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Posted on April 30, 2026 by Alan Senauke
Donors often ask how a small office in Berkeley turns gifts into food, training, and witness in Asia. This page traces the basic path, not as a financial audit, but as a map for people who want their money to follow their values. The Clear View Project home page orients newcomers, while this note is for readers who already know the mission and want detail on moving resources.
1. Gifts enter through the support page. Most U.S. donations start on the Support page, where you can read how checks, PayPal, and partner designations work. Clear View Project is a 501(c)(3), so many U.S. taxpayers can claim a deduction where the law allows.
2. Staff prioritize trusted networks. Hozan Alan Senauke and board members consult regularly with monastic allies, groups working along the Thai-Myanmar border, and partners tied to the International Network of Engaged Buddhists. Funding decisions favor organizations that already have community trust and clear safety protocols.
3. Burma and Myanmar programs. Money may support education, medical relief, or solidarity work described on the Burma (Myanmar) page. Amounts shift with events on the ground, so project pages and the Clear View Blog carry fresher numbers than any single essay can promise.
4. India and Dalit partnerships. Training materials and retreat design for Dalit Buddhist communities connect to the longer story on India’s Dalit Community. Support here often mixes modest grants with volunteer teaching time.
5. Staying accountable. Public writing on About Clear View Project and in blog posts explains major campaigns after they launch. When speed matters more than a long report, short updates still aim to name partner groups in general terms without putting individuals at risk.
Ready to give? Use the Support page for current options. To place this article in context, return to the home page anytime.
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Posted on April 30, 2026 by Alan Senauke
How Support Reaches the Field
Donors often ask how a small office in Berkeley turns gifts into food, training, and witness in Asia. This page traces the basic path, not as a financial audit, but as a map for people who want their money to follow their values. The Clear View Project home page orients newcomers, while this note is for readers who already know the mission and want detail on moving resources.
1. Gifts enter through the support page. Most U.S. donations start on the Support page, where you can read how checks, PayPal, and partner designations work. Clear View Project is a 501(c)(3), so many U.S. taxpayers can claim a deduction where the law allows.
2. Staff prioritize trusted networks. Hozan Alan Senauke and board members consult regularly with monastic allies, groups working along the Thai-Myanmar border, and partners tied to the International Network of Engaged Buddhists. Funding decisions favor organizations that already have community trust and clear safety protocols.
3. Burma and Myanmar programs. Money may support education, medical relief, or solidarity work described on the Burma (Myanmar) page. Amounts shift with events on the ground, so project pages and the Clear View Blog carry fresher numbers than any single essay can promise.
4. India and Dalit partnerships. Training materials and retreat design for Dalit Buddhist communities connect to the longer story on India’s Dalit Community. Support here often mixes modest grants with volunteer teaching time.
5. Staying accountable. Public writing on About Clear View Project and in blog posts explains major campaigns after they launch. When speed matters more than a long report, short updates still aim to name partner groups in general terms without putting individuals at risk.
Ready to give? Use the Support page for current options. To place this article in context, return to the home page anytime.
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Category: News Tags: Buddhism, social engagement
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