Social Worker Makes Frugal Living Donating Nearly $ 11 Million to Children's Charities: NPR



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Alan Naiman, social worker from Washington State, photographed in 2013, left the bulk of his $ 11 million heritage to charities for children at his death.

Shashi Karan / AP


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Shashi Karan / AP

Alan Naiman, social worker from Washington State, photographed in 2013, left most of his $ 11 million to children's charities at his death.

Shashi Karan / AP

Some friends remember Alan Naiman, a social worker from Washington State, very frugal. He wore old shoes stuck with duct tape, bought his clothes at the grocery store, drove jalopies and ate at cheap restaurants. But when he died of cancer in January, at the age of 63, people around him learned that he had quietly saved millions of dollars for a superior cause. .

Naiman left the bulk of his $ 11 million estate to organizations serving abandoned, impoverished, sick and disabled people "19659008]" He left everything to charities – mostly to children, some from the company that really could not help themselves, "said his friend Shashi Karan to NPR.

Naiman had no spouses or biological children, but his brother Elder, disabled and deceased in 2013, "his style has changed a lot," his friend Susan Madsen, Associated Press.