The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Lemonade stand raises $13K for migrants
Woman’s 6-year-old son wanted to help separated families.
When an Atlanta mother told her two young children about families being separated at the U.S.-Mexico border, her 6-year-old son suggested starting a lemonade stand to help.
Shannon Cofrin Gaggero set a goal of $1,000, an amount she considered ambitious. A week later, the online and in-person campaign has raised nearly 13 times that amount.
The family and other volunteers hosted the lemonade stand and bake sale in Virginia-Highland on Sunday. While that event netted $1,100, the majority of donations — more than 200 of them — have come from the paired virtual Facebook event.
The local fundraiser follows the trend of hundreds of thousands of people worldwide donating to nonprofit organizations, prompted by images and audio of children crying for their parents. A Silicon Valley couple, David Children hold signs Sunday in Virginia-Highland for a lemonade stand and bake sale raising money for separated immigrant families.
and Charlotte Willner, have raised more than $20 million.
Like the Willner’s fundraiser, the Gaggero’s proceeds will go to the Refugee and Immigrant Center for Education and Legal Service, or RAICES, a Texas nonprofit
that offers free and low-cost legal services to immigrants.
Gaggero, author of the blog “A Striving Parent,” is not new to organizing these types of events. She previously helped start a parent- ing group to discuss issues of
race and privilege at Charis Books and More.
The Gaggero fundraiser, which Shannon Cofrin Gag- gero said prompted a few satellite lemonade stands across the country, is scheduled to end at midnight.