Solidarity Run with Palestinian Children

Other

Solidarity Run with Palestinian Children
French: Nous sommes deux amies qui participons au semi-marathon du Wadi Rum en Jordanie. Pour cette occasion, nous lançons une cagnotte afin que 100% des fonds reviennent à l’ONG “Palestinian Humanitarian Response Center” qui agit à Gaza et au Caire. Créée en 2023 par Awni Farhat, le Palestinian Humanitarian Response Center (PHRC) est une organisation à but non lucratif basée aux Pays-Bas. Sa mission : protéger les enfants palestiniens et raviver l’espoir dans un contexte de violence extrême. Le PHRC se consacre à l’accompagnement des enfants touchés par la guerre et l’exil, en leur offrant un soutien face aux traumatismes, un espace d’expression émotionnelle et des outils pour reconstruire leur résilience. Face à l’ampleur des souffrances psychologiques causées par ce conflit, l’association met en place des activités interactives et thérapeutiques pour permettre aux enfants de libérer la parole, apaiser les blessures intérieures et entamer un chemin de guérison. En dehors de Gaza, le PHRC a également mis en place un espace communautaire pour les enfants au Caire, offrant un accompagnement psychosocial, des activités éducatives et un lieu sûr pour les familles palestiniennes déplacées. En mai 2024, environ 100 000 Palestiniens avaient trouvé refuge en Égypte, dont 15 000 enfants en âge d’être scolarisés, restés sans école à cause d’obstacles administratifs. « Nous essayons de créer une étreinte pour ces enfants et de marcher à leurs côtés vers un avenir, au cœur de cette réalité brisée. Nous devons faire naître l’espoir. » – Awni Farhat 💡 Rejoignez notre initiative solidaire ! Chaque don peut changer la vie de ces enfants. 🌍 En savoir plus sur les actions du PHRC : https://www.palestinehumanitarianresponse.com/ English: We are two friends running the Wadi Rum Full Moon Half Marathon in Jordan to support the Palestinian Humanitarian Response Center (PHRC), which provides mental health support and trauma relief to Palestinian children in Gaza and Cairo. Children are paying the heaviest price in Gaza. More than 14,000 have lost their lives, countless others remain trapped under the rubble, and many have been left orphaned. No child has been spared—every single one is exposed to overwhelming trauma. Founded in 2023 by Awni Farhat, the PHRC is a non-profit organization based in the Netherlands with a mission to protect children and create hope amid ongoing severe violence. The organization focuses on trauma relief, emotional healing, and resilience-building for children affected by war and displacement. The genocide is leaving deep emotional scars on these children, and through interactive games and therapeutic activities, the PHRC offers a safe space where they can express emotions, process trauma, and begin healing. Beyond Gaza, the PHRC has also established a community space for children in Cairo, providing psychosocial support, educational activities, and a safe environment for displaced Palestinian children and families. As of May 2024, around 100,000 Palestinians had fled to Egypt, including 15,000 primary school-aged children who remained out of school due to bureaucratic barriers. “We are trying to create a hug for these kids and walk with them toward a future within this damaged reality. We need to create hope.” – Awni Farhat 💡 Join us in our support! Every donation can make a difference for these children. 🌍 Learn more about PHRC’s activities: https://www.palestinehumanitarianresponse.com/

$1,664 raised Of $2,000

Rusted Radishes Journal | مجلة فَمْ

Other

Rusted Radishes Journal | مجلة فَمْ
Since 2012, through disaster and upheaval, Rusted Radishes: Beirut Literary and Art Journal has been publishing the most exciting literature and art from the Arab world, forging meaning from the current moment. The journal has evolved from a local Beirut-based English-language publication to a bilingual platform in Arabic and English and one of the Arab world’s most vital spaces for contemporary literature and art. Through our annual print issues, open-access webzine, and special editions, we bring together established writers and emerging voices shaping the cultural and literary landscapes of our region and diaspora. What began as a small initiative is now a living archive: more than a thousand works have been published across our open-access webzine and our annual print issues, each one speaking to the moment in poetry, prose, art, graphic narrative, and multimedia forms. Our growth has come from a thriving community of editors, writers, and artists in Beirut and the region as well as several creative collaborations with sister platforms and institutions. These partnerships have allowed us to deepen our engagement with urgent questions: How do we translate pain in the most painful times? What does labor mean in collapsing economies? How do we address shame, illness, money, and war without simplifying or surrendering to despair? At the heart of this massive undertaking is our mission of nurturing writers through the role of the editor—not as a gatekeeper, but as a companion in the creative process. Our editors spend long hours in dialogue with writers, helping shape each piece with care. This ethos also inspired our podcast series, Hazf wa Idafa, which explores the craft of literary editing, opening up the conversation in the Arab world. Our journal is built on the labor of volunteers—editors, designers, translators, digital content managers—who give their time and hearts to keep this space alive. We are grateful for the support of the American University of Beirut, which has provided funding for the printing costs of the annual special issue as well as event funding; and for the Arab Fund for Arts and Culture (AFAC) for four years of funding to expand our Arabic section as a source of contemporary Arabic literature. However, sustaining the journal as a whole to pay the people who keep it alive depends on the community it serves. In moments of devastation—Lebanon’s economic collapse, the port explosion, Israel’s ongoing attacks on Lebanon and genocide of Palestinians—Rusted Radishes has remained a space for meaning-making in the Arab world and beyond. If you believe in our mission, we invite you to support Rusted Radishes to reach our first fundraising goal for the year: $35,000 Your contribution helps us continue. Your solidarity makes this possible. To learn more about us, check our webzine at www.rustedradishes.com. How will we use $35,000? To pay people! 1. Building on our annual issues which presciently address urgent contexts, most recently themed Sea Change (2019), Health and Illness (2021), Money (2023), Labor & Idleness (2024), and Pain (2025), we will publish our forthcoming themed issue in print and online. Funds will go toward paying contributors, editors, digital content managers, and designers. 2. Keeping our webzine as a current source of literature, art, and critical writing, we will publish one webzine piece per week for the next year. Funds will go toward paying contributors, editors, digital content managers, and designers. 3. We will hire a media manager to boost our networking and outreach and promote our contributors. Local contributions*: $1-29 receive recognition in our next issue and online. $30-49 receive our latest print issue: Pain. Make a donation before Thursday, June 26, and be the first to receive a copy at our launch! $50-99 receive our latest print issue + a notebook, delivered to you. $100-149 receive the last 2 issues available + a notebook, delivered to you. $150-200 receive your choice of 3 items (print journal/notebook/digital). $200+ We will reach out to you! *For local/Beirut contributions, in addition to making a donation at this online campaign, you may also donate offline at any BOB Finance branch in Lebanon by mentioning fundahope and the specific campaign ID (ID # 2914) at the counter. International contributions: $1-29 receive recognition in our next issue and online. $30-99 receive the digital version of our latest issue: Pain. $100-149 receive a copy of our latest issue, Pain, delivered to you. $150-200 receive a copy of our latest issue, Pain, delivered to you + the digital versions of the latest three issues: Money, Labor & Idleness, and Pain. $200+ We will reach out to you! All contributions will be recognized in our next issue and online and receive our infinite gratitude as well as more of our labor toward literature and art from the Arab world!

$190 raised Of $35,000

HOPE FOR KIDS

Other

HOPE FOR KIDS
Hello my name is David Otieno ,founder of The feed the kids,i am a Parent to many from Nairobi area ,I am 39yrs old,   student at church  I run a project that helps children's and needy people here in my neighborhood. We have a feeding program that usually takes place every Saturday where we engage with the kids and get to hear the challenges they are facing back at home. Through this foundation some of these kids school fees have been paid, goods have been donated to them and also we are finalizing some agreements with the parents so we can see how to come up with different activities/skills that can help them in future as we feed them.    We also have mentorship for girls living in our community where we talk to them issues about menstrual hygiene,and basically how to be safe as a young girl and after our 1hr session we give them 2packets of sanitary towels and 2rolls of tissue. We also have women empowerment programs where we support women with funds raised by well wishers as start up capital so they can start their own business and be independent as an individual . Also we have managed to support some members of our community who are sick and with no medicine we ensure they get their medicine on time and when it's needed only for those who are totally unable to buy or help themselves.    We have a dress me up initiative where we get to dress school going kids with brand new school uniform this is only for those who are in need. Among the other projects we do are, Slippers donation this usually happens when the schools have closed we randomly select needy kids from different villages and gift them.    Clothes donation, through well wishers from this page who donate clothes, shoes, school bags, books, uniform and basically the things they don't use to us we give them to the most deserving individuals from this community so if you have something you'd like to give kindly get in touch 🙏🏾.    We also try to donate food stuff to families here in Sinai, what we do is identify those in need and visit them with some unga, rice, sugar and soap.    We've been doing this for 2years now this is our third year and we thank God because His blessings have been sufficient in our lives from the beginning 🥰.    I welcome you all to partner with us so we can grow as a community and keep spreading love and kindness to those in need 🙏🏾   From the kitchen to the community👥   God your Child is grateful🙏   To support use PayPal dotieno136@gmail.com #communitysupport  #feedingprogram2025

$0 raised Of $5,000

Rebuild our space ... Bring back our smiles!

Other

Rebuild our space ... Bring back our smiles!
<Arabic below> Across the world, humanitarian aid is shrinking — and vulnerable communities like ours are paying the highest price. In Wavel Camp (Baalbek, Lebanon), our kindergarten was more than just a school. It was a sanctuary — a safe, nurturing space where 160 children from Palestinian and Syrian refugee families, as well as vulnerable Lebanese households, could learn, play, and dream. Then came the war. Our beloved building was damaged, and our hopes rested on support to rebuild. But amid global funding cuts, our children were left behind — with no classroom, no resources, and no safe place to return to. Still, we refuse to give up. We’re determined to restore this vital space — to bring back warmth, safety, and joy to children who have already endured far too much. But we can’t do it without you. Your support can rebuild not just a building — but their future. Every dollar counts. النسخة العربية في جميع أنحاء العالم، يشهد التمويل الإنساني تراجعًا حادًا — والمجتمعات الأكثر هشاشة، مثل مجتمعنا، تدفع الثمن الأكبر. في مخيم الجليل (بعلبك، لبنان)، لم تكن روضتنا مجرد مدرسة، بل كانت ملاذًا آمنًا — مساحة دافئة وآمنة لـ 160 طفلًا من اللاجئين الفلسطينيين والسوريين، بالإضافة إلى عائلات لبنانية ضعيفة، ليتعلموا ويلعبوا ويحلموا. لكن الحرب دمّرت المبنى. ورغم أملنا بالحصول على الدعم لإعادة التأهيل، أدت التخفيضات العالمية في التمويل إلى ترك أطفالنا خلف الجميع — بلا صفوف، بلا موارد، بلا مكان آمن. ومع ذلك، لم نفقد الأمل. نحن مصمّمون على إعادة بناء هذه المساحة الحيوية — لإعادة الدفء والأمان والفرح إلى أطفال تحمّلوا فوق طاقتهم. ولكننا بحاجة إليكم. دعمكم لا يُعيد بناء مبنى فحسب، بل يُعيد الأمل بمستقبل أفضل. كل مساهمة تصنع فرقًا.

$235 raised Of $45,000