" My children cry all the time from hunger... The available food here is very expensive. No one can buy it except those who have money. "
Welcome, and thank you for your time.
About Me
My name is Leah, and I'm an information scientist and librarian in Canada. I run a site called Ideocene.net. This page was created to provide a safe place to raise funds for a young Palestinian man I have come to know and whom I have personally verified via his Palestinian identification. He is trying to help his family survive the humanitarian crisis in Gaza. He doesn't have connections to anyone outside of Gaza who can assist him with raising funds to feed his small children, his wife, his mother, and himself. The quoted excerpts in this post all come from my interviews with Mohammed.
Thank you for visiting and taking the time to read his story. You can help Mohammed right now by sharing this page or by making a donation to pay for food through his PayPal link below:
PayPal: The easiest way to donate
Mohammed also set up a QR code to donate via PayPal. It takes you to his personal PayPal donation link. It's very simple, and he can access the donation within minutes to purchase food. I don't handle any of your donations. So far, there does not seem to be a minimum amount you can send. Any amount helps and is deeply appreciated.
Releasing soon: When you donate to Mohammed's PayPal, you'll receive a digital copy of Recipes for Hope: A Delicious Guide to Palestinian Cuisine. To collect your copy, simply take a screenshot of your donation. You can crop or blur any personal information, I just need to see any amount with Mohammed as the recipient. Email it to me at ideocene (at) gmail (dot) com, and I'll send you the download link.
I'm booking it to get it out next week, with updates as I research them. If you donated, thank you so much, you can claim your copy when it's out! ❤️
How I Met Mohammed
As I mentioned, I'm an information scientist. My following on Bluesky is modest, but I often receive requests for humanitarian aid for families trying to survive in Gaza. Like many people, I've been overwhelmed with desperation to help do something about the immense suffering of Palestinians. The need for outside help has increased over the last months as accessing the necessities of life has become extremely dangerous for Gazans.
I share funding campaigns on my Bluesky account every morning now. I'm well aware that bad actors are taking advantage of the situation in Gaza to make money. I try my best with the skills I have to ensure I am not sharing fraudulent campaigns, as the last thing I want to do is harm or mislead anyone, especially concerned donors. These fraudsters make life even harder for the people of Gaza trying to survive.
So when Mohammed reached out and asked if he could speak privately to me, I agreed to hear his story.
I'm glad I did.
Photo before the war: Mohammed is pictured with his two oldest children. They are the pride of his life.
A Father Trying To Cope
Mohammed is a young father of three little children: son Bader, 6 years, his daughter Mira, 4 years, and baby Karim is only 2 years old. In addition to his own family, he cares for his wife Nesma, and his mother, who has been ill during the war.
A student, Mohammed is unable to find employment on the Gaza Strip. Finding sustainable work has been challenging for Palestinians for years, and is almost impossible now due to the humanitarian crisis. UNICEF has reported on this problem before. The poverty in the tent encampments is unimaginable.
Mohammed tells me the water in the camp is polluted. This puts everyone at risk for infectious diseases like cholera. The children are especially vulnerable due to both their age and being forced to endure months of chronic malnutrition.
" Yes, our life here is bad. I don’t know how we will live from now on. My eldest child, Bader, sees some children having good food and some children’s snacks, and he says to me, “Dad, I don’t have the same as them.” "
"This is my baby who needs milk and diapers. He hasn't had milk for 5 months or more. He wears diapers with strips and nylon. At this time, he is showing allergies and bacteria on his skin."
"Some days we feel faint and have pain in our stomach due to not eating because we are unable to buy food."
Why Mohammed Urgently Needs Your Donation
The situation in Gaza is critical. Palestinian families endure threats to their lives not just from the bombings and shootings, but from lack of sanitation in the camps, and the threat of water from the Mediterranean Sea.
He explains:
"All I want is a decent life for me, my children and my family. My children have the right to education and the right to a decent life. My family's needs: buying food and drink. Now the water we drink is polluted. "
The camps have no protection from the elements. Not only do Gazans deal with extreme heat, but soon they will face another brutal winter in this war.
Mohammed continues:
"My children need clothes... we are at the end of summer and they don't have clothes for the winter, except for torn clothes. We need mattresses, blankets, and tent maintenance. The tent we live in is not good. It is made of cloth and wood. In the winter, it is not suitable. Water will reach us and my children will get wet and we might drown in the tents."
The ages of the children further add to Mohammed's worries. The stress of trying to raise very young children, including a baby, in a tent during war is a trauma no parent should ever have to endure.
Mohammed details his agony:
"My little son, Karim, is two years old. He needs diapers and needs... and needs milk. He hasn't had his milk for 5 months because I can't buy it... and I need to collect money to get me out of Gaza from the war and seek refuge in another country."
UPDATES
This week your donations fed not only the children but the 3 adults: Mohammed, Nesma, and his mother, who is struggling with illness. Your donations bought Karim milk, diapers, and even a tiny bit of chocolate for the kids. Life is so miserable and precarious but you made such a difference! One person donated enough to not only feed everyone, but paid for necessities that they have gone without for the baby, and Mohammed was even able to get a small treat of snacks for the other children. This is a small bit of joy in months for them. I was so happy to see that, it meant so much to them.
We thank you for caring and for sharing what you can to help Mohammed's family survive another week of hell. 🙏
August 19th:
Mohammed tells me it was a terrible, terrifying night. Imagine raising your children under the constant threat of death. I include his own words here; he uses Google translate to talk to me, as his English is difficult for him.
Before going to bed last night, he wrote:
"The shelling is intense now and there are tanks advancing, but they are a little far away. They are besieging a shelter with a lot of people in it."
I never know if I will hear from him again. In the mornings, the first thing I do is check for messages from him to see that he and his family are ok:
"Good morning.. It was one of the hardest nights of my life.. Lots of bombing.. The occupation advanced and besieged everyone and then retreated a little.. We don't know what they are thinking now. We are in a state of exhaustion and fear."
Amid the daily fear of death, I am seeing another grief for Mohammed: the loss of the kids' childhoods. He worries that they will never get their education, even if they survive the advance:
"I hope the war ends soon… Bader should advance to first grade… but the circumstances are difficult here… There are private schools here because of the war, not governmental ones… but if the donations are good, I will enroll him in them. He wants to learn and asks me to, but I cannot provide education or food… I hope the donations increase with time and that we find many good people who will help through donations and by sharing my meaning and conveying it, people can donate…"
August 29th:
The last couple of weeks have been hard in the tent. We were not able to find many donations, but those that did come made life more bearable, even for a day or so. The relief from hunger and thirst is always welcome.
Today Mohammed sends me a concerning update on the looming evacuations, which they expect will begin next week. Mohammed will not evacuate, he says. He simply can't physically do it.
His mother cannot walk with her heart condition, and the three children are far too young to walk, let alone carry the few supplies they will need to set up again wherever they are displaced to the south of Gaza.
To help them evacuate we estimate will cost about 3000.00 USD. He must find a vehicle and supplies for their next camp. They also need food and medicine.
If they don't evacuate they will die. I don't see how they will survive an escalation of the occupation.
He explains, translating an announcement for me:
"🔴Yedioth Ahronoth: 🔴The Israeli army's announcement of the end of the tactical truce in Gaza City is a preliminary step for the launch of Operation "Gideon Vehicles 2." 🔴Next week, all residents of the city will be asked to begin evacuating to the southern Gaza Strip before the operation to seize the city begins."
This is not only terrifying news, but to survive now means the cost of commodities will go up even more. Mohammed continues:
"It seems that they will stop the aid soon, and this means that prices will also rise significantly. If I had the money, I would buy the supplies at good prices. I hope to receive donations until the morning so that I can buy what I need. I do not want my children to die of hunger."
I will continue to update on what is happening in the camp as Mohammed is able to get information.
If you have read this far, I thank you, and Mohammed's family thanks you, too. If you can't donate, please consider sharing this page with your social networks. Every single donation will keep Mohammed, Nesma, Bader, Mira, and little Karim from suffering from the torture of starvation.
Any amount is deeply appreciated. Food, medicine, diapers, clothes, mattresses, and coats for the winter are needed NOW.
The costs of food are now astronomical in Gaza. A donation of approximately 35.00 USD or 50.00 CAD will allow Mohammed to purchase a kilo of flour and perhaps a kilo of rice. This does not go very far, and is very dangerous to obtain. One kind donor gave 100.00 USD, and Mohammed was able to get not only food, but milk and diapers for the baby. Every donation keeps them going, no matter the amount.
Your donation goes directly to Mohammed's PayPal account, I just built the site to host his bio and donation link on his behalf.
It's my greatest hope for Mohammed that he will be able to flee Gaza with his family as soon as he can so that his children may yet have a chance at the happy childhood they deserve.
Please help them.
If you have ever wondered what you would have done during war, you're doing it.
Please do something.