WASHINGTON — The goal of Giving Tuesday is to inspire generosity.
Held on the Tuesday after Thanksgiving, it’s a global movement that’s taken off in the sixth years since its inception at the 92nd Street Y in New York.
“As a sort of antidote to the more commercially focused Black Friday and Cyber Monday, they came up with Giving Tuesday,” said Cari Rudd, with The Catalogue for Philanthropy Greater Washington. “It gives people a way to kick off the giving season.”
Whether you’re interested in volunteering time, sharing talents or donating money, there are so many worthy causes to consider that Rudd’s group has created a nine-question online quiz to help narrow down your interests.
“It takes you through several quick questions about where you live, what you like to do on a Saturday, where we would find you on a rainy day — and matches you to what we would like to think of as your charity soul mate,” Rudd said.
Rudd emphasized that organizations featured by her group are small, local and focused.
“They’re not the Red Cross; they’re not the Nature Conservancy — some of these huge, enormous ‘United Way’ organizations,” Rudd said. “They really are in our communities, in our neighborhoods, working day to day making sure kids have food to eat, places to go and safe places to be.”
On the group’s website, you can search charities filtered by interests such as education, culture, nature, ethnic groups, ages and populations served.