logo

Aseel App

A seamless browsing experience

Campaign Image

Child and Family Relief

$37,610 Raised of $38,000

98%

Recent Contributions

Anonymous

$100
2 years ago

Anonymous

$100
2 years ago

Anonymous

$100
2 years ago

Anonymous

$200
2 years ago

Anonymous

$20
2 years ago

About Campaign

The "Child and Family Relief Fund" campaign aims to support malnourished children and families who are significantly impacted by the ongoing crisis and famine in Afghanistan. Our goal is to support 350 malnourished children and 150 ultra-poor families (including widows and women-led households) in different provinces of Afghanistan. Aseel's Emergency Package for Child Relief (55 USD per package) saves a malnourished child, while Aseel's Emergency Food Package 1 (70 USD per package) feeds a family of 6-8 members for five weeks. You can review both packages by clicking on this link: https://aseelapp.com/af/er.html. Please donate as much/little as you can. Every donation counts and can make a difference. Please help us #SaveAfghanistan, #SaveAfghanChildren, and save families facing humanitarian crises. The beneficiaries for this campaign will be identified/registered by the organizers, Aseel Team, and other volunteers on the ground. The packages will be delivered by the volunteers who will report back to the organizers and Aseel Team. Aseel Team and Zikria Tory will provide updates to the donors via email and his Twitter handle (@ToryKhan25). We will also provide the beneficiaries with Omid (Hope) cards to track each beneficiary. ABOUT Aseel: Aseel is an Afghan-led, international company operated by staff worldwide, including founder Nasrat Khalid who is currently based in Washington, D.C., and who previously worked for international organizations including the World Bank and ICANN. The U.S. Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control has approved Aseel's financial model for operations in Afghanistan. Aseel's work has been covered by international publications including Time, Al Jazeera English, The New Humanitarian, The Intercept, etc. Aseel launched its Emergency Response in August 2021 to allow people inside and outside Afghanistan to purchase necessary aid packages for families in need. The packages include emergency food, baby care, life, first-aid, and winter. Aseel has active volunteers in 24 provinces (and expanding this network) who identify and assist beneficiaries in need. Aseel COMMITMENT TO TRANSPARENCY: All donor funds go directly to aid packages for recipients, with the exception of an optional tip that donors may leave at their discretion for Aseel's operating costs. For total transparency, campaign organizers receive a list of recipients when the distribution is complete and may confirm with recipients that the packages were received. If you would like to purchase an aid package directly for a specific individual or family you know in Afghanistan, you may do so Here, and Aseel will deliver it. MORE ABOUT AFGHANISTAN HUMANITARIAN CRISIS: According to the World Food Program (WFP), more than 22.8 million people in Afghanistan are identified as acutely food insecure, 8.7 million people face emergency levels of food insecurity, and 2 million children are malnourished. Read more Here. According to a BBC Report "The tragedy of Afghanistan's malnourished children," Jalil Ahmad was brought into hospital hardly breathing, in Helmand Province. His hands and feed have gone cold. His mother, Markah, said that her son is two and a half years old but looks a lot tinier. Jalil is severely malnourished and has tuberculosis. His mother, Markah, says, "I am helpless as he suffers. I've spent the whole night scared that at any moment he'll stop breathing." You can access the BBC report Here. Based on the New Yorker Report on January 5, 2022, "Afghanistan has Become the World's Largest Humanitarian Crisis," more than 20 million Afghans are on the brink of famine. You can access the report Here. In Afghanistan, parents are sacrificing their bodies to feed their children while others consider selling their children to survive. The Telegraph interviewed Aziza, a mother of three children who said she is waiting to be matched with a patient who needs a kidney. She stated, "My children roam on the streets begging. If I don't sell my kidney, I will be forced to sell my one-year-old daughter." You can access the report via: Link1, Link2, Link3, and Link4. Photo: Everyday Afghanistan

Organizers

Z

zikria zikria

Organizer has no bio