Our Community Fund, providing steadfast nonprofit support, opens its spring grants cycle.
Learn about our Community Fund and how Cambridge nonprofits may apply for grants this spring.
See Cambridge Community Foundation on:
Learn about our Community Fund and how Cambridge nonprofits may apply for grants this spring.
A reflection from our president Geeta Pradhan on how Cambridge can start to move the needle toward justice and equity.
Learn about this year's MLK Day of Service, featuring a new, community walk celebrating Black history and many more ways to give back to our city.
A letter from CCF Board Member Lauren Cosulich.
Learn about the local nonprofits we're supporting this fall.
Thank you for supporting your community nonprofits this Giving Tuesday.
This week, the Cambridge Community Foundation awarded 11 grants to local food pantries, community fridges, and other efforts to alleviate food insecurity.
We ask for your support this giving season.
MBK Cambridge hosts two candidate forums this Wednesday and Thursday on Zoom.
Educators connect with nature and one another through Our Fire Collective. At the close of the 2021 school year, one national study said one in four teachers was considering quitting, citing pandemic-era stressors: remote learning for teachers and students, technology glitches, and concerns about COVID-19 exposure. And in our community, Our Fire Collective, a 2020 Imagined in Cambridge! Social Innovation Award winner, was there to help them. This young organization has been offering healing retreats for K-12 educators who work in high-needs communities and struggle with second-hand trauma and burnout. Prior to the pandemic, creators Naqibah Al-Kaleem and Jesse Leavitt saw their teacher friends struggling, and developed overnight nature retreats for educators. With the pandemic the program evolved. It now offers a six-month-long series of fully outdoor, daytime retreats for educators, offering individual healing and the opportunity to develop deep connections together. "Educators are so bogged down with schedules and the rigor of their work, they don't have time for "extra" - but self-care shouldn't be extra. If you keep giving, giving, giving, you have to have moments to heal as well. The pandemic has allowed a lot of educators to say, 'It's part of sustaining our work to take care of ourselves,'” said Naqibah. Thank you, Naqibah and Jesse, for giving local educators space where they're [...]