to tackling the world’s greatest challenges. Yet, even before COVID-19, 52.2 million girls in sub-Saharan Africa were out of school, and millions more are now at risk. In response, CAMFED’s pan-African movement is educating girls through a model that radically improves their prospects of becoming independent, influential women.
Graduates in turn join forces with CAMFED and their communities to keep even more girls in school and accelerate their path to livelihoods and leadership – sustaining and multiplying the impact of your donation far into the future.
Nick Kristof surprised Angie Murimirwa, CAMFED’s Executive Director – Africa, when he announced CAMFED as the Grand Prize winner of the 2020 Kristof Holiday Impact Prize during their conversation online. In this clip, they introduce CAMFED, and Nick explains why he’s asking his readers to support our movement. You can also: Watch a series of short clips from their conversation or watch the full conversation (17 mins).
The Holiday Impact Prize will support CAMFED’s work to educate 5 million girls by 2025, providing a crucial combination of financial, social and peer support for them to attend school and thrive – all led by young women who have lived and overcome poverty and exclusion themselves.
$150 can support a girl in high school for a year, including dedicated mentorship from a young woman trained to help improve her confidence, life skills and learning.
In her conversation with Nick Kristof, Angeline emphasizes that no donation is too small. The lack of something as small as a pen or a notebook can keep a girl out of school. Educating girls is a collective effort, multiplied by CAMFED’s young women leaders.
Girls’ education has the power to tackle the world’s most pressing challenges – from poverty and gender inequity to global instability and climate change – and CAMFED is a pan-African movement with a revolutionary model for delivering on this promise. Every graduate, on average, supports at least another three more girls in turn. This is what we call the Multiplier Effect – the impact a girl’s education has on others’ lives, and on the health, wealth and equality of our world.
Anthony Cole $10.9
Heather Sheeran £57.4
Margaret Cupp $2102
Crystal Martin $47.6
Crystal Martin $117
Derwood Mamouzelos $10.9
Olivia Buell $10
Sherry Thompsen $50
Joan and Scott Barker $526
dilhara anbil $7000
Kristin Nylen $158
Michael Glanz $150
Joyce Feeney $150
Vanessa Dauterive $26.6
Aran MacKinnon $106