The TEARS Foundation

The TEARS Foundation seeks to compassionately lift a financial burden from families who have lost a child by providing funds to assist with the cost of burial or cremation services. We also offer parents comprehensive bereavement care in the form of grief support groups and peer companions.

Boys & Girls Clubs of North Alabama

Wine, Women & Shoes Huntsville, AL 2024 About Wine, Women & Shoes Huntsville An engaging and exciting fundraising event where community-minded, philanthropic women (and a few good men) gather to sip, shop, savor, and support a worthy cause in a chic, fun, and innovative way. This signature fundraising event ignites the senses from the moment…

Children’s Cancer Research Fund

The Great Cycle Challenge 2024 Together we are riding to fight childhood cancer Gerald Russell’s Story This September, I am taking part in the Great Cycle Challenge to fight kids’ cancer! Why? Because right now, cancer is the biggest killer of children from disease in the United States. Over 15,700 children are diagnosed every year,…

Aum Foundation

Bollywood Night 2024 Get ready for a night of fun, dancing, and philanthropy at this year’s Bollywood Night 2024! Our very own Hibah Setayesh is a dancer in this year’s annual gala, which is dedicated to supporting the Aum Foundation. The Aum Foundation empowers under-resourced girls to succeed in life, and your participation will make…

Kids to Love

We selected the local Kids to Love Charity primarily for the dynamic support they are providing to foster children. Their ability to help them transition out of the system and into secondary education and job training impressed us the most.

Enable Madison County

Our Redstone GCI team participated in a volunteer service day for several charities this holiday season. One charity we worked with was Enable Madison County. Several members of the RGCI team helped harvest and pick vegetables for delivery to aging and homebound residents.

American Foundation for Suicide Prevention

The Community Walks, held in hundreds of cities across the country, are the core of the Out of the Darkness movement, which began in 2004. These events give people the courage to open up about their own connections to the cause, and a platform to create a culture that’s smarter about mental health. Friends, family members, neighbors and coworkers walk side-by-side, supporting each other and in memory of those we’ve lost. Now, more than ever, it’s important to be there for one another and take steps to safeguard our mental health and prevent suicide.