
Rihanna's expanding Clara Lionel Foundation: A model for celebrity philanthropy
by Naharnet Newsdesk 04 April 2025, 15:54
Rihanna is accustomed to defying convention.
The nine-time Grammy winner has turned her wide-ranging string of hits, including "Umbrella" and "Work," into a business empire worth an estimated $1.4 billion, placing her high on last year's Forbes list of the richest "self-made" American women. The Barbados native stunned entertainment's biggest stage with a pregnancy reveal during her solo 2023 Super Bowl halftime show. And her successful Fenty Beauty cosmetics brand revolutionized the makeup industry with its inclusive shades.
But it is not the megastar-turned-mogul's long-awaited follow-up to 2016's "Anti" album set to make waves this year. It's her philanthropy.
Named after Rihanna's grandparents and funded partially through her brands, the Clara Lionel Foundation is coming off a "refresh" that is poised to direct more funds toward climate solutions and women's entrepreneurship in the under-invested regions of East Africa, the Caribbean and the U.S. South. After 13 years of relative anonymity, the nonprofit is ready for more visibility.
"Our founder is a woman from a small island nation who's got global reach. She's an entrepreneur. She's a mom. She's a creative," said Executive Director Jessie Schutt-Aine. "So, we want an organization that reflects that spirit and that energy. She's bold and she's ambitious. She's innovative. She always does things different. She's a game changer."
Experts say it's rare to see such intentionality among famous philanthropists. Clara Lionel Foundation has also garnered praise for its embrace of "trust-based" giving, which empowers recipients with unrestricted funding.
NDN Collective founder Nick Tilsen said CLF lets his Indigenous power-building nonprofit "do the work on our terms" — and that other funders should take notes.
"They're not a foundation that's all up in your business, either," Tilsen said. "They support. They see the work. They allow us to do what we need to do."
Clara Lionel Foundation's personal roots
Rihanna started the foundation with a $516,000 contribution after her grandmother died of cancer complications in 2012. That year, the musician established an oncology center at Barbados' main hospital to expand cancer screening and treatment. And the young foundation focused on healthcare and Barbados for much of last decade.
By 2019, though, CLF had begun prioritizing emergency preparedness. Grantmaking jumped to more than $33 million in 2020 as the nonprofit provided much-needed pandemic relief and backed racial justice efforts. Post-pandemic spending slowdowns coincided with its internal transition, according to tax filings.
A revamped team and refined priorities now match its broader ambitions. A new director for women's entrepreneurship, based in South Carolina, will build out that pillar's programs. Black Feminist Fund co-founder Amina Doherty now oversees programs and impact. Rounding out its five new pillars are climate solutions, arts and culture, health access and equity, and future generations.
The youth focus was commended by Ashley Lashley, a 25-year-old whose foundation has worked with CLF to address environmental challenges in her native Barbados. She often hears leaders say that 'youth are the future,' she said, but those statements rarely translate into actual support.
"Rihanna's foundation is a prime example of how women in power can help contribute to work that is being done at the community level," Lashley said.
Rihanna told The Associated Press she hopes CLF will continue to be a force for "global inclusion in philanthropy."
She reflected on the foundation's 13-year transformation in a statement: "Today we have global reach, but that notion of love for community and for our roots runs deep in the DNA of the foundation."
Finding partners — big and small
The latest example of that evolution is a partnership with The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. Barbados' "invaluable history" as "an essential chapter in the broader story of the African diaspora" is threatened by climate change, according to a Mellon press release.
Together, the two foundations announced, they will fund "artist-led initiatives" to protect that culture "while inspiring new narratives and opportunities internationally."
Schutt-Aine views the partnership with Mellon — the largest philanthropic supporter of the arts in the U.S. — as a milestone for CLF. Justin Garrett Moore, the director of the Mellon's Humanities in Place program, said the nonprofit's name arose when his team asked contacts to recommend partners.
"We think there is an incredible platform that Clara Lionel Foundation has, with their founder, to bring this type of work into a legibility and visibility for the organizations that will be supported," Moore said. "Also, just generally in the society, to help amplify the power of the arts."
Among those grantees is a developmental performance arts program that also provides free social services to students in the nation's capital of Bridgetown. Operation Triple Threat founder Janelle Headley said Clara Lionel Foundation helped the nonprofit afford a warehouse outfitted with acoustics panels, sound equipment and a dance floor.
The relationship began with a microgrant for scholarships. Operation Triple Threat now receives general operating support — a "revolutionary" investment, Headley said, because charitable donations are usually earmarked for specific causes. That flexibility proved especially helpful during the pandemic when rapidly changing circumstances created new needs like iPads for remote learning.
"It's uncommon, to be honest, to have someone give a sizable donation unrestricted and say, 'We trust you, your vision,'" Headley said. "That is very forward-thinking of them."
A unique model for celebrity philanthropy
The approach is unique, according to Mary Beth Collins, the executive director of the Center for Community and Nonprofit Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. She finds that celebrities typically engage in philanthropy only when necessary.
But Collins said CLF appears to think long-term about its partners and deliberately in its bottom-up funding. The strategies align with her own recommendations to engage expert professionals, address root causes, select focus areas important to founders and lift up leaders living those issues.
"We want to see funds and resources from the more endowed people in the world going to those leaders on the ground that really know the place and the experience and the issues best," Collins said.
CLF used that model late last year when it provided additional funding to a clean energy nonprofit partner impacted by Hurricane Helene. Melanie Allen, co-director of The Hive Fund for Climate and Gender Justice, said they suddenly received around $60,000 to quickly distribute among vetted partners in devastated communities.
The contribution came amid an increasingly hostile environment for nonprofits like hers supporting women of color, which has prompted some philanthropists to reduce giving. Allen said she is excited about CLF's "deep commitment to the South going forward."
As others reduce resources, CLF wants to bring more philanthropic partners to the table. They're planning a summer convening for grantees to expand networks. The message, CLF's Doherty said, is "We will stick with you."
"Some people might say times look bleak," Doherty said. "But this is a moment of possibility."
The importance of remaining grounded in communities you serve is a lesson Schutt-Aine learned throughout a 25-year global health career.
Most recently the Chief of Equity, Gender and Cultural Diversity at the Pan American Health Organization, Schutt-Aine has treated the world's deadliest infections of tuberculosis, malaria and HIV/AIDS.
"If you're going to work on malaria," she said, "you need to have lived with the mosquito."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Nahar Net
2 days ago
- Nahar Net
All 7 BTS members are now done with mandatory service
by Naharnet Newsdesk 20 June 2025, 15:05 Suga, a rapper and songwriter in the global K-pop sensation BTS, has been discharged from South Korea's mandatory military service, marking the official return of all seven members from their enlistment duties. The label confirmed that Suga completed his alternative service duties on Wednesday after using up his remaining leave. His official discharge date is Saturday. BTS' management agency, Big Hit Entertainment, had said earlier that no events were planned for Suga's release out of concern for overcrowding. It is a momentous occasion for fans of the K-pop group BTS. The seven singers of the popular K-pop band plan to reunite as a group sometime in 2025 now that they've finished their service. Last week, BTS superstars RM and V were discharged from South Korea's military after fulfilling their mandatory service. Jimin and Jung Kook were discharged a day later. All four were enlisted in December 2023. Six of the group's seven members served in the army, while Suga fulfilled his duty as a social service agent, an alternative form of military service. Jin, the oldest BTS member, was discharged in June 2024. J-Hope was discharged in October. In South Korea, all able-bodied men aged 18 to 28 are required by law to perform 18-21 months of military service under a conscription system meant to deter aggression from rival North Korea. The law gives special exemptions to athletes, classical and traditional musicians, and ballet and other dancers if they have obtained top prizes in certain competitions and are assessed to have enhanced national prestige. K-pop stars and other entertainers aren't subject to such privileges. However, in 2020, BTS postponed their service until age 30 after South Korea's National Assembly revised its Military Service Act, allowing K-pop stars to delay their enlistment until age 30. There was heated public debate in 2022 over whether to offer special exemptions of mandatory military service for BTS members, until the group's management agency announced in October 2022 that all seven members would fulfill their duties.


Nahar Net
2 days ago
- Nahar Net
South Korea's last circus, Dongchoon, holds up as it marks centennial
by Naharnet Newsdesk 20 June 2025, 15:12 No more elephant and monkey acts. No more death-defying motorbike stunts. No more singing or acting on stage. Several hundred spectators still clapped constantly when acrobats with Dongchoon Circus Troupe, South Korea's last and 100-year-old circus, twirled on a long suspended fabric, juggled clubs on a large, rotating wheel and rode a unicycle on a tightrope under the big top. "As I recall the hardship that I've gone through, I think I've done something significant," Park Sae-hwan, the head of the circus, said in a recent Associated Press interview. "But I also feel heavy responsibility because if Dongchoon stops, our country's circus, one genre in our performing arts, will disappear. That's the problem." The golden age of circuses Founded in 1925, Dongchoon is Korea's oldest circus. In the golden ages of South Korean circuses in the 1960s when most households still had no TVs, Dongchoon travelled across the country, wowing audiences with then exotic animals like an elephant and a giraffe and a variety of shows including skits, comic talks, singing, dancing and magic shows. At its peak years, it had more than 200 artists, acrobats and other staff, according to Park. Like in many other countries, TVs and movies later syphoned off the audiences of Dongchoon and other circuses in South Korea. Their actors, singers and comedians moved to TV stations, and some became bigger stars. The advent of the internet, video games and professional sports were another blow. South Korean circuses also dropped animal shows that faced protests by animal rights campaigners. Now, Dongchoon is the only circus in South Korea after all its rivals went out of business. How Dongchoon survives Park, who joined Dongchoon in 1963, served as a show host and sometimes sang and acted in the circus's drama programs. He left the circus in 1973 and ran a lucrative supermarket business. In 1978, he returned to the circus industry by taking over Dongchoon, which was put up for sale after devastating typhoon damage. Park, now 80, said he worried Dongchoon could disappear into history after seeing newspaper reports that its assets would be split into parts and sold. "I thought Dongchoon must not disappear. When we want to study the roots of our country's dramas, we should look back on the traces of Dongchoon. The same goes for the history of our other shows, traditional music performances and magic shows as well as circuses themselves," Park said. Heo Jeong Joo, an expert at the All That Heritage Research Institute, also values highly the legacy of Dongchoon, which she said incorporated many traditional performers and artists who operated before its 1925 founding. "Its foundation exceeds 100 years. In a historical perspective, I think it should be designated as an intangible cultural asset," Heo said. Park said he almost closed the circus in 2009 after his shows drew only 10-20 spectators each for several months during a widespread flu outbreak. It survived after local media reports sympathizing with the plight of Dongchoon prompted many people to flock and fully pack shows for weeks, he said. Dongchoon leaps again at its seaside big top Since 2011, Dongchoon has been performing at a big top at a seaside tourist area in Ansan, just south of Seoul. Its circus workers also frequently travel to other areas for temporary shows. Dongchoon officials said their business is doing relatively well, drawing several hundred spectators on weekdays and up to 2,000 on weekends at Ansan alone. Ansan official Sharon Ham said local tourism has been boosted by Dongchoon's presence. She said Dongchoon shows are popular with both older generations wanting to recall childhood memories of circuses and younger generations seeking something new. "It was a very impressive and meaningful circus," Sim Chung-yong, a 61-year-old spectator, said after one show last week. "But I also thought about how much big pains and hardships those circus acrobats underwent to perform like this." Dongchoon officials say they now offer only acrobatic performances and refrain from too-risky acts because many people don't like them any longer. Its all 35 acrobats are now Chinese, as a circus job is generally shunned by more affluent South Koreans who consider it too dangerous and low-paying. Park said he bought land at Ansan where he hopes to build a circus school to nurture South Korean circus artists. Xing Jiangtao, 37, has been working for Dongchoon since 2002 — initially as an acrobat and now as its performance director. He recalled that when he first came to South Korea, he and his Chinese colleagues all worked as assistants to Dongchoon's 50 South Korean acrobats but they've all left one by one. "Now, it's the only circus in South Korea, and I hope we will create good circus performances to show to spectators so that we can help Dongchoon exist for another 100 years," Xing said in fluent Korean.


Nahar Net
4 days ago
- Nahar Net
Irish rapper in court on terror charge over Hezbollah flag
by Naharnet Newsdesk 18 June 2025, 13:09 Hundreds of people gathered outside a London court Wednesday in a show of support for the provocative Irish rap group Kneecap as one of the singers appeared charged with a terror offense for allegedly promoting Lebanon's Hezbollah. Liam O'Hanna, 27, known by his stage name Mo Chara, was charged in May after being accused of displaying a Hezbollah flag during a London concert in November. He appeared at Westminster Magistrates' Court on Wednesday wearing a Palestinian keffiyeh scarf around his neck, and black sunglasses. Shouts of "Free Palestine" rang out among the crowd outside, as well as from people who were inside the court building. The Iran-backed Lebanese group Hezbollah and the Palestinian militant group Hamas are banned in the UK, and it is an offense to show support for them. Kneecap, which has recently grabbed headlines for statements denouncing the war in Gaza and against Israel, has denied the charge. "We deny this 'offense' and will vehemently defend ourselves. This is political policing. This is a carnival of distraction," the Belfast band wrote on X last month. The raucous punk-rap group has said the video that led to the charge was taken out of context. O'Hanna told London's Wide Awake Festival in May that the charge was an attempt to "silence us" after several of their performances were canceled. A performance in Scotland was pulled over safety concerns, various shows in Germany were axed, and UK government ministers had suggested the organizers of the upcoming Glastonbury festival should reconsider their appearance. Daring provocateurs to their fans, dangerous extremists to their detractors, the group's members rap in the Irish language as well as English. Formed in 2017, the group is no stranger to controversy. Their lyrics are filled with references to drugs, they have repeatedly clashed with the UK's previous Conservative government and have vocally opposed British rule in Northern Ireland. Last year, the group was catapulted to international fame by a semi-fictional film based on them that scooped multiple awards including at the Sundance festival. - 'Unfazed' - O'Hanna, Liam Og O Hannaidh in Gaelic, was charged last month after London's Metropolitan Police investigated a video from the festival in Kentish Town, north London, in November 2024. He is accused of displaying a flag "in such a way or in such circumstances as to arouse reasonable suspicion that he is a supporter of a proscribed organization," police said. One of the supporters outside the court on Wednesday, who gave her name as Sadia, denounced the charge as "ridiculous". "Kneecap actually represent every one of us. They speak for us, you know, because everything they feel, every injustice that they feel, we feel," she told AFP. The group however apologized this year after a 2023 video emerged appearing to show one singer calling for the death of British Conservative MPs. Rich Peppiatt, who directed the award-winning semi-autobiographical film about Kneecap, told AFP this week that the group was "unfazed" by the legal charge and controversies. "Even through all the controversy at the moment, they just shrug their shoulders and get on with it," Peppiatt said. "They've always been controversial at a local level, and they've always bounced back from it," he added. In its statement following the charge, the group said: "14,000 babies are about to die of starvation in Gaza, with food sent by the world sitting on the other side of a wall, and once again the British establishment is focused on us." "We are not the story. Genocide is," it added. Israel has repeatedly denied that it is committing genocide in its offensive in Gaza, which it says aims to wipe out Hamas. Prominent British musicians and groups including Paul Weller, Massive Attack, Brian Eno, Pulp and Primal Scream have defended the group and denounced a "concerted attempt to censor and de-platform Kneecap".