2021-2021 The Washington Post Helping Hand Beneficiaries
Bread for the City
Provides food, clothing, medical care, and legal and social services to reduce the burden of poverty.
Friendship Place
Empowering individuals to rebuild their lives, find homes, get jobs, and reconnect with friends, family, and the community, permanently.
Miriam's Kitchen
From meals to housing, Miriam’s Kitchen plays a critical role in the fight to end chronic homelessness in D.C.
- D.C., Md. & Va.
- Perspective
We ended our Helping Hand charity campaign on the highest of notes
We started this year's Helping Hand campaign not knowing how it would end. The result? Success.
- D.C., Md. & Va.
- Perspective
Bread for the City saved his life. Now he gives back to the D.C. charity.
Bread for the City and Harold Valentine both work to improve life in the Shaw area of D.C.
- D.C., Md. & Va.
- Perspective
Understanding their LGBTQ clients is important to the people at Friendship Place
“It's about embracing their humanity,” says the CEO of the charity fighting homelessness in the District.
- D.C., Md. & Va.
- Perspective
At Miriam’s Kitchen, housing advocates lead the charge for change
At this District charity, advocacy means showing others that you care -- and they should, too.
- D.C., Md. & Va.
- Perspective
At the Brooks, a temporary home for District families in need
The Brooks, run by Friendship Place, is a safe harbor where homeless families can get back on their feet.
- D.C., Md. & Va.
- Perspective
Equity and inclusion is a main ingredient at Miriam’s Kitchen
The D.C. charity embraces a goal beyond providing meals and finding homes for individual people experiencing hunger and homelessness.
- D.C., Md. & Va.
- Perspective
Tenants facing eviction have Bread for the City in their corner
Housing lawyers at this D.C. charity help renters keep their homes.
- D.C., Md. & Va.
- Perspective
Miriam’s Kitchen reaches the unhoused where they live: On the streets
Every day, Miriam's Kitchen workers visit the tent cities that dot Washington's parks.
- D.C., Md. & Va.
- Perspective
‘Gregory has an apartment’: Friendship Place helps a man into his own home
After years spent on the streets, a District man has a new home, thanks to Friendship Place.
- D.C., Md. & Va.
- Perspective
Bread for the City’s free diapers mean happy babies for cash-strapped parents
The D.C. charity distributes more than 50,000 of the expensive staples every month.
- D.C., Md. & Va.
- Perspective
At Friendship Place, a new way of finding a job
When people experiencing homelessness need a job, Friendship Place's AimHire program is there to help.
- Local
- Perspective
Plot twist: Best-selling author Patricia Cornwell meets one of her biggest fans
Wesley Thomas once lived on D.C.’s streets. Cornwell’s novels helped him escape.
- Local
- Perspective
From co-pay to no-pay: Bread for the City treats low-income patients
“We are going to see you, even if you don’t have the funds,” says medical director.
- Local
- Perspective
Coming in from the cold after 29 years on the streets of Washington
Miriam’s Kitchen fed Wesley Thomas. Then it helped him find a home.
- Local
- Perspective
Bread for the City’s new Southeast D.C. dental clinic puts smiles on a lot of faces
Low-income patients can find a medical home on Good Hope Road SE.
- Local
- Perspective
All are welcome at Friendship Place, whatever their needs
The Helping Hand charity is fighting homelessness in Upper Northwest.
The Washington Post Helping Hand
The Washington Post Helping Hand seeks to facilitate significant financial donations directly to human service nonprofit organizations in the Washington, D.C. metro area through high-impact, in-depth narratives about those in need and the programs that assist them.
The Washington Post Helping Hand names its 2021-23 beneficiaries
The Washington Post Helping Hand, a charitable giving initiative, today announced the selection of Bread for the City, Friendship Place and Miriam’s Kitchen as the three beneficiaries of the 2021-2023 cycle. Over the next three winter holiday seasons, Local Columnist John Kelly will highlight the work of each nonprofit through bi-weekly “John Kelly’s Washington” columns in The Washington Post. Post Helping Hand will help facilitate direct donations from readers to the nonprofits through Kelly’s column.
How to apply to The Washington Post Helping Hand
The Washington Post is launching its third cycle of Helping Hand, a nonprofit giving initiative started by The Post to help connect the D.C. community with local nonprofit organizations. Helping Hand is currently seeking letters of inquiry from human services nonprofits that work toward the prevention and remediation of hunger, homelessness and poverty, in the Washington, D.C. area for a three-year commitment.
The Washington Post Helping Hand raises record $816k for beneficiaries Bright Beginnings, N Street Village and So Others Might Eat
The charitable giving initiative has raised a total of $1.4 million for Washington, D.C.-area nonprofits focused on alleviating hunger, homelessness and poverty since its inception in 2014.
The Washington Post Helping Hand raises record $1.1 million to support local nonprofits
The Washington Post Helping Hand announced it has successfully raised over $250,000 in the 2018-2019 season bringing the total funds raised to $1.14 million since the charitable giving initiative began in 2014.