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Score (99)
How This 10 Year Old's Love Of Frogs Is Inspiring Him To Save The Planet
Justin, 10, is an environmental activist who has raised almost $30,000 to stop plastic pollution, preserve wetlands, save rain forests, and invest in conservation projects. He started his foundation when he was just a kindergartener. His ultimate mission is to conserve 30 percent of the planet by 2030.

Score (98)
Wildlife SOS Shares Heartwarming Moment This Rescued Elephant Enjoyed a Christmas Feast
Bani the elephant is spending this Christmas far from the train tracks where her story began — surrounded by love, treats, and twinkling decorations. In a festive video shared by conservation group Wildlife SOS, the young female Asian elephant can be seen digging into a special holiday meal of melons, bananas, and leafy greens, all served at a table adorned with red and silver stars. Above her, banana-filled wreaths hang like ornaments, and staff dressed as Santa beam with joy. Now just over a year old, Bani has come a long way since she was rescued in 2024 after a train accident left her with serious injuries. She was only nine months old when she was found alone and abandoned by her herd, unable to walk due to damage to her spine, hips, and legs. The team at Wildlife SOS transported her to their Elephant Hospital Campus in Uttar Pradesh, India — a facility known for treating and rehabilitating injured elephants. “December brings the shortest days of the year, peace, good food, festivities and cherished time with friends and family,” Wildlife SOS said in a caption alongside the video. “It’s a time to appreciate kindness, generosity and of course, freedom.” Bani has become a symbol of that freedom. Named after Mother Earth, she’s the first infant elephant to be cared for by Wildlife SOS, and her progress has been marked by quiet resilience. The group says she now enjoys sunbathing, taking dust baths, and munching on green fodder — with bananas topping the list of favourite snacks. “As the year comes to a close, Wildlife SOS is marking the holidays with elephants who were once injured, exploited, or displaced... and who are now thriving under long-term care,” the organization told PEOPLE. The group has shared Bani’s journey with a growing online community, receiving an outpouring of support with each update. When they posted the Christmas feast video on Instagram, comments poured in: “Baby Bani, your light always shines through so brightly,” wrote one supporter. “Sending lots of love and Christmas cheer to Bani 🐘,” added another. Since its founding, Wildlife SOS has rescued dozens of elephants like Bani — each with their own story of hardship. Vayu, a malnourished male, was brought in this year. Arya, a blind female, arrived in 2020. Walnut, a former circus elephant, was rescued in 2015. But it’s not just about saving lives, the group says — it’s about dignity. “The images capture a rare, quiet moment of joy,” Wildlife SOS said. “A reminder that conservation isn’t only about rescue, but about giving animals the chance to live with comfort, safety, and dignity.” For Bani, that now includes Christmas lights, a table of her favourite foods, and people who care. Her journey is far from over, but this year, she has something to celebrate — and a future worth looking forward to.

Score (97)
Thousands Race Through Madrid Streets In Festive Santa Claus Charity Run
Thousands of Santas — and a few elves — braved the rain in Madrid on Sunday, December 21, for the 14th annual El Corte Inglés Santa Claus charity race. Despite the wet weather, organizers said a record-breaking 11,000 participants took part in the festive 4.5-kilometer run, which wound down the city’s iconic Paseo de la Castellana. Runners donned red suits, white beards, and pointy green hats, transforming the heart of the capital into a sea of holiday spirit. Footage from sponsor Sport Life Ibérica captured the joyful chaos as costumed runners of all ages jogged, danced, and laughed their way through the course. Each participant paid a €1 registration fee, with all proceeds going to the Red Cross. For many, it was about more than just exercise — it was a chance to come together for a good cause and kick off the holidays with cheer, even in the rain.

Score (97)
Holiday Train Delivers Christmas Cheer To U.S. And Canada
The CPKC Holiday Train rolled to a powerful finish this year, raising more than $2 million and collecting over 175,000 pounds of food for local food banks across Canada and the United States. The 2025 edition of the festive rail tour stopped in hundreds of communities, delivering not just donations but live music, holiday cheer, and a strong message of unity and generosity. Since it first launched in 1999, the Canadian Pacific Kansas City (CPKC) Holiday Train has now raised over $28.3 million and gathered 5.6 million pounds of food to support food banks across North America. "Year after year, the CPKC Holiday Train proves that generosity and community spirit know no bounds," said CPKC President and CEO Keith Creel. “Our heartfelt thanks go to everyone who came out to see a show, donated to this great cause, and made the season a true celebration of giving. The incredible support we receive reminds us of what is possible when we come together with kindness and purpose.” The 2025 tour featured 194 live performances, with artists including Barenaked Ladies, Tyler Shaw, and American Authors performing from the brightly lit train cars that double as rolling stages. The tour covered six Canadian provinces and 13 U.S. states, continuing its mission to spread holiday joy while supporting food security at the grassroots level. But the holiday spirit didn’t stop at the northern border. In Mexico, CPKC continued its tradition of operating the Tren Navideño, a decorated holiday train that has visited communities there since 2010. The Mexican tour adds a southern chapter to the North American tradition, connecting people across all three countries served by the CPKC rail network. The Holiday Train is more than just a seasonal event; it’s become a cornerstone of community engagement, especially for smaller towns where the annual arrival of the glowing train draws crowds of families, volunteers, and neighbours. Local food banks receive donations raised at each stop, ensuring that the generosity stays in the community where it’s needed most. From rural stations to city centres, the train’s impact goes beyond what it delivers — it's about who it brings together. And for CPKC, that’s the point.

Score (95)
Australia Announces Special Honours List To Recognise Acts Of Bravery During The Bondi Attack
Australia will create a special honours list to recognise extraordinary acts of courage, kindness, and selflessness in response to the recent terror attack in Bondi, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese announced on Wednesday. Speaking at a press conference, Albanese said the honours — to be awarded next year in consultation with the New South Wales government — will celebrate “the best of humanity” shown in the wake of what he described as an antisemitic massacre. “We saw it with those who lost their lives tackling the terrorists as they embarked from the car,” he said. “We saw it with police and emergency services rushing to assist people. We saw it with the medical staff and professionals stopping having dinner and rushing to St Vincent’s hospital or Prince Alfred hospital or other places to provide assistance.” The honours will be given for acts of bravery or meritorious service. Among those likely to be recognised are police, doctors, surf lifesavers, and ordinary citizens who stepped in to help during and after the attack. Ahmed al-Ahmed, a 44-year-old father of two, gained widespread attention after tackling one of the gunmen and seizing his weapon. A global outpouring of support followed, with fundraisers raising $2.5 million in his name. Others paid with their lives. Boris and Sofia Gurman were killed while attempting to stop the attackers. Fourteen-year-old Chaya Dadon was shot while protecting two younger children. “The attack did show us the worst of humanity: hatred, antisemitism, violence,” Albanese said. “It also showed us the best of humanity: extraordinary acts of bravery and courage, acts of kindness for fellow Australians.” He described meeting frontline responders who dropped everything to help. Some travelled hours from outside Sydney. One police officer drove in from Newcastle; another had worked through the night and was still on duty. “It’s important that we as a nation celebrate our heroes and celebrate good deeds,” Albanese said. In a diplomatic move, the prime minister confirmed he had asked the governor-general to invite Israeli President Isaac Herzog to visit Australia next year. The two leaders spoke Tuesday night. Herzog, in a statement posted on social media, said he was “profoundly shocked” by the “catastrophic terror attack against the Australian Jewish community” and offered condolences to the victims' families. He also called for legal action to confront what he described as an “unprecedented rise in antisemitism, extremism, and jihadist terror.” Herzog confirmed he would accept the invitation to visit. “We’ve invited President Herzog, which is entirely appropriate for the head of state to visit,” he said. The exact details of the upcoming honours list, including categories or criteria, have not yet been made public. But for now, Albanese says it’s about recognising that even in a moment of horror, Australians showed up for each other. “We saw people making extraordinary personal sacrifices to help their fellow Australians,” he said. “That deserves to be honoured.”

Score (97)
This 11-Year-Old Cancer Survivor is Celebrating Christmas at Home After Her Tumor Battle
An 11-year-old girl from Essex will spend this Christmas at home, cancer-free, after a year that turned her life upside down. Lola, from Thundersley, was diagnosed with spindle cell sarcoma in November 2024 — a rare and aggressive form of bone cancer. It took months of uncertainty and misdiagnoses, including ear infections and growing pains, before doctors discovered a 10-centimetre tumour in her femur. By then, the bone had begun to crumble. What followed was months of chemotherapy, surgery to replace her femur, and a Christmas spent in hospital, where she was the only child on her ward. Her brother Louie, 13, stayed by her side, while their dad brought in a makeshift holiday meal. Their mum Kaisha slept beside Lola in the hospital as the two children opened presents in a hospital room instead of under a tree. This year, they’ll be celebrating at home. "It's been such a tough time for the family, but Lola and Louie have both been so brave and resilient," Kaisha said. Lola’s fight has been brutal. Chemotherapy left her weak, the surgery to replace her femur was complex, and the emotional toll on the family was immense. But they weren’t alone. A local charity called Gold Geese stepped in to support them with bills, care packages, and moments of joy when they were needed most. Lola said the charity lifted her spirits with a trip to Port Lympne Safari Park in Kent when she was “down in the dumps” and later helped throw a party to mark the end of her treatment. Louie also remembers how isolating last Christmas was. “What happened to Lola was hard for our whole family,” he said. “Last Christmas we felt quite alone and Gold Geese supported us by sending us vouchers.” Gold Geese was founded in 2018 by Katie Southgate after her own child was diagnosed with cancer. Her goal is to support other families facing similar battles — with emotional support, financial aid, and sometimes just a bit of light in a very dark time. “Christmas with cancer sucks, and even more so when you're a child and missing out on the festive fun your friends get to have,” Southgate said. “I wish I had a magic wand to make everything all right again. The only thing I can do is try my best to make things a little brighter.” She credits the charity’s work to donors and supporters who’ve continued to give even when “times are tight.” Each year, around 1,900 children in the UK aged 14 and under are diagnosed with cancer, including benign brain tumours. For families like Lola’s, that diagnosis changes everything. But in a year filled with hospital visits, surgeries, and fear, Lola also found unexpected moments of laughter — including a viral one. During the Wicked: For Good premiere, she caught the attention of pop singer and actor Ariana Grande. A video of Lola telling her, “by the way, my cousin thinks you’re fit,” racked up 2.5 million views on TikTok and left the crowd, including Grande, in stitches. “Wow, that’s so kind,” the singer replied, smiling. Now, after a year of pain, perseverance, and unexpected fame, Lola is home with her family — where she belongs — getting ready to open her presents, not in a hospital bed, but under the lights of a tree. It’s the kind of ending her family didn’t dare hope for just a year ago. This Christmas, they’re not taking any of it for granted.

Score (93)
New Peptide Treatment Shows Promise In Protecting Brain After Traumatic Injury
A four-letter peptide is showing big promise in the race to treat traumatic brain injuries — and it could be heading for human trials. Researchers from a global team led by California-based biotech company Aivocode, working with scientists at Spain’s Institute for Advanced Chemistry of Catalonia (IQAC-CSIC), have reported that a small compound called CAQK helped protect brain tissue and improve recovery in mouse and pig models of brain trauma. The findings were published in EMBO Molecular Medicine and mark a step forward in what has long been one of neurology’s most stubborn challenges: treating brain injuries without risky invasive procedures. CAQK is a short peptide made of just four amino acids. But when injected into mice and pigs with moderate or severe brain injuries, the compound showed a remarkable ability to target damaged tissue, reduce inflammation and cell death, and improve behavioral outcomes — all without obvious side effects. In the study, researchers gave CAQK intravenously shortly after the injury. The peptide appeared to be drawn to a specific protein that becomes unusually abundant in the brain following trauma. It then built up in those areas, where it bound to glycoproteins — sugar-coated proteins in the extracellular matrix — that increase after brain injury. “We observed less cell death and lower expression of inflammatory markers in the injured area, indicating that CAQK alleviated neuroinflammation and its secondary effects,” said Dr. Aman P. Mann, lead author of the study and one of Aivocode’s co-founders. “Behavioral and memory tests conducted after treatment also showed improvement in functional deficits, with no evident toxicity.” The treatment was tested in both mice and pigs, with the latter used to better approximate human brain structure. Across both species, CAQK consistently found its way to the injury site and helped mitigate damage — a rare feat for a compound administered through the bloodstream rather than directly into the brain. That’s part of what makes the results so compelling. Most experimental treatments for traumatic brain injury (TBI) have to be injected into the brain itself, a highly invasive procedure with major risks. CAQK, on the other hand, is non-invasive and, according to researchers, easy to manufacture at scale. “Peptides with these characteristics show good tissue penetration and are non-immunogenic,” said Dr. Pablo Scodeller, researcher at IQAC-CSIC and co-author of the study. “What’s exciting is that, in addition to proving highly effective, it’s a very simple compound — a short peptide that is easy to synthesize safely at large scale.” TBI remains a major health burden worldwide. Each year, roughly 200 out of every 100,000 people suffer a traumatic brain injury, often from car accidents, falls, or workplace incidents. Current treatment focuses almost entirely on stabilizing patients — reducing intracranial pressure and maintaining blood flow — but does nothing to stop the underlying damage or the wave of inflammation and cell death that follows. There are still no approved drugs that directly treat the injury itself. “The current interventions for treating acute brain injury aim to stabilize the patient,” Scodeller explained. “But there are no approved drugs to stop the damage and secondary effects of these injuries.” CAQK’s story began nearly a decade ago. In 2016, Mann and Scodeller were working in the lab of Erkki Ruoslahti at the Sanford Burnham Prebys Institute in San Diego when they first identified CAQK using a technique called peptide-phage display. At the time, CAQK was mainly seen as a delivery mechanism — a sort of molecular homing device to ferry other drugs to injured brain regions. This new study suggests the peptide has value on its own. Aivocode, a spin-off from the Sanford Burnham Prebys Institute, was founded by Mann, Scodeller, and Ruoslahti. The company now says it plans to seek permission from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to begin Phase I human trials. No timeline has been confirmed yet, but the team says the simplicity and safety profile of CAQK make it an attractive drug candidate. If approved, CAQK would be a rare example of a treatment that doesn’t just stabilize the brain after injury but actually intervenes in the damage process — and does it without a scalpel. For now, it’s just four amino acids. But with the right support, CAQK could be the start of a new chapter in brain injury treatment.

Score (98)
'Miracle' Cat Returns Home After Five Years Missing
A family in Cambridgeshire is celebrating what they’re calling a “Christmas miracle” after their missing cat returned home—five years after vanishing during the pandemic. Bindi, a sleek black cat with a glossy coat and a quiet personality, went missing in 2020 from her home in Somersham, shortly after the first COVID-19 lockdowns began. Her disappearance left owner Jilly Fretwell devastated. “She’s been missing for five years and we got a call on Thursday from the lovely vets in Witchford to say they had scanned her microchip and she was coming back home to us,” Jilly, 29, said. That call came after a woman in nearby Haddenham found Bindi and brought her to a local veterinary clinic. Staff scanned her microchip and traced her back to Jilly. Despite a few small scratches, the now ten-year-old cat was healthy, well-fed, and had clearly been cared for. “She had a couple of little scratches on her that the vet wanted to see to, but other than that, she looks great,” Jilly said. “She’s lovely and glossy, well-fed and has been looked after somewhere. But we have absolutely no idea where she has been the last five years.” Back in 2020, Jilly had spent her government-permitted daily walks searching for Bindi, posting appeals on social media and checking in with locals in Haddenham. But as the months passed with no sightings, hope faded. “We were devastated, as they’re part of your family,” Jilly said. “They’re part of your routine, you wake up, you feed them, give them attention, wait for them to come home to give them their dinner. It was a complete change of routine.” By 2021, she had come to terms with the loss. “I’d given up hope,” she admitted. That’s why the call from the vet caught her completely off guard. “We were just in disbelief, and then you just get this little ball of light in your chest,” she said. “We were so excited to see her.” And the reunion didn’t disappoint. “We picked her up from the vets, and it’s like she recognised us. She was instantly on our lap, giving us snuggles, and it was the best feeling. A real Christmas miracle.” Though Bindi can’t tell her side of the story, Jilly suspects someone nearby may have taken her in. “She’s never been much of a hunter. I think someone has potentially taken her in, and they think they’re doing a kind thing, and she’s been living with them the last few years,” she said. “She’s in really good shape; someone has cared for her.” Now back at home, Bindi has wasted no time settling in—curling up in laps and soaking up affection like nothing ever happened. For Jilly and her family, it's the kind of ending they had once stopped dreaming about. “She was instantly on our lap,” Jilly said. “It was the best feeling.”

Score (98)
Winnie-The-Pooh Celebrates 100 Years Of Fame In The Forest on Christmas Eve
On Christmas Eve, one of the world’s most beloved bears turns 100. It was December 24, 1925, when Winnie-the-Pooh first appeared in print, starring in a short story called The Wrong Sort of Bees in the London Evening News. The tale marked the debut of a honey-loving bear whose adventures with Christopher Robin would soon enchant children and parents across generations and continents. A century later, Pooh’s influence shows no sign of fading. In fact, his birthplace in the English countryside is marking the milestone with fanfare—and funding. Officials in East Sussex have allocated £450,000 of public money to help commemorate Pooh’s centenary in Ashdown Forest, the very landscape that inspired the fictional Hundred Acre Wood. Back in 1925, Winnie-the-Pooh’s creator, AA Milne, had just bought Cotchford Farm, a country home near the village of Hartfield, about a mile from Ashdown Forest. The forest, a stretch of heathland perched on the sandy ridges of the High Weald Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, soon became the backdrop for tales of stuffed animals, gentle adventures, and a game called Pooh Sticks. That game, created by Milne and his son Christopher Robin, was played on a wooden bridge that became a pilgrimage site for fans. When the original structure became unsafe in the late 1990s, it was dismantled and replaced with a replica. The original bridge later sold at auction in 2021 for £131,000. Winnie-the-Pooh’s popularity soared even further when Disney acquired the rights in 1961, transforming the hand-drawn bear into a global icon with an unmistakable voice and red shirt. But long before the animated adaptations, it was Milne’s simple, whimsical prose—and the heartfelt bond between a boy and his bear—that gave the stories their staying power. The 100-year anniversary isn’t just a literary celebration; it’s also a tourism magnet. At Pooh Corner, a gift shop and tea room in Hartfield that opened in 1978, visitors from around the globe come to sip tea, buy memorabilia, and retrace Pooh’s fictional footsteps. Neil Reed, who runs the shop, says the character’s emotional pull still surprises him. “It’s amazing to have people travel to our little village hidden in the English countryside from all over the world to celebrate Winnie-the-Pooh,” he said. “We love hearing from visitors about why he is special to them and the reasons behind them travelling so far to come to the Ashdown Forest.” The area has become a bucket-list stop for fans, especially from North America. Gerry Manser, who founded Pooh Trek Tours in 2018, says around 90 percent of his clients are international visitors. “The 100th anniversary is an extremely important event for the forest,” he said. “Without Pooh one of the most remarkable landscapes in the UK wouldn’t be as well-known.” To mark the centenary, Ashdown Forest is planning a series of events throughout the coming year. One highlight will be an immersive installation that transforms the forest’s visitor centre into a life-sized pop-up book. There are also plans for new walking trails to accommodate the influx of tourists while protecting sensitive conservation areas. For many, the stories of Pooh, Piglet, Tigger, and Eeyore are not just about a bear with a craving for honey. They are about friendship, imagination, and the quiet magic of childhood. Milne captured those feelings in Winnie-the-Pooh (1926) and its sequel The House at Pooh Corner (1928), as well as in two poetry collections that helped round out the gentle world he built for his son. Today, that world still draws crowds, inspires nostalgia, and helps generate a steady stream of income for the local community. One hundred years later, Pooh’s charm remains as timeless as the forest that first brought him to life.

Score (97)
A Robotics Pioneer is Championing Tech Solutions for Childhood Loneliness — Here's How
When Karen Dolva co-founded the Norwegian tech company No Isolation in 2015, her mission was clear: tackle loneliness using technology — starting with some of the most isolated people of all, children too ill to attend school. The result was AV1, a small robot designed not to replace teachers or classmates, but to help children stay connected when illness keeps them at home, in hospital, or physically apart from their peers. Controlled remotely by the child, AV1 sits in the classroom, offering a set of “eyes” and a voice that allows them to see, hear, and even speak to their friends and teachers in real time. "The idea was sparked by a friend of mine who had worked as a nurse on a children’s ward," Dolva told Euronews Next. "She mentioned these kids didn’t get nearly enough visitors." That conversation lit a spark. Since then, AV1 has been deployed in classrooms across Europe, giving children with long-term illnesses or mental health challenges a way to attend school virtually — and more importantly, to feel included. Dolva emphasized that AV1 is not a substitute for in-person education, but a bridge for those who can’t yet return. “They are not lazy, they’re ill,” she said. “There’s always the intent of going back [to school].” The robot itself is simple and deliberately neutral. With just a head and torso, AV1 doesn't try to mimic human appearance — a conscious design choice. “We’ve followed a lot of the design principles by Pixar,” Dolva explained. “We wanted something with a lot of human feeling and expression, but without the humanoid elements.” That neutrality matters. “We’re going to try to fit a six-year-old boy and a seventeen-year-old girl and everyone in between [in AV1], so it needs to be quite neutral,” she added. Though AV1’s appearance is robotic, its impact is deeply human. Children can raise their hand in class via the robot, whisper to a classmate through its speaker, or simply observe — quietly included in the rhythm of school life. Its camera eyes transmit live classroom footage back to the student’s device, and the robot’s head can turn to help them follow the action. Most AV1 units aren’t bought by families. Instead, they’re provided through partnerships between No Isolation and local governments, schools, or healthcare providers. That model helps ensure broader access and keeps the technology focused on inclusion, not profit. Dolva’s work has taken on renewed relevance in recent years, especially as global attention around loneliness has grown. In 2023, the World Health Organization officially recognised loneliness as a global health threat. According to a 2025 WHO report, around 16 percent of people worldwide say they feel lonely — a number that’s even higher among adolescents. Technology is emerging as a potential tool in that fight. Online gaming, artificial intelligence, virtual reality and robotic companions are increasingly seen as interventions worth exploring. Dolva, who stepped down as CEO but remains closely connected to the company’s vision, believes strongly in what she calls “hard first impact” companies — those that take on social problems from day one. “My personal goal with all of this has been to prove that this kind of company can become very successful,” she said. AV1 may be small and unassuming, but for the children who use it, the robot represents something enormous: connection, belonging, and the chance to be part of a world they might otherwise be missing.

Score (96)
Santa Delights Gorilla Family With Early Christmas Gifts
Santa Claus made an early stop in southern Spain this year — not for children, but for gorillas. At Bioparc Fuengirola, a group of critically endangered western lowland gorillas, including a newborn, got a special Christmas delivery as part of the park’s enrichment program. Dressed in full holiday gear, Santa entered the gorilla enclosure with a sack full of wrapped gifts, much to the curiosity of the resident primates. Footage released by the park shows the gorillas approaching the colorful boxes, sniffing and unwrapping them with care. Inside were treats and toys, carefully selected to stimulate their senses and encourage natural behaviors like foraging and exploration. The festive visit is part of the zoo's efforts to keep the animals engaged and mentally stimulated — and to spread a little seasonal cheer in the process. According to staff, the gorillas responded with fascination, and the youngest member of the group stayed close to its mother while watching the action unfold. No wrapping paper was spared.