An initiative for Lebanon

Relief for the displaced.
Solidarity from here.

Hundreds of thousands of Lebanese families have been forced from their homes. This initiative links you directly to organisations on the ground that have been vetted, and provides you with links to donate directly to them.

See the organisations
The situation

A country in crisis

Since the re-start of the war between Israel and Hezbollah on the second of March, after more than a year of Israeli violations to the ceasefire, Lebanon has seen a massive wave of internal displacement. Families across the south, Beirut and the Bekaa have fled their homes, many for the second or third time. An estimated 1 million people are now internally displaced.

Local organisations — rooted in their communities, trusted by the people they serve — are carrying much of the burden. They need sustained, flexible funding to continue their work: essential supplies, food distribution, medical care, psychosocial support, and menstrual health.

This campaign connects you directly to these organisations. Every donation flows to verified, accountable relief work on the ground. Their pages will be updated regularly with news from the field.

The organisations

Each has been selected for their track record, transparency, and proximity to the communities they serve.
Community relief

Beit Aam

البيت العام

Beit Aam — "The Common House" — is a community space in Beirut, that turned its operations to relief efforts when the war began. Run almost entirely by volunteers, it collects cash and in-kind donations to supply shelters with essentials: diapers, blankets, pillows, hygiene and menstrual kits. Beit Aam works with informal shelters and displaced families who fall outside state support — the people hardest to reach and easiest to overlook. What started locally has expanded across the Bekaa, Saida, the Shouf, Aley, and Mount Lebanon.

Essential supplies Menstrual products Informal shelters Volunteer-led
Menstrual health & dignity

Jeyetna

جايتنا

Jeyetna — "we got it", a Lebanese euphemism for getting your period — is a feminist collective fighting period poverty across Lebanon. Since the economic collapse, the price of menstrual products has risen by over 500%, pushing two-thirds of women in Lebanon into period poverty. When the war displaced hundreds of thousands more, Jeyetna pivoted to emergency distribution: reusable and disposable menstrual products, hygiene kits, and awareness sessions in shelters and displacement sites across the country. Jeyetna is fighting not only period poverty but also the stigma and taboo around menstruation that is often exacerbated in shelters and camps.

Menstrual products Hygiene kits Awareness & education
Relief & community resilience

Ahla Fawda

أحلى فوضى

Ahla Fawda — "Beautiful Chaos" — is a grassroots NGO built around its EcoHub, a community centre that combines humanitarian aid with circular, sustainable solutions. Since the war began, the EcoHub has become a frontline relief hub operating at full capacity. The team runs two active kitchens serving over 1,200 cooked meals a day across shelters and schools, while supporting 100–120 displaced families daily who are living outside formal shelters — on streets, in abandoned buildings, or with host families. They distribute food, hygiene kits, clothing, blankets, and mattresses, alongside children's books and toys. For the youngest displaced, Ahla Fawda creates safe spaces through storytelling, art activities, and community engagement.

Cooked meals Essential supplies Psychosocial support
Arts & mutual aid

Haven for Artists

هايفن للفنانات والفنانين

Haven for Artists is a feminist cultural organisation in Beirut working at the intersection of art and activism. Founded in 2011, Haven has long served as a safe space for marginalised artists and communities. When the war began, the team activated a mutual aid network — coordinating with grassroots initiatives and community collectives to distribute mattresses, blankets, food, hygiene kits, and medication to displaced families. Haven also organises fundraising events — film screenings, figure drawing salons, and community gatherings — turning its cultural infrastructure into a lifeline. Art and solidarity, under the same roof.

Mutual aid Essential supplies Cultural fundraising

Every donation counts

You don't need to be on the ground to make a difference. A single donation can supply a family with a meal, clothes, or provide a displaced woman with menstrual products at a time of need.

If this resonates with you, consider sharing it. Send it to a friend, post it in a group chat, pass it along to a colleague. The more people see this, the more families get reached.

Follow us on Instagram →

Who we are

Pia Kfoury and Maya Bou Ayache are two Lebanese living in Brussels. This is a personal initiative. Just two people trying to mobilise as much support as possible for home. Every organisation featured here has been personally vetted, and every donation link goes directly to them.