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Dolly Parton wins charity award for children’s book project

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Dolly Parton Philanthropy
Dolly Parton Philanthropy

Dolly Parton was jokingly callous after the crowd at the Carnegie Medal of Philanthropy attempted to sing together during her acceptance speech.

“It’s horrible,” the Grammy-winning country star said after a silent singing of Books, Books, which she wrote to support her imaginative library project.

The philanthropic program, which provides children under five with a free book each month, is one of the reasons she was this year’s Carnegie Medal of Philanthropy recipient and one of the reasons she donated to coronavirus vaccine research in 2020 , the research helped develop modern vaccines.

“I’m very proud and honored to be involved in anything that makes the world a better place,” Parton said, adding that she was delighted to join forces with Dallas-based entrepreneur Lyda Hill, Kenyan industrialist Manu Chandaria and a family of investors from Oklahoma Lynn and Stacy Schusterman.

Dolly Parton Philanthropy
Dolly Parton receives the Carnegie Medal of Philanthropy (Andres Kudacki/AP)

The ceremony was held at Gotham Hall in New York to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the award, which was established in 2001 as the Nobel Prize for Philanthropy.

In honor of the milestone, delayed a year due to the Covid-19 pandemic, the Carnegie Institution has launched the Carnegie Catalyst Award to “celebrate the transformative power of human kindness.”

The award went to World Central Kitchen, an anti-hunger nonprofit founded by chef Jose Andres.

Stacy Schusterman, chair of Schusterman Family Philanthropies, said she was proud to accept the award along with her mother Lynn, becoming the first mother-daughter team in the award’s history to be honored.

However, she said philanthropy also urgently needed to be more collaborative and take on more challenges to improve society.

“America was built with ideals that we have yet to achieve,” she said in her acceptance speech. “When we say ‘all men are created equal,’ it’s clear that ‘men’ does not mean all Americans, including women, people of a broad spectrum of genders, and all races, ethnicities and religions.”

The Charles and Lynn Shusterman Family Foundation was established in 1987 to invest in systemic change in justice and equity in the United States and Israel.

When Charles died in 2000, Lynn Shusterman took over the foundation, expanding its work and becoming an outspoken advocate for inclusion, especially for the LGBTQ community. In 2018, their daughter Stacy Schusterman took over the foundation, which was renamed Schusterman Family Philanthropies last year.

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