Our Story

Why Support Through Us

A new humanitarian model — transparent, direct, and respectful of human dignity.

Why We Created This Platform

This platform was born from a painful reality that people in Palestine live every single day.

As economic and humanitarian crises continue to deepen, and as poverty, unemployment, and displacement rise dramatically, thousands of Palestinian families have become almost entirely dependent on humanitarian aid to survive.

But over time, another serious problem emerged: many donations never fully reach the people they were intended for. Administrative complications, lack of transparency, financial restrictions, the resale of in-kind aid, and losses during transportation and distribution have created a growing gap between the donor's genuine intention and what actually reaches families in need.

At the same time, sending financial support from abroad has become increasingly difficult due to:

  • banking restrictions,
  • suspended transfer services,
  • delayed international transactions,
  • and financial barriers affecting transfers into Palestine.

All of this pushed us to rethink humanitarian aid itself. We believed there had to be a more transparent, more direct, and more effective way to help families in need. That is how this platform began.

When Daily Life Becomes a Fight for Survival

In the West Bank, the crisis is no longer just about economic statistics or political headlines. It has become a daily reality for hundreds of thousands of Palestinian families struggling to secure the most basic necessities of life: food, medicine, rent, education, and clean water.

Over the past months, the Palestinian economy has entered one of its most dangerous periods in years. Markets have declined, businesses have closed, thousands of workers have lost their livelihoods, and many families now depend on humanitarian aid simply to survive.

But behind every number is a real human story:

  • A father who lost his job and can no longer afford milk for his children.
  • A government employee waiting months for part of his salary.
  • A family displaced from its refugee camp with no idea when they can return home.
  • A mother struggling to pay for medicine or rent amid rising prices and constant uncertainty.

An Economy Collapsing Under Restrictions and Crisis

According to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics (PCBS), unemployment rates in the West Bank rose sharply during 2025, reaching approximately 28.7% — representing nearly 293,000 unemployed people.

The Palestinian economy has also suffered a severe contraction due to war, closures, and the disruption of major sectors of trade and labor. According to World Bank data, the Palestinian economy has lost hundreds of thousands of jobs since late 2023.

This decline did not only affect businesses or markets — it deeply impacted everyday life:

  • Thousands of families lost their only source of income.
  • Household debt increased dramatically.
  • Dependence on food assistance grew rapidly.
  • Access to medicine and healthcare became more difficult.
  • Many families became unable to pay rent and essential bills.

Palestinian Workers: From Livelihood to Sudden Unemployment

Before the recent escalation, tens of thousands of Palestinians depended on work inside Israel or related sectors as their primary source of income. But with increasing security restrictions and the suspension of many work permits, countless workers suddenly found themselves without any income.

For many Palestinian families, this was not simply the loss of a job — it meant losing the ability to:

  • buy food,
  • pay university and school tuition,
  • afford medical treatment,
  • pay rent,
  • and support entire households.

The Crisis Facing Palestinian Government Employees

The Palestinian Authority has faced a growing financial crisis for years due to Israel withholding large portions of Palestinian clearance revenues. According to official statements, withheld Palestinian funds have exceeded 10 billion shekels.

This situation has resulted in:

  • delayed and partial salary payments,
  • growing debt among employees,
  • declining purchasing power,
  • weakened public services,
  • and increased dependence on loans and aid.

Poverty Is No Longer an Exceptional Situation

According to a joint report issued by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and ESCWA, the poverty rate in Palestine is expected to reach approximately 74.3%, meaning that more than 4.1 million Palestinians are living below the poverty line. The report also warns that the current war and economic collapse are erasing nearly 70 years of development progress.

Many families who once considered themselves middle class are now struggling to survive and require food assistance, rent support, medical aid, educational support, and help securing fuel, electricity, and water. For many people today, humanitarian aid is no longer additional support — it has become a means of survival.

Jenin and Tulkarm Camps: Displacement Within Homeland

In the northern West Bank, refugee camps in Jenin, Tulkarm, and Nur Shams have experienced large-scale military operations that triggered one of the largest waves of internal displacement in the region in years. According to UNRWA and OCHA, nearly 40,000 Palestinians have been displaced from refugee camps in the northern West Bank.

Many families were forced to:

  • leave their homes suddenly,
  • live in schools or temporary shelters,
  • stay with relatives in overcrowded conditions,
  • and abandon their belongings and sources of income behind them.

For children, these were not simply political events or news headlines — they meant losing their homes, feeling unsafe, and being disconnected from normal life and education.

The Humanitarian Aid Crisis Itself

As the number of people in need continues to rise, humanitarian aid has become a critical lifeline. Yet serious challenges have also emerged:

  • delays in international support,
  • banking restrictions,
  • complications in international transfers,
  • loss of aid during distribution,
  • lack of transparency in some traditional channels,
  • and the resale of in-kind aid instead of it fully reaching families in need.

This reality created a painful gap between the donor's intention and the actual impact on the ground.

The Platform Vision

All of this pushed us to create a new and modern way to deliver humanitarian support through financial technology and digital wallets. The platform is built around:

  • digital wallets,
  • stable cryptocurrencies (USDT),
  • field verification of humanitarian cases,
  • transparent campaign reporting,
  • and continuous updates for donors.

Instead of relying entirely on in-kind donations that may be wasted, delayed, stolen, or resold, donors can provide direct financial support that allows families to purchase what they truly need: food, medicine, rent, water, clothing, and education.

We are not simply building a donation website. We are building a new humanitarian model — more transparent, more fair, less dependent on intermediaries, faster in reaching people, and more respectful of human dignity.

Official Sources

  • Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics (PCBS)
  • UN Report on Poverty and Development in Palestine
  • UNRWA
  • OCHA — occupied Palestinian territory
  • United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)

Be part of the solution

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