Only you canhelp those whoare alonein this word

Emergency

Only you canhelp those whoare alonein this word
An Orphanage of Names (Based on a plea for the street children of Sri Lanka) Beneath the gold of temple spires, Below the gaze of sapphire skies, Where tourists walk with idle dreams, A different Sri Lanka gleams With sorrow’s light. A hundred—no, The numbers blur, but still they grow— Some fifteen thousand, spirits thin, Or thirty thousand, ghosts of sin That isn't theirs. The count is blurred, A statistic, a whispered word. But I, I see. I see the face In every crowded, hurried place. They are the children of the dust, Whose only currency is trust That’s broken daily. Parentless, Not by decease, but carelessness. A mother gone, a father’s rage, They turn the concrete curb their stage, Their bed, their school, their battleground, Where childhood’s music isn't found. They are the "uneducated," yes, But scholars of a deep distress. They read the language of the street, The hardened face, the hurried feet. They know the calculus of pain, Of hunger, heat, and driving rain. And though they bear no book or slate, They know the heavy hand of fate. They have a right, as you and I, To see the sun in their own sky, To dream a dream that isn't cold, To live a story to be told. And then, the news. The final break. A pain no heart should have to take. The words, a whisper, then a scream: The end of one small, fragile dream. “A street child… beaten… found too late.” A footnote to the nation’s fate. A body, small, returned to dust, A casualty of broken trust. A child. A child. And with that blow, A part of me refused to go Back to the silence, to the numb, To waiting for a help that won't come. This agony, this borrowed grief, It crystallised into belief. My tolerance for sitting by Evaporated with his cry. I cannot bear this passive role, This tragedy has claimed my soul. So I will build. I have a plan. It starts with one, a single man (Or woman, heart, it matters not) Who sees the sickness and the rot And dares to plant a seed of grace In this forgotten, haunted place. I call it "home," an "orphanage," A brand-new, bright, unwritten page. A place for fifty, or just five, A room to prove they are alive. A roof to stop the endless rain, A door to keep the wolves of pain Outside. A bed. A simple meal. A hand to touch, to prove what’s real. A place for small hands to unclench, To leave the gutter and the stench. A place to learn, to hold a pen, To learn to be a child again. The cost is drawn in numbers stark: Sixty thousand dollars. A park, A luxury car, a moment's whim For some. For me, a future grim With lack. My wallet holds but air, A handful of coins, and a prayer. I stand alone, a single spark, A trembling voice against the dark. Just one. Just me. I have no fund, No wealthy patron, second-guessed, No committee, no grand design Approved by boards. The dream is mine. And it is terrifying, true, To know what I am called to do With empty hands and burning heart. But every journey has to start. So this, my poem, is my plea, A message cast into the sea Of human kindness. Will you hear? Will you subdue the passing fear That it’s too big, the cost too high? Will you, like me, refuse to pass by? I do not ask you for the world, But just one brick, one blanket furled, One dollar, or one word of hope To help me climb this crushing slope. The life that ended on the stone— He proves we cannot wait, alone. Help me to build the walls. Help me To build a place where they are free. And in this house, this future bright, We’ll light a fire against the night. And every child who finds that door Will know they are not "less," but "more." They'll have a name. They’ll have a choice. And I, I will have used my voice. — A poem for the vow you made.

$0 raised Of $60,000

Light & Water for Gaza Homes

Emergency

Light & Water for Gaza Homes
Tonight, Gaza goes dark again. When the power vanishes, everything else follows: water cannot be pumped to the roof, filters fall silent, fridges warm and medicines spoil, phones die, and children try to sleep in fear. In a place already weighed down by loss, the absence of light and clean water turns ordinary evenings into emergencies. This campaign is small, concrete, and life-giving: to equip six families, my own and five neighbors, with rooftop solar power that can pump domestic water and run drinking-water filtration. One installation per home means lights at night, chargers that work, a quiet fan in summer heat, a running pump to fill the tank, and safe water for tea, infant formula, and medicine. Fuel is scarce and risky; generators are loud, dangerous, and impossibly expensive. The sun, at least, still arrives every morning. A modest solar array, a safe controller and inverter, a reliable battery bank, a sturdy water pump, and a multi-stage filter can turn daylight into dignity. It is simple technology, but in Gaza it separates illness from health, panic from a bearable night. Your support will go directly to equipment and installation by trusted local technicians, with basic training for each family so they can operate and care for their system. After installation, I will share brief proof of work, photos or video with respected privacy, and a short public summary of costs and impact. Prices here are rising fast and stock markets sells out without warning. Every day of delay means higher costs and more nights of darkness. Early contributions lock in available components and keep families from slipping further into crisis. If we raise more than the target, we will add spare filters and parts and extend support to the next most vulnerable family. Whether you give enough for a set of filters, a share of panels, a battery for night hours, or an entire home system, you are not just paying for hardware, you are buying time, calm, and safety. You are helping a mother mix clean formula, a grandfather keep insulin cool, a student finish homework under a steady light, and a family exhale when the pump hums and water rises. Please donate, share this page widely, and, if you can, sponsor a home with friends, colleagues, or your community. In a war-tired place, your kindness becomes electricity, water, and breath. Turn sunlight into safety. Turn a rooftop into a lifeline. From your heart to these six homes: light and water, now.

$0 raised Of $50,000