The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

This holiday season, think of gifts that have meaning

- Nicholas D. Kristof He writes for the New York Times.

Sure, you can buy your uncle a necktie that he won’t wear, or your niece an Amazon gift card that she’ll forget to use. Or you can help remove shrapnel from an injured child in Syria, or assist students at risk of genocide in South Sudan.

The major aid organizati­ons have special catalogs this time of year: You can buy an alpaca for a family for $150 at Heifer Internatio­nal, help educate a girl for $75 at Save the Children or help extend a much-admired microsavin­gs program for $25 at Care. But this year my annual holiday gift list is special. I’ve tied some items to the election of Donald Trump, and I’ve looked for organizati­ons that you may not have heard of:

One battle over the coming four years will involve family planning, because of Republican efforts to defund Title X family planning programs and repeal Obamacare, which provides free birth control. So consider a donation to one of the most effective counter-forces: the National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy, thenationa­lcampaign.org.

As Syria and Russia commit war crimes in Aleppo, heroic physicians from America and other countries are traveling secretly to rebel-held areas of Syria to treat the wounded in undergroun­d hospitals and call attention to the carnage. They work through the Syrian American Medical Society, SAMS, sams-usa.net, which supports more than 100 medical facilities in Syria.

Human rights and press freedoms seem likely to get much less attention from the next administra­tion, which makes this a good time to support the Committee to Protect Journalist­s, cpj.org. The CPJ speaks up for imprisoned journalist­s worldwide and tries to end impunity for those who murder journalist­s (at least 40 journalist­s have been killed worldwide so far in 2016 for their work). In the same vein, consider buying a gift subscripti­on to a reliable news organizati­on for yourself or a friend — as an investment in a robust civil society.

The recent hurricane in Haiti was devastatin­g, and one of the most effective aid organizati­ons in Haiti is Fonkoze, fonkoze. org, which has adopted a “graduation model” that has been particular­ly successful at combating global poverty. Founded by a local Catholic priest, Fonkoze works with the most impoverish­ed women in Haiti over 18 months to get them earning regular incomes through raising livestock or selling merchandis­e. It’s about teaching people how to fish, not handing out fish.

Congo is home to probably the most lethal conflict since World War II, and it is sometimes called the rape capital of the world. One of the heroes there is Dr. Denis Mukwege, who founded the Panzi hospital to treat injured women and risks his life to stand up to warlords. You can support his hospital at panzifound­ation.org.

I’ve reported on crimes against humanity unfolding in South Sudan, one of the world’s poorest countries, and now the United Nations is warning of the risk of full-blown genocide. In this impossible situation, a South Sudan-born American named Valentino Deng is running a high school, one of few still functionin­g. It needs support so students can get an education and build their country (vadfoundat­ion.org). You may remember Valentino: He’s the “lost boy” at the center of Dave Eggers’ best-selling book “What Is the What.” What he has done since, in founding this school, is even more impressive.

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