Ramadan is nearly over.
If you need a verified place to donate Zakat or charity to Gaza, 📧📧📧 EMAIL ME @
[email protected] now and I will get you instructions right away.
The nights are closing. The calendar is turning.
But in Gaza, nothing “ends” when Ramadan ends.
Hunger doesn’t stop because Eid is coming.
Orphans don’t stop being orphans.
Families don’t stop needing food, medicine, shelter, and dignity.
So I’m asking you—right now—please don’t let the end of Ramadan become the end of your support for Gaza.
Tonight I’m giving you two ways to turn mercy into something real. Please choose one (or both) and take the next step:
Option A: Help fund warm Iftar meals for families in Gaza (immediate impact)
Option B: Sponsor a newly orphaned child in Gaza (long-term stability)
📧📧📧 If you want the next steps on how to support either project, email me at
[email protected] and my team will reply with everything you need.
For my Muslim family: Ramadan is the month we train our souls to choose discipline over ease, empathy over selfishness, and mercy over apathy. These final days are when we’re supposed to press hardest—because we know how easy it is to drift once the month ends.
For my non-Muslim family: Ramadan is a season where millions of people practice hunger so they don’t forget the hungry—and then try to turn compassion into action. Whether or not you share the faith, the principle is universal: when people are suffering, we show up.
If you’re stuck, here’s the simplest way to decide:
Meals = “feed a family tonight.”
Orphans = “carry a child for the long road.”
📧📧📧Email me at
[email protected] and tell me which one you want to support (meals, orphans, or both). I’ll get you the next steps.
And please share this post with three people. The hardest part of the final days isn’t the need—it’s attention fading. Gaza doesn’t get to fade.
📧📧📧
[email protected]