Help Youssef regain his sight after an explosion — 9 years old, a life to rebuild
Youssef is nine years old. While looking for food for his family, he picked up an object from the ground that looked harmless. It exploded in his hands.
Families in Gaza
Youssef is nine years old. While looking for food for his family, he picked up an object from the ground that looked harmless. It exploded in his hands.
Amjad is a young child living with his parents, Amna and Mahmoud, in the Mawasi area of Khan Yunis. The family is sheltering in a worn tent and has no stable income.
Taleen is a thirteen-year-old girl from Gaza trying to rebuild her life after losing most of her family and her home. She survived under the rubble after the bombing of the family house in Al-Zawayda.
Ibrahim, Yaman, and their family have been displaced through the war in Gaza after their home in Mawasi, Khan Yunis was destroyed. The family lost shelter, clothing, food security, and access to clean water.
Leena and Abdul once had a stable life and hopes for their children. Abdul worked as a lawyer, and the family was focused on education, safety, and a peaceful future.
Waldi is a child living with pain and medical needs in Gaza. His campaign focuses on helping him reach treatment and relief while his family tries to survive the conditions around them.
Who we are
Mama Kamela is a registered association in Spain, registered under number 632872. It is formed by Mireia, Alhucema, and Kristel, and was born from direct contact with families in Gaza and the need to sustain those relationships over time.
This is not a general fundraising platform. It is a home for the family campaigns Mama Kamela accompanies, where every story can keep moving and every family can be followed with care.
La Despensa is the shared pantry. It exists to respond when a family campaign slows down, when urgency appears, or when support is not arriving equally.
Learn moreWe work through individual campaigns for each family, because direct support makes it possible to follow each story over time.
Apapachar means staying close: knowing a family story, sharing it, returning to it, and not disappearing when it stops being visible.
How help arrives
Money is sent digitally whenever possible. Sometimes it moves through direct local transfers, and sometimes through trusted intermediaries indicated by families. Mama Kamela does not decide what the money is used for; families know what they need in each moment.
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