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Rude. When my brother died, my parents funded the vast majority of the scholarship fund.
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Yeah, who expects other people to do the heavy lifting to fund a memorial? Can they not put some $$$ aside every paycheck and fund their son's scholarship themselves? I get wanting to see that other people love and miss their child, but presumptuous is the right word here. Also I agree that the pot-stirrer is trouble and OP shouldn't listen to them. |
| So, your brother and his wife expect you and their friends to write a check each year? The fundraisers I have attended usually involve an event (example: golf). The event would include a lunch, a 50/50 raffle and donated gift baskets that participants would purchase tickets in order to win. The vendors offer their services to the charity and the people pay more for the golf match than usual. This is all done so the charity makes money. |
| It’s rude and unreasonable. I would still give them grace. You know whether you can give more. If you can, I would. Once you hit your max, you tell them that we’re at our financial limit, but I’d love to…x,y,z. Whatever that means to you. |
SHE DID. |
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I do not understand the expectation that close family and close friends will give large sums to a fund that's not for a critical need and was not their idea in the first place. Even if people told them "I support you, and think a scholarship is a great idea", it still doesn't mean you should be on the hook for more than a token gesture. $250 is a token gesture, you have fulfilled your obligation in my view. Your relatives are way out of line. Grieving doesn't mean milking people for money, even for a legitimate charitable effort!
Not the same thing, but similar: many years ago, my best friend's husband wanted to go on a once-in-a-lifetime trip on the other side of the world to write a book about a topic dear to his heart. It meant subsidizing a break from his work for several months, plus living expenses in that country. I gave a token amount. Apparently he was mad that everyone around him gave a token amount (his BIL gave much more, because he's generous that way, but it still wasn't nearly enough). I still do not understand why this man expected the people around him to just give him money for this project! At one point in our lives, when we were young, DH and I had a life event and were temporarily homeless. We did lean on family for a few months, but didn't expect anything except help with room and board. We repaid everything as soon as we could. I would never ask anything of anyone if it was not a true, and dire, need. |
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They are uninformed about endowed scholarships. If they had asked for donations to a college or high school in memory of that's one thing.
But a named scholarship of $250k they try to find over t years is ignorant. Donations have peaked. People move on. They should have self funded and hotten top up donations. If you feel you must, give the total of whatever you intended to give now. Then send them a note each birthday not $50 to the fund. That's ridiculous. A $250k endowment pays 5% a year. |
Agree with this poster above. Like you, I'd be annoyed to get this pressure thirdhand. But at the same time, I'd be willing to give more if I had it to avoid other people feeling grief. |
Also sounds like the parents are never going to be satisfied no matter how much OP gives --- unless OP feels like being a big hero and coughing up the remaining $14K of course. |
Very fair. |
| They’re going to have a hard time getting to $25K at this point. Donations are given at death, few are going to give more after that. Also it would typically be primarily funded by them, anything from others is very generous. It is very kind of you to donate annually. That they expect anything more from anyone is outrageous. They’re probably both very sad and very unrealistic. |
| Can the parents not put aside $100 per week and fund the scholarship themselves? Why are they expecting other people to do it for them? |
| $250 is super light...I would have done a minimum of 1K |
The most recent funeral in my family, I ponied up for funeral costs, flowers, food.... If someone had said "And now you need to donate to this scholarship," I'm not sure I would have given another dime. |
+1. Don't feel bad. |