Ana Robic - $3,000

$1,800 to Shikshit Bharat School in INdia. It is in a village near Gorakhpur, in the state of Uttar Pradesh. The majority of students are Dalits (untouchables). The school needs money for food and warm clothing for the 150 students, plus classroom construction repair, plus teacher salaries. (director is not paid, teachers are paid $45 month)

Below are photos of students with THANK YOU HGC signs plus a photo of the Director, who is also the Science teacher, plus a group photo of 15-20 students assembled (The last photo has “THANK YOU ANA ROBIC” Signs displayed).

Funds will also allow the school to keep teaching children whose parents cannot afford the $12/month tuition.

Rukina Bano

Sakshi Kumari

Sunita Nishad

Alka Kumari

Vishal Gond

Rashida Bano

Rohit Kumar

Nisha Kumari

Rameshar Kumar

Akansha Pandey (director, science teacher)

$900 provided blankets, mosquito nets, food, and Vaseline (for chapped skin in the dry windy winter) to orphans and abandoned children in Maiduguri, Nigeria. photos are a sampling of the 30 children HGC Cares for, plus one photo of the Humanist Global Charity director in Nigeria (Sadiq Modu Kura) and a Final Group photo.

$150 for medicine to Refugee Camp in Myanmar (in the jungle hiding from the military) The refugees are mainly Karen and Karenni ethnic peoples.

$150 to Dora Nalwonga, in Uganda. She is at the ShelterMi SafeHouse in the town of Mpigi. Her husband shoved her face in a pan of boiling oil and she needs surgery for her eye (it is dripping pus), Her nose, and her lip.

Matching Funds Provided by Ana’s Workplace - $3,000

$151 to Mama Rihanna Womens Cooperative in Kasese, Uganda - for sewing project - they will sew school uniforms for local Humanist School

$103 to Antonio de Jesus Flores Carranza in Baja California Sur, Mexico, for a bicycle that he can ride to work.

$245 to three members of HAPI (HUmanists & Atheists of the Philippines International) to help start-up their video production business. The funds will buy equipment, and Pay them to make a 2.5 minute video promoting Humanist Global Charity. The three film producers are Sherwin Dane Zauro Haro, Kelly Kim Sepida & Kryshia Gayle Solon

$95 to Rita Estrada Martinez, in Mexico, to buy fabric and sewing materials for boys and girls clothing

$101 - Grain Store for Ntoroko Humanists, Uganda (maize, wheat, cassava)

$111 to Wooden Humanist Nursery School in Uganda. It is in a small village next to Rwenzori National Park, it has 150 children, many are orphans or half-orphans because their parents died of HIV/AIDS, or they were killed for poaching, or they were massacred or imprisoned by the Ugandan Military for their involvement in the Bakonzo civil war, protecting their king. Funds will be spent on food and school supplies like books, pencils, and notebooks.

$95 to Dora Alicia Villalobos Rodriguez in Mexico to buy fabric, thread, buttons for her clothing business

$204 to Pearl Mukasa Memorial High School (humanist school in Mukasa) to pay salaries to three science teachers: Mr. Kiggundu Simon (Mathematics, Physics), Nampenja Lilian (Chemistry, Biology) and Namuli Jane (Agriculture, Computer Science )at Pearl Mukasa Memorial High School.

$100 went to The Philippines to buy books for their Humanist LIbrary. The books purchased were: You Are Enough (A Book of Inclusion) by Margaret O'Hair; Atheism for Kids by Jessica Thorpe; Curious Questions and Answers About the Solar System by Ian Graham; The World Made of Rainbow by Michelle Robinson; Humanism, What's That? A Book for Curious Kids by Hellen Bennett; Hello World! Solar System by Jill McDonald; Be Kind by Pat Zietlow Miller; and Elle the Humanist by Elle Harris

$100 to Rinki Yadav in Uttar Pradesh, India. She was beaten by her husband many times, so she left - with her children. funds will pay for her children’s school education, plus food for the family and other personal needs. Sh’is in the center of this photo with her children - the tall girls on the side are HGC Humanist Youth Advisors

$152 for a Corn, Yam, and Peanut Garden in Benue State that will give 70% of its produce to Benue State refugees, who live in a nearby IDP camp

$79 to Sikhum Kandangwa is in grade 10 at Janta School in Khudunabari village in southeastern Nepal. She wants to be an agriculturalist, but her rickshaw driver and his income is not enough to raise 4 children, or to keep them in school. If Sikhum gets help for her education she will happily continue it.

$101 to Yangnu Kandangwa - an extraordinary hardworking student in Class 10 at Janta School in Khudunabari village in southeastern Nepal. She loves public speaking, debate competitions, and quiz competitions. She wants to be a teacher or a psychologist for children, but her father is a manual worker and does not earn enough to support her further education.

$64 to Jyoti Panchkoti an orphan (her parents are unknown) who attends Janta School in Khudunabari village in eastern Nepal. Her guardians are an impoverished Dalit (untouchable) family. Jyoti is a studious, determined student in Class 3. She wants to be a teacher. She loves to sing, dance and is very good at sports. She is a multitalented child who needs help to continue her education.

$453 in oil, flour, soap, and other necessities delivered to landless peasant women in a village called Navek-Shotak, in Sikkim, north-east India. They are impoverished because they earn only a small living by working in farms that belong to other people. Items were delivered by HGC representative Dilkshek. Top photo is wHere this community lives

$101 to Bappi Roy (age 13) an orphan in Bangladesh at Dhaka Orphanage Society, to pay for school supplies and tuition. His father left his mother. After that, his Mom became a Muslim and didn’t want to raise Bappi (who was Hindu) so she left him in a Hindu orphanage when he was six years old.

$86 to Srijoni Tripura, an orphan in Bangladesh at Dhaka Orphanage Society, to pay for School Tuition and supplies. She is a tribal person. Her dad left for work one day and did not return. No one knows if he is alive or dead. Her mother remarried and left her in the orphanage.