As long as she can remember, Andie Greenberg is invested to give again.
Bethesda’s high school young man, MD, has volunteered for various charities with her family since elementary school, but recently she has taken her charity initiatives to a new level.
Andie’s first sport was tennis but as a high school during the pandemia she started playing golf. She has practiced, played and improved since then, in the hope of going down to a college team. But in addition to her busy golf schedule, Andie is also a lawyer set for the community with disabilities-some seed that had been planted during her school years, volunteering along with her mother, Michelle, for the Nora project, a nonprofit dedicated to promoting the inclusion of disability, her 12th grade.
“At the end of the program, we did documentaries on our friends and had to share it with the rest of the school in ‘Nora Night’,” Andie told me the next day. “And that is really what aroused my interest in giving again the disability community.”
As a beginner of the high school, Andie became a companion friend with the best program of friends, who facilitates two-week hanging for individuals with intellectual or development disabilities. Andie said she and her friend, Alexa, Facetime often between meetings and spend a lot of time talking about typical adolescent topics; They also enjoy the exits to The best ice cream of max In Bethesda, whom partners with best friends offer jobs for adults with intellectual and/or development disabilities.
While researching ways to raise money for her Bat Mitzvah project, Andie revealed the Daniel music foundation, a New York -based nonprofit offering free music programs.
“It is so comprehensive, everyone is so positive,” Andie said.
Andie gathered $ 2,000 for the Daniel Music Foundation through the Leadership Program of the American Golf Association Junior – a joint initiative founded by the USA and Ajga to further develop new players through volunteering and philanthropy. In August, Andie was recognized for her efforts to collect funds as female recipient of 2025 Award the leadership of the USA-Ajga presidentswhich was created in 2005 to identify a male golf player and a woman demonstrating leadership, character and community service through their involvement with the leadership connections program.
While receiving the price was humble, Andie said her most inspiring moment of summer happened a few weeks before her honor announcement. 2025 US Adaptive OpenThe USGA national championship for disabled players was held at the Andie interior club, Woodmont Country Club in Rockville, MD. Andie intended to help the note, but then a DM came from the Australian competitor Lachlan Wood, who was looking for a caddy. With Andie in the bag, Wood gained its separation (damage to the lower limbs) and was tied to second place in general.
“They all play golf better than me,” Andie said. “I’ve learned a lot from all the experience, and it was probably one of the best sporting events I’ve ever been.”
Andie says she hopes to continue her philanthropic efforts.
“I don’t know if I still have a full plan, but I definitely want to continue to raise awareness and give these different charities that have helped the community,” she said. “I just think it’s such a good cause and I still want to keep helping.”
How about next summer? One week is already reserved.
Adaptive Adaptive Adaptive Return to Woodmont in 2026, and Greenberg will return to the Wood bag.

