Nominated by Morgan Giordano, 19, Bernardsville, N.J.
Why Maggie is amazing:
Five years ago, Maggie Doyne, then 18, took time off before college to travel the world doing service and cultural projects. Twenty thousand miles later, while working at an orphanage in India, she encountered hundreds of children left parentless and homeless by Nepal’s civil war. Touched by their stories, she decided to use all $5,000 of her babysitting savings to help them; she appealed to her hometown and was amazed by the outpouring of support. In 2007 she opened a shelter, the Kopila Valley Children’s Home, which now houses 40 orphans in Nepal.
But she didn’t stop there: Last year Maggie opened a primary school that serves 250 kids, providing not just schooling but also health care, basic medical treatment and a daily nutritious meal. Maggie’s work has been recognized widely; among the awards she’s received is $100,000 from dosomething.org. This past October her photo appeared on the cover of The New York Times Magazine, her story an example of what Nicholas Kristof calls the “DIY Foreign-Aid Revolution.”
In her own words: “I want to create a world that I want to see everyday, and I think that we have the power to do that.”