June 15. There is no red date in the calendar, but for millions of people around the world, this is the day when they share a part of their income, time, or things with those in need. The Worldwide Day of Giving (Worldwide Day Giving) is an unofficial holiday celebrated by volunteers, philanthropists, and simply caring people. It aims to remind us that giving is not just about money, but also about kindness, participation, and care. In an era when the world is divided, donations become a bridge. Let's understand what philanthropy is today, how it works, and why everyone can become a part of it.
The tradition of giving roots back to ancient times. In religions of all peoples, there is the concept of "almsgiving" (zakat in Islam, tithe in Christianity, dan in Hinduism). The first secular charitable organizations appeared in the 19th century (Red Cross, Salvation Army). In the 20th century, funds were established to raise money for science, medicine, and education. In 2012, "Giving Tuesday" started in the United States — the Tuesday after Thanksgiving, becoming a global day of philanthropy. The Worldwide Day of Giving is not associated with a single founder, but many countries mark it on June 15 to draw attention to the problem of inequality. In 2026, the holiday falls on a Monday.
Cash is the most obvious, but not the only way to help. You can donate: things (clothing, books, toys, furniture), non-perishable food to food banks, blood (donation), time (volunteering), services (tutoring, legal assistance, repair), intellectual property (patents, copyrights), your profession (doctors, builders, rescuers work for free in disaster areas), organs after death (organ donation). Donations can be anonymous or open, one-time or regular, targeted or general.
The motives are diverse. Altruism — a sincere desire to help without any benefit. Empathy — sharing someone else's pain. Social pressure — if everyone in the company donates, it's uncomfortable to refuse. Religious beliefs — a commandment. Tax deductions — a deduction from the taxable base. The desire to improve self-esteem ("I am a good person"). Image — public donations improve reputation. Studies show that people donate more when they see a specific story (one child, not abstract statistics). Also, the "signature" effect works: if you give a person a "I help" badge, they will donate more often.
In many countries, donations to charitable organizations reduce the taxable base. In Russia, the NDFL deduction is up to 25% of income. You need to: donate money to an official NGO (not a commercial organization); keep payment documents; file a 3-NDFL declaration; attach a donation agreement. The maximum amount for which a deduction can be received is 120,000 rubles per year (for all social deductions together). For large donations (for science, culture, sports), the limit is higher. In the United States, deductions are more generous — up to 60% of income. In Europe, it is similar. Learn the laws of your country.
Unfortunately, there are scammers who collect money under the guise of assistance. To avoid mistakes, check: the foundation is registered in the Ministry of Justice (in Russia), has open reporting, publishes reports on the expenditure of funds, has positive reviews (but not only in social networks), participates in ratings (for example, "Everything Transparent" in Russia). Do not transfer money to a personal account (only a legal entity). Avoid foundations with aggressive advertising and pressure. Trusted Russian funds: "Podari Zhizn", "Deti Drevnogo SOS", "Nochlezhka", "Russfond", "Vera". International: "Doctors Without Borders", "Red Cross", "OXFAM", "WWF".
If you don't have money, you can help with actions. Volunteers are needed in hospitals (nurses, animators), animal shelters, children's homes, homes for the elderly, at environmental actions, during the liquidation of the consequences of natural disasters. Even a couple of hours a month can change someone's life. Volunteering gives new acquaintances, professional skills, a sense of necessity. On the Day of Giving, many organizations hold open days where anyone can come.
Myth 1: only the rich donate. Reality: in the statistics of the United States, 70% of donations are made by people with income below the average. Myth 2: my 100 rubles won't make a difference. Reality: many small sums make up large ones. Myth 3: foundations steal money. Reality: most are honest, there is control. Myth 4: it's better to help personally, not through a foundation. Reality: personal help is often unsystematic and short-lived. Myth 5: donations exempt you from taxes completely. Reality: they only reduce the base, not the tax amount.
Little Leshka from Voronezh needed a bone marrow transplant. His mother couldn't find a million rubles. After the publication in social networks and the collection of funds on the "Russfond" platform, the necessary amount was raised in 3 days. Thousands of people transferred 100-500 rubles. Leshka is alive. Or the story of the homeless Vladimir, whom the volunteers of "Nochlezhka" helped to restore documents and find a job. Donations are not an abstraction. They are specific saved lives.
Transfer any amount to a verified charitable, church, or foundation. Donate things (clean, in good condition). Donate blood (if healthy). Become a volunteer for a day (find out at the nearest shelter). Spread information about philanthropy on social networks. Organize a fund-raising campaign at the office or school. Don't forget to thank those who donate regularly.
Donation is not a loss, but an investment. An investment in humanity. In a world where there is hunger, diseases, loneliness, every ruble, every minute, every thing can become someone's chance. Today, June 15, take this step. Not for the report, but for the heart.
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