This dedicated page will feature photos and short bios of the individuals and families supported by Earth Angels Act. Each story will be shared with full permission and deep care, honoring dignity, privacy, and the humanity at the center of our work.
Marehan, Ahmed, and Lulu
Marehan is only 23 years old.
She is a new mother, a young wife, and a woman carrying more loss than anyone her age should have to hold.
Her baby girl, Lulu, is just 6 months old.
Mariehan was married only a year and a half ago. Two years ago, she lost her mother. Now she is displaced far from her home, living without close family nearby except for her disabled father. She and her husband, Ahmad, were forced to flee and for months lived in other people’s tents—until supporters like you helped us raise enough to buy them a proper dome tent last month.
That tent gave them shelter.
But it did not give them food.
It did not give them formula.
It did not give them diapers.
And it did not give them income.
Ahmad has not been able to find work. There are almost no jobs. The little they have comes only from donations. Every day, Marehan worries about how to feed her baby, how to keep her warm, how to buy diapers, and how to handle the medical needs that come with caring for a newborn in conditions that are anything but safe.
Marehan wakes up every day and does what mothers everywhere do—she loves her child, she soothes her, she feeds her, she sings to her. But she does it inside a tent, without security, without income, without knowing if tomorrow she will be able to buy what Lulu needs to survive.
This family needs funds for:
Baby formula
Diapers
Occasional medical care for Lulu
Food for the family
Basic hygiene supplies
Your support means Lulu gets milk when she cries.
It means clean diapers.
It means food on the mat.
It means a young family can breathe a little easier in a world that has given them very little.
When you give, you are not just donating.
You are standing beside a mother.
You are holding a baby you may never meet.
You are saying: you are not alone.
Thank you for helping Marehan care for little Lulu.
Tamara
Tamara’s life was torn apart in stages.
Last spring, she lost her husband.
Last summer, she lost her two-year-old daughter.
There was no time to grieve.
Soon after, her brothers were severely injured while trying to get food and supplies. An airstrike left one brother blind and the other paralyzed from the waist down. These are not illnesses — they are war injuries.
Now, Tamara is responsible for their care, as well as for her parents. Her mother urgently needs heart surgery in Egypt. Her father lives with diabetes and high blood pressure. Every person in her family depends on her.
Tamara herself is displaced and struggling to secure basic necessities — food, shelter, medicine — while also navigating grief that few people could survive.
She is not asking for sympathy. She is asking for help to keep her family alive.
Tamara and her family need emergency support:
• food and daily necessities
• medical care and medications
• support related to disability and chronic injury
• stability for a family living under constant strain
• For privacy and safety reasons, Tamara and her family have chosen not to share identifiable photos. The images included show only what they feel is safe to share — but their need is real.
Tamara has already lost more than anyone should.
Your support helps ensure she does not lose what remains.
Ibrahim
Ibrahim is 19 years old.
At an age when most young people are thinking about school, dreams, and the future, Ibrahim is the sole provider for a family of eleven.
He lives in Gaza. His family has lost their home. They now live in a tent. His parents are ill. His grandparents are ill. His younger sisters cannot work. And every day, the responsibility of survival rests on his shoulders alone.
Ibrahim has a spinal injury in his lower back (L4–L5). He lives with constant pain and needs medical injections every few months just to function. He has medical reports and imaging that confirm this injury. Without treatment, he cannot stand, lift, or work for long periods—yet he must, because eleven people depend on him.
He does not complain easily. He works whenever he can. He carries water, food, supplies, and responsibility through pain most people never see.
He is not asking for comfort.
He is asking for survival.
Your donation helps provide:
Food for a family of 11
Medicine for chronic illness and pain
Medical injections for his spinal injury
Basic supplies for life in a tent
Phone/data so he can stay connected to aid and work opportunities
This is not a story about weakness. It is a story about invisible strength—and the cost of carrying too much alone.
Ibrahim should not have to destroy his body to keep his family alive.He should not have to choose between pain and hunger.
When you give, you are not “saving” someone helpless.
You are standing beside someone strong who should not be standing alone.
Hanan
Nurse Hanan and her family
We have been raising funds on behalf of Hanan (20), her siblings Hanin (17), Dima (16), Bayan (13), Yousef (5), Ali (1) and her parents Muhammad and Howaida. They all used to live in their house where they never imagined to live in this nightmare. Hanan is a 20 year old woman who was studying to become a nurse and working in Al-Shifa Hospital. Her house, her university and the hospital she worked in, all got bombed by the IOF.
Hanan and her family left their house to her grandfathers house in the beginning of the genocide. The bombardments were continuous throughout the night that they could not sleep. The IOF was bombing anything from any direction, schools, mosques..etc
They headed to the south of Gaza There were no cars so they walked for 6 hours from a city called Nusairat where they stayed at a school lo turned into a refugee camp for 37 days. After that they were displaced again and ended up in Khan Younis where they stayed for 2 weeks.
Her family has struggled a lot at the hands of the collapsed healthcare system in Gaza with her sister Bayan getting sick with hepatitis. Her mother and father both have asthma and have found the constant build up of debris in Gaza has made everything a lot worse.
Her mother even struggles to bake bread because of the fumes and smoke created and the effect this has on her asthma.
Her brother Ali is one and half years old and they do not have any milk to feed him and he was crying all day and night.
Diapers are expensive and reach 50 dollars. They have been cutting up pieces of fabric from their clothes to use as diapers and he developed a skin rash.
And Hanan used her nursing skills to volunteer in hospitals during the war. She wishes to go back to university and finish her degree.
Her family is in desperate need of medical supplies, diapers, water, and food.
Aisyah, Mahmoud and Yaqub
Aisyah and Mahmoud hace a child named Yaqub and Aisyah is pregnant with her second child . Living through the war life has become extremely difficult for them, and they face daily struggles. Their home was destroyed, and now the family is living in a torn tent. The tent does not protect them from rain, cold, or wind, and they urgently need a new one to stay safe.
Baby Yaqub was kept in an incubator after birth due to low blood levels and received a blood transfusion. He still suffers from rashes and hunger. Every week, he needs two cans of baby formula and one pack of diapers to survive, which the family cannot afford. They are in desperate need of continuous support to provide him with milk, diapers, medicine, and basic needs.
Also with pregnancy, Aisyah needs prenatal support and proper nutrition which is extremely hard to get in Gaza, especially with limited funds.
Message from Aisyah:
I write this with a heavy heart and tears in my eyes. My baby Yaqub cries from hunger, and many times I have no milk to give him. We lost our home and now we live in a torn tent. We have no diapers, no medicine, and no safe place for my baby. Even the smallest donation can help us replace our damaged tent, feed my child, and give him a chance to live safely. Your kindness could save his life. May God bless you for any support you can give.
Maisara
A $4,000 kiosk can give Maisara the chance to support his mother and sisters with dignity, not dependency.
Maisara is 22 years old, but his life has already carried more weight than many people will ever know.
In 2024, his father was killed by the occupation. Overnight, Maisara became the sole protector and provider for his family: his ailing mother and his two young sisters. With no steady income and no safe home, they now live in what remains of their destroyed house—a single cleared-out room inside the rubble.
There are no windows. No doors.
They hang cloth and tarps over broken openings to shield themselves from wind, rain, and dust. Every day, they live with the fear that the remaining walls could collapse at any moment.
Yet even in this impossible situation, Maisara is not asking for a life of charity.
He has been offered a rare and precious opportunity: to purchase a small kiosk—a mini market—for $4,000. This simple shop would give him a way to earn a living, to buy and sell basic goods, and to support his family with his own hands.
This kiosk means:
Food and medicine for his mother
Safety and dignity for his sisters
Stability instead of constant fear
A future built through work, not begging
Maisara dreams of serving his neighbors, rebuilding relationships, and growing his small business step by step. He doesn’t want to be dependent forever—he wants to stand.
By supporting this campaign, you are not only helping a young man survive—you are helping him lead, provide, and rebuild.
Your donation is not just aid.
It is a doorway where there is now only a tarp.
It is a livelihood where there is now only loss.
It is a future where there is now only uncertainty.
Together, we can help Maisara turn grief into purpose—and rubble into life.

































