💔 The Need is Urgent. The Response is Collective.
Right now, families in Sudan and the neighboring refugee camps are facing unimaginable hardship—lives shattered by war, displacement, and hunger. In places like Nyarugusu and Gorom refugee camps, people are surviving in overcrowded shelters, with little access to clean water, food, or medical care. We’re reaching out not for charity, but for solidarity across borders. Our struggle is one for justice, dignity, and collective survival for those running from violence, not just “refugees” as a distant category, but as neighbors, parents, and children fighting for their lives.
🌱 Why Your Contribution Matters
Direct, Transparent Aid:
Every pound or dollar you give goes straight to urgent essentials—food, clean water, basic shelter, hygiene kits, and medicines—without corporate middlemen or bloated “administrative” overhead. This is aid that skips the bureaucracy and reaches people in displacement as fast as possible.
Restore Dignity & Autonomy:
Many displaced families in camps are treated like cases in reports, not as people with choices, skills, and stories. When you support them, you help restore dignity and autonomy—the right to decide how to use resources, feed their children, and rebuild their lives on their own terms.
Empowerment, Not Handouts:
This is not about pity. It’s about building a common solidarity economy—a network of care where support flows from people who have a bit to those who have almost nothing. When you give, share, and organize, you’re part of a commons of mutual aid that can outlive any single crisis.
1. Donate What You Can
Even small amounts add up fast.
Every £40 or £60 can help buy food for a displaced family for several days, or pay for basic medical supplies and hygiene items for women and children in the camps.
Every £100–£200 can contribute to shelter repairs, safe water, or emergency medical care in overcrowded camps like Nyarugusu and Gorom.
Your donation is a seed of hope in a system designed to neglect them.
2. Share and Amplify
Silence is part of the violence.
Share this appeal in groups, classrooms, WhatsApp networks, Discord servers, and among your friends.
Translate or repost it in your local language so more people can see it.
Tag or tag communities that care about Sudan, Sudanese refugees, and global solidarity.
Every repost, comment, and story helps break the media blackout that keeps Sudan’s suffering invisible.
3. Engage in Solidarity, Not Charity
This is not just a fundraiser—it’s a political act.
Start conversations about why people are displaced, how borders and militarized “security” are used to control their movements, and how mutual aid and grassroots organizing can challenge the systems that destroy their lives.
Who profits from this war in Sudan?
Who controls the aid pipelines into the camps?
How can we center Sudanese voices, not just foreign “rescuers”?
🌍 Where Does Your Donation Go?
100% to families in crisis (or to trusted local organizers who know the camps best).
No high‑end “overhead”—minimal institutional filters, maximum connection to people on the ground.
Decisions are made democratically and transparently, with input from displaced families and community organizers.
Updates are shared regularly so donors can see what their money actually does—food distributed, shelters improved, medical costs covered.