🇵🇸 A global initiative led by two Palestinian female doctors to offer immediate relief and sustainable support to the people of Gaza
🍉⬇️ Donate today
The Nakba of 1948 is a defining moment in Palestinian history, marking the displacement of a large part of the Palestinian population during the conflict surrounding the creation of Israel. For Palestinians, it represents more than a political event; it is a deep collective memory passed down through generations. Entire villages were emptied, families were separated, and many people were forced to seek refuge in different regions, leaving behind homes, land, and a way of life that had existed for centuries.
Even after many decades, the impact of the Nakba is still present in the lives of Palestinians. It is reflected in refugee camps, in stories shared by elders, and in the continued longing for return and justice. Despite these hardships, Palestinians have shown remarkable resilience, preserving their identity through education, culture, and strong community ties. The memory of the Nakba continues to shape their determination to seek dignity, peace, and stability.
Today, the Nakba is also a reminder of the importance of human rights and the need to protect the dignity of all people, regardless of their background or nationality. It encourages reflection on history while also looking forward to a future built on understanding and coexistence.
Pal Humanity Slogan:
“Pal Humanity — Building Knowledge, Strengthening Identity, and Inspiring Hope for a Brighter Future.”#palhumanity #palxoob #alleyesongaza #insidegaza #medicalaid
The Nakba (“the Catastrophe”) refers to the events of 1948, when hundreds of thousands of Palestinians were displaced from their homes during the war that led to the establishment of the State of Israel. For Palestinians, it is not only a historical event, but also a lasting memory that continues to shape their identity, culture, and daily life. Families were forced to leave their towns and villages, many becoming refugees in neighboring countries and across different parts of Palestine. Homes were lost, communities were scattered, and generations grew up carrying the stories of their ancestors and the hope of return.
The Nakba is remembered each year as a symbol of loss, resilience, and the struggle for dignity and justice. Despite the hardship, the Palestinian people have continued to preserve their heritage, language, and traditions. The memory of the Nakba is not only about the past, but also about the present reality of displacement and the future hope for peace, stability, and the right to live freely and safely in their homeland.
Through education, storytelling, and cultural expression, new generations continue to learn about what happened in 1948, ensuring that the history is not forgotten. It remains a powerful reminder of the importance of human rights, justice, and the need for understanding among all people.
Slogan for Pal Humanity:
“Pal Humanity — Empowering Education, Preserving Dignity, and Inspiring Hope for a Better Tomorrow.”
In Gaza, pregnant women are not living the peaceful journey pregnancy is meant to be. Instead, they endure heavy days filled with fear, exhaustion, and uncertainty.
Mothers wait for their babies amid the sounds of bombardment, power outages, and severe shortages of food and medicine, while trying to hold on to hope despite the harsh realities surrounding them.
Pregnancy, which should be a time of joy and preparation for new life, has become a daily struggle for countless women.
Some mothers walk long distances just to reach a hospital or medical center, while others face a lack of medical care, essential checkups, and even the most basic needs every pregnant woman deserves.
They do not only need aid — they need people who hear their voices, understand their suffering, and restore their basic right to care, safety, and dignity.
Today, PalHumanity opens the “Soul Clinic” in Gaza.
A place rising quietly, yet powerfully, from everything that was lost.
A laboratory bringing answers back to where there was once nothing.
A pharmacy restoring the right to treatment.
Ultrasound examinations replacing silence with the sound every mother longs to hear.
And obstetricians and gynecologists standing with unwavering humanity at the threshold of new life.
This is more than a reopening.
This is reclamation.
Reclaiming care.
Reclaiming dignity.
Reclaiming the right to begin again.
Because even after destruction tried to rewrite the ending, Gaza still chooses life.
And mothers still carry hope through fear, and hold onto dreams despite the pain.
And today…
the soul is not only surviving,
it is blooming back into life once again. 🤍
In Gaza, education has become one of the greatest challenges children face every single day. Between interrupted schooling, difficult living conditions, fear, displacement, and uncertainty, many students struggle just to continue learning and hold onto a sense of normal life.
For countless children, school is no longer only a place for lessons and exams. It has become a place where they search for hope, comfort, safety, and the feeling that their future still matters. Despite everything happening around them, Gaza’s students continue to show incredible strength. They carry their books, attend their classes, and hold tightly to their dreams even during the hardest moments.
The reality of education in Gaza is painful. Many students face emotional stress, lack of resources, and constant instability that deeply affects their ability to learn. Yet even through these hardships, they continue trying, believing that education is the path toward a better future.
With PalHumanity, education becomes more than just studying. It becomes support, encouragement, healing, and hope. Through educational activities, creative programs, emotional support, and safe learning spaces, children are given the chance to feel motivated, valued, and confident again.
At PalHumanity, we believe every child deserves the opportunity to learn in an environment filled with care, understanding, and positivity. We believe that even in the darkest circumstances, education can still bring light.
Because Gaza’s children are not defined by the hardships they face — they are defined by their resilience, their dreams, and their determination to keep going.
And through education, hope continues to grow. 🤍
In Gaza, school was never just a place to learn—it was a sanctuary of hope, a space where children dreamed of a brighter future. But for a long time, that light has been interrupted. Classrooms fell silent, the voices of teachers faded, and the laughter that once filled the halls disappeared. No morning bells, no eager hands raising questions, no notebooks opened with excitement—only a heavy silence that settled over young hearts waiting to grow through education.
Yet even through this painful interruption, the desire to learn never disappeared. In their eyes, hope still shines—quiet but unbroken. Because education is not a luxury; it is a right, a lifeline that every child deserves.
This is where Pal Humanity stepped in—not just to support, but to restore what was lost. They carried education back into the lives of children, reopening doors that had long been closed. With them, learning became more than lessons—it became warmth, encouragement, and a reminder that every child still has a future worth fighting for.
With Pal Humanity, education is no longer a distant dream. Children are writing again, reading again, and most importantly, dreaming again. Step by step, hope is being rebuilt—stronger than before, even in the face of hardship.
Because schools may close, but the love for learning never fades…
And a child who carries knowledge in their heart can never truly be defeated.
Here’s a refined, powerful English version of your message:
⸻
Two years…
Two long years have passed without the children of Gaza hearing the morning school bell,
without opening their notebooks,
without running freely in schoolyards filled with laughter.
Two years of forced absence from classrooms,
where education — once a basic right —
became a distant dream.
It was never about their willingness to learn.
Children in Gaza have never lost their curiosity, their desire, their light.
But the circumstances were heavier than any child should carry…
war, fear, displacement, and the constant disruption of anything that feels like normal life.
They grew up waiting.
Waiting for a chance to write, to read, to dream again.
Because for them, education is not just lessons —
it is hope,
it is a doorway to something beyond the pain they know.
And then, hope returned…
With PalHumanity,
learning began again.
Classrooms found their voices,
notebooks were opened once more,
and small dreams started to grow again in young hearts.
This was not just about education —
it was about restoring a childhood that was slipping away,
about rebuilding a future that once felt uncertain.
In every pencil held,
in every word written,
there is a story of resilience…
a child choosing to learn despite everything.
PalHumanity didn’t just bring back education —
it brought back hope.
It proved that learning can begin again… even after two years of silence.
Because every child deserves to learn,
to dream,
and to have a future full of possibility.
⸻
She feels the movement of her child for the first time…
a small reminder that life is growing inside her.
A life that depends on her for everything.
But her body is weak.
Not because she isn’t strong — but because she has been deprived of what every human being deserves: food, care, dignity.
Hunger doesn’t wait for birth.
It reaches into the earliest stages of life, shaping a child before they even enter the world.
It steals nutrients from the mother, and with them, the strength her baby needs to survive.
This is the reality for millions of women.
Carrying life while battling starvation.
Holding hope in one hand… and fear in the other.
Will her baby be born healthy?
Will she have the strength to deliver safely?
Will this life she is nurturing get a fair chance?
These are not questions any mother should have to ask.
At PalHumanity, we stand at this fragile intersection —
where a mother’s survival and a child’s future are deeply connected.
Through our perinatal work, we provide care, support, and the basic human right of health and nourishment.
Because saving a life doesn’t begin at birth.
It begins in the quiet, unseen moments —
in the womb, in the struggle, in the hope that refuses to fade.
Every mother deserves strength.
Every child deserves a beginning filled with possibility — not pain.
In Gaza, childhood is being stolen by hunger.
This is not just a crisis—it is a slow, relentless emergency unfolding in the smallest bodies. According to recent IPC estimates, around 132,000 children under the age of five are expected to suffer from acute malnutrition, including over 41,000 facing the most severe, life-threatening conditions. Behind these numbers are children who should be learning to speak, to laugh, to play—but instead are fighting simply to survive.
Mothers are watching their children grow weaker by the day, with empty kitchens and no safe access to food, clean water, or basic healthcare. Aid restrictions and ongoing instability have turned everyday survival into an impossible challenge. For many families, there are no choices left—only fear, exhaustion, and the hope that tomorrow might bring relief.
Malnutrition does not just mean hunger. It means fragile bodies that cannot fight illness. It means delayed growth, long-term health damage, and in too many cases, lives lost far too soon. It means a generation at risk before it even has a chance to begin.
And yet, these children are more than victims of statistics. They are dreams waiting to be protected. They are futures that still deserve a chance.
The world cannot look away.
Every child deserves nourishment, safety, and dignity—not survival against impossible odds.
PalHumanity stands with Gaza’s children—because their lives are not negotiable.
#GazaChildren #EndMalnutrition #HumanityFirst #PalHumanity #SaveGazaChildren
Two years ago, Operation Olive Branch and PAL Humanity made a quiet, urgent commitment: to protect life at its most fragile stage in Gaza.
Two years later, that commitment has been tested in ways no one could have imagined.
This prenatal project was never just about supplies — it was about survival. It became a bridge between despair and dignity, between fear and care. In the middle of devastation, where hunger tightens its grip and uncertainty fills every day, we carried what we could: formula for empty shelves, diapers for newborns who deserved comfort, and support for mothers navigating the unthinkable.
We have witnessed strength that cannot be put into words.
Mothers holding on through loss.
Families welcoming life in the shadow of destruction.
Babies fighting, breathing, growing — against all odds.
Every delivery has been a challenge. Every step forward has come with obstacles. But stopping was never an option — because the cost of stopping is too high.
This is what two years looks like:
Not perfection. Not ease.
But persistence. Presence. Refusal to abandon.
In a time marked by violence and deprivation, this project has been a reminder that care still exists — that even in the darkest conditions, humanity can choose to act.
We mark two years not with celebration alone, but with deep recognition of the road traveled — and the road still ahead.
For every baby who made it.
For every mother who continues.
For every hand that helped carry this work forward —
We remain committed.
We remain present.
And we will keep going.
Today, our students didn’t just attend school—they celebrated who they are.
At PalHumanity, our traditional open day was filled with meaning beyond what words can fully capture. In the Gaza Strip, where daily life is often uncertain, moments like these become deeply powerful.
Students proudly shared their culture through traditional clothing, music, food, and stories. Each detail carried history. Each smile carried strength. Each moment reflected a deep connection to identity and belonging.
Because when everything around them feels unstable, culture becomes something they can hold onto.
This day was not just about celebration—it was about preserving identity, building confidence, and reminding every child that their story matters.
At PalHumanity, we believe education is more than lessons. It is about creating spaces where children feel proud of who they are, where their voices are heard, and where their heritage continues to live on through them.
Even in the most difficult circumstances, their culture shines.
Even in uncertainty, their identity remains strong.
And through them, hope continues. 🤍
Two years ago, a fragile but determined idea took root between Operation Olive Branch and PAL Humanity — a promise to stand beside the smallest, most vulnerable lives in Gaza before they even took their first breath.
Today, that promise is still alive.
For two years, this prenatal project has been more than aid. It has been a lifeline — carried through rubble, through hunger, through unimaginable loss. In a place where mothers face fear instead of safety, where newborns enter a world already weighed down by siege, starvation, and violence, we chose — and continue to choose — to show up.
We have carried formula when there was none.
We have delivered diapers when dignity felt out of reach.
We have stood with mothers who had every reason to lose hope — and reminded them they are not alone.
This journey has not been easy. It has been long, exhausting, and often heartbreaking. Every box delivered, every supply secured, every life touched has come through relentless effort, sleepless nights, and unwavering belief that these babies matter.
Because they do.
They matter in every heartbeat that fights to keep going.
They matter in every mother who refuses to give up.
They matter in every small act of care that says: you deserve to live, to grow, to be held, to be safe.
Two years in, and the need has only grown heavier. The conditions have only become harsher. But so has our resolve.
This is not just an anniversary.
It is a testament — to resilience, to solidarity, to humanity refusing to look away.
We honor every mother who trusted us.
We honor every baby who is still here, still fighting.
And we honor every person who has helped carry this mission forward.
We are still here.
We are not stopping.
And as long as there are babies in Gaza who need us — we will continue to answer.