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Giving Tuesday 2021: What is Giving Tuesday?

Let’s face it. Tuesday’s a pretty drab day, if not the drabbest of the week. It’s not as “despised” as the so-called Dreaded Monday, and it’s not as “uplifting” as Wednesday, the so-called Hump Day. However, there’s one Tuesday of the year that’s actually incredibly special—and that’s Giving Tuesday. 

So, What and When is Giving Tuesday, Exactly?

Giving Tuesday, also termed #GivingTuesday for the purposes of hashtag activism, is always the Tuesday after Thanksgiving (so, this year it’s November 30). It’s a day for everybody in the entire world to set aside to support the causes and communities they believe in. In a way, it coincides with Black Friday (the day after Thanksgiving) and Cyber Monday (the day before Giving Tuesday). While those days promote holiday shopping for friends, relatives, and even oneself, Giving Tuesday asks people to extend their generosity beyond those in their inner circle.

How Did Giving Tuesday Begin?

Giving Tuesday began in 2012 as the simple idea of encouraging people to do good, conceived of by Henry Timms of the United Nations Foundation. For its first eight years, Giving Tuesday was housed in the 92nd Street Y’s Belfer Center for Innovation & Social Impact, which serves as an incubator for ideas until they prove their sustainability. Giving Tuesday did just that. In June 2019 it split off from 92Y to become its own independent 501 (c)(3) nonprofit organization. Since its inception, Giving Tuesday has grown to become immensely popular, particularly among nonprofit organizations, even spawning many Giving Tuesday logos. In fact, on Giving Tuesday 2020 alone, a staggering $503 million was raised online to promote the cause.

How Embrace Relief Factors In

As an organization that is constantly striving and succeeding in alleviating human suffering wherever it exists, we hold Giving Tuesday near and dear to our hearts. We think it’s incredibly important that everybody in the world take at least one day (though we certainly advocate more!) to consider supporting those less fortunate. That’s why we’re inviting you to support this Giving Tuesday now by donating or volunteering with Embrace Relief. So, please visit our website and choose from one of our many campaigns. Or, you can donate in our name on Meta (formerly Facebook), which will match every dollar donated up to two million dollars on November 30 (so, if you donate $10, Meta will also donate $10). Then, it will match ten percent up to eight million dollars (if you donate $10, Meta will donate $1)! Have a happy Giving Tuesday!

Yemen Crisis 2021: The Yemen Crisis Facts

The Yemen Crisis is currently the worst humanitarian crisis in the world. Among many other issues, it has led to the Yemen Famine. 17.8 million people in Yemen don’t know where their next meal is coming from, 8.4 million are considered at risk of starvation, and severe acute malnutrition is threatening the lives of almost 400,000 children under the age of five. In fact, over 11 million Yemeni children are in desperate need of aid. That’s nearly every single child in the Yemeni population! But why is the Yemen Crisis so debilitating? What is contributing to all of this human hardship?

The Yemen Humanitarian Crisis and Its Impact Explained

Since 2015, Yemen has been embroiled in conflict, resulting in airstrikes hitting many different parts of the country, with one every 99 minutes for the past three years to be exact. As expected, these airstrikes have had a number of very destructive effects, including:

  • Destroyed homes and public areas such as schools, markets, and health facilities, killing over a quarter of a million civilians, injuring thousands more, and leaving over 4 million people displaced.
  • Millions more suffer because the resulting destruction has cut off their access to healthcare and clean water. More than half of the country’s healthcare facilities have been destroyed, leaving over 19.7 million people without access to basic healthcare, and lack of access to clean water has led to the Yemen Water Crisis. 
  • The airstrikes make it difficult for humanitarian organizations to provide food and medical aid, which only exacerbates a deadly cholera outbreak that has already killed thousands of people.
  • Thousands of schools have shut down due to the conflict, keeping two million children out of the classroom. Plus, armed groups have occupied schools and displaced people use others for shelter. The latter is a part of the severe refugee crisis in the country, with over three million Yemenis displaced from their homes.
  • Left in vulnerable positions due to the conflict, young boys are being recruited as child soldiers, and young girls are forced into early marriages.

How We Are Aiding the Situation

In response to all this turmoil, Embrace Relief is distributing as many food packages as possible to those affected by the crisis in Yemen. Since 2020, we’ve distributed over a thousand food packages to hungry people in Yemen, but there are still so many more who need help! So, please consider donating today to provide them not only the nutrition they desperately need, but hope for a brighter future. That’s part of our Year-End Resolutions, anyway.

About Our Year-End Resolutions

A take on New Year’s Resolutions, our Year-End Resolutions is something you can do—right here, right now—that has an impact before the year is officially over. For example, contributing to one of Embrace Relief’s many humanitarian causes (check them all out here). And the best thing is—by doing so, you’ll officially make 2021 a great year. Not just for yourself, but for people who urgently need support but have nowhere and no one to turn to, because together, we can provide the resources needed to change and save lives. Happy Year-End!

Yemen Hunger Relief

Eight-year-old Abbas’s Story: How to Donate to Yemen

Meet eight-year-old Abbas. Since 2015, his country Yemen has been embroiled in conflict, resulting in the destruction of most of the country’s infrastructure including houses, hospitals, schools, and markets. Unfortunately, one of these buildings happened to be Abbas and his family’s home, forcing them to take refuge in a nearby closed school.

This school is also home to many other people who also lost their homes due to the conflict. The school Abbas and his younger brother and sister attend is closed as well due to the turmoil, like thousands of other schools in Yemen, stealing valuable class time from the children.

Needless to say, Abbas and his family live in a fearful, uncertain state every single day. For one, they’re praying the school they’re taking refuge in isn’t suddenly destroyed like so many other buildings in the country, potentially leading to their deaths or terrible injuries. Plus, they’re finding it extremely difficult to find food, water, and medical care because so much of their country is no longer operational. This is particularly distressing because a cholera outbreak is ravaging Yemen, leaving thousands dead and many more at risk of infection. All Abbas and his family can do is cling to one another and spend their days desperately scavenging for food and water.

The Big Picture

Abbas and his family are just one of millions of families affected by the conflict in Yemen, the worst humanitarian crisis in the world. A striking 17.8 million people don’t know where their next meal is coming from. 8.4 million are considered at risk of starvation, and severe acute malnutrition is threatening the lives of almost 400,000 children under the age of five. In fact, over 11 million Yemeni children are in need of desperate aid—that’s nearly every single child in Yemen!

How We Are Aiding the Situation

In an effort to help those struggling in Yemen, Embrace Relief is distributing as many food packages as possible. Since 2020, we’ve distributed over a thousand food packages to hungry people in Yemen, but there are still so many more who need your help! So, please consider donating today to provide them not only the nutrition they desperately need, but hope for a brighter future. That’s part of our Year-End Resolutions, anyway.

About Our Year-End Resolutions

A take on New Year’s Resolutions, our Year-End Resolutions is something you can do—right here, right now—that has an impact before the year is officially over. For example, contributing to one of Embrace Relief’s many humanitarian causes (check them all out here). And the best thing is—by doing so, you’ll officially make 2021 a great year. Not just for yourself, but for people like Abbas and his family who need support but have nowhere and no one to turn to, because with your help, we provide the resources needed to save and change lives. Happy Year-End!

The Story of Miray: One of Many Refugees in Greece

Meet 34-year-old Miray Ozmen, one of many refugees in Greece today. After learning that there was a warrant out for her arrest, Miray fled her hometown in Turkey in the middle of the night. Her husband, a highly respected doctor, had been imprisoned a few months before, leaving Miray and her eight-year-old and ten-year-old daughters alone.

Miray and her daughters traveled for days on foot to the Meric River, sleeping in farms along the way. They had only a backpack, the clothes on their backs, and the very little money Miray’s husband left for them.

Miray’s plan—get to Greece. Get to freedom. But once she and her daughters met the Meric River, another problem greeted them—no way to cross. Luckily, smugglers were in the area and granted them passage overnight—for a fee. And apparently, that fee was everything Miray had left.

Still, she agreed—she had to get herself and her daughters to freedom, after all! So they all boarded the boat, their entire bodies feeling like lumbering masses of burnt rubber after all that traveling.

But the danger was far from over. What if a log penetrated the boat, or what if it capsized? Such things had happened many times before, drowning loads of refugees. So, during the incredibly nerve-wracking trip across the Meric, Miray clung to her daughters, enveloping both of them with both her arms, holding them as close as she could to her own extremely weary body.

“It’s going to be okay,” she kept whispering to them as the boat bucked and bobbed amid the pitch-black night. “Don’t worry. It’s going to be okay.”

But she couldn’t know that for sure. In fact, it hardly even seemed possible. She and her daughters were going to a brand-new country, after all. They were leaving their friends and family, where they were born—all of which they might never see again—with practically nothing. Even if they made it across the river, where were they going to stay, and how would they survive, much less build a future? How were they even going to communicate with the Greek citizens, and how would the Greek citizens treat them?

Finally, and thankfully, the boat safely made the trip across the Meric, and the smugglers dropped Miray and her daughters off on Greece’s sandy shore. They staggered straight to the Greek police, who promptly shuttled them to an overpopulated refugee camp.

How Embrace Relief Helped Miray and Her Children

Miray and her children are just a few among thousands of refugees in Greece. In fact, the number of refugees in Greece is approximately 5,500, all of whom arrived by land or sea since the beginning of 2021. And, as more migration occurs, there is a greater need for efforts to grant refugees access to rights and opportunities in order to avoid isolation and protect their human rights. Thankfully, Embrace Relief recognizes that refugees provide an opportunity for cultural diversity and economic growth in Greece. Therefore, we embrace refugees like Miray and her children by providing them with the following:

  • Emergency Housing—With emergency housing, they’re no longer forced to stay in overpopulated refugee camps, which are especially unsafe during the COVID-19 pandemic. Our support also includes food, water, clothing, and access to pro-bono lawyers and translators who assist refugees with asylum paperwork, searching for a permanent home, and placing their children into schools.
  • Rent Assistance—Upon finding a permanent home, we continue to aid refugee families with up to $500 in rent assistance. So far, we have assisted 280 families.
  • English-Learning Courses—We systematically pair refugees with volunteer native English speakers who meet once a week via video call. They learn how to speak English, allowing them to excel in school, find new jobs, and make new friends in their new countries. To date, we’ve enrolled nearly 300 refugees in English courses.     
  •  Adopt a Refugee Family—This program personally matches people in the United States with a refugee family in Greece, providing refugees with invaluable emotional and psychological support. Providing a sense that someone cares about them and their family has helped refugee families in the program survive and succeed. We currently have 110 families who have been symbolically adopted.
  • First Bricks ProgramMillions of refugee children worldwide are often years behind the education level they should be at for their age. This is because they often miss months—if not years—of school. After all, they often hide with their parents to avoid conflict in their countries and endure prolonged periods of isolation in refugee camps. Therefore, the First Bricks online education program helps children of refugees learn math, science, languages, among other important subjects, and connect with other children their age—all for free.     
  •      For children of refugees, the emotional and psychological burden of migrating to an unfamiliar country is undeniable. Under this state of duress, gestures of kindness and thoughtfulness often have a profound impact. Therefore, in the last two years, we’ve provided gift bags for over 3,000 children of refugees.

How YOU Can Help Refugees Fleeing to Greece

Please donate today or volunteer for refugees in Greece to help us provide them not only a significant cushion to fall on during tough times, but the means to integrate themselves into their new, unfamiliar country. Thanks to the efficient system we have in place, refugees have the tools to positively impact their new communities. And YOU can make it part of your Year-End Resolutions to be a part of this meaningful evolution!

About Our Year-End Resolutions

A take on New Year’s Resolutions, our Year-End Resolutions is something you can do—right here, right now—that has an impact before the year is officially over. For example, contributing to one of Embrace Relief’s many humanitarian causes (check them all out here). And the best thing is—by doing so, you’ll officially make 2021 a great year. Not just for yourself, but for people like Miray and her daughters who need support but have nowhere and no one to turn to, because together, we provide resources needed to save and change lives. Happy Year-End!

What is a Refugee? A Look at the Word and Meaning

So, what is a refugee, exactly? According to Merriam-Webster Dictionary, the official definition of “refugee” is “a person who flees to a foreign country or power to escape danger or persecution.” Also, “refuge,” meaning “a safe haven”, is the root of the word “refugee.”

“Refugee” stems from the French word “réfugié,” which refers to Protestants who fled France following the cancellation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685. The Edict of Nantes was a law that granted religious liberty and civil rights to the Huguenots, a Protestant religious group from France in the 16th and 17th centuries. After the Huguenots were no longer granted protection and faced increased persecution in France, over 400,000 French Protestants fled their home country in the following years, many to Protestant England. However, within a decade, the word “refugee” was being used more generally in English to refer to anyone who was forced to flee to a place of safety, often because of danger or persecution due to one or more of the following reasons:

  • Their religious and/or political beliefs
  • Their race
  • Their sexual orientation or identity
  • Violence or war

The Refugee Crisis in Greece

There are millions of refugees from different regions all over the world, but Embrace Relief focuses on those fleeing Turkey to Greece. Overall, the number of refugees in Greece is approximately 5,500, all of whom arrived by land or sea since the beginning of 2021. And as more migration occurs, there is a greater need for efforts to grant refugees access to rights and opportunities in order to prevent increased isolation and protect their human rights. Thankfully, Embrace Relief recognizes that refugees provide an opportunity for cultural diversity and economic growth. Therefore, we embracerefugees by providing them with the following:

  • Emergency Housing—With emergency housing, refugees no longer have to stay in overpopulated refugee camps, which are especially unsafe during the COVID-19 pandemic. This support also includes food, water, clothing, and access to pro-bono lawyers and translators who assist refugees with asylum paperwork, searching for a permanent home, and placing their children into schools.
  •  Rent Assistance—Upon finding a permanent home, we continue to aid refugee families with up to $500 in rent assistance. So far, we have assisted 280 families.
  • English-Learning Courses—We systematically pair refugees with volunteer native English speakers who meet once a week via video call. They learn how to speak English, allowing them to excel in school, find new jobs, and make new friends in their new countries. To date we’ve enrolled nearly 300 refugees in English courses.
  • Adopt a Refugee Family—This program personally matches people in the United States with a refugee family in Greece, providing refugees with invaluable emotional and psychological support. Providing refugees with the sense that someone cares about them and their family helps them survive and succeed. We currently have 110 families who have been symbolically adopted.
  • First Bricks ProgramMillions of refugee children worldwide are often years behind the education level they should be at for their age. This is because they often miss months—if not years—of school. After all, they often hide with their parents to avoid conflict in their countries and endure prolonged periods of isolation in refugee camps. Therefore, the First Bricks online education program helps children of refugees learn math, science, and languages, among other important subjects, and connect with other children their age—all for free.
  • For children of refugees, the emotional and psychological burden of migrating to an unfamiliar country is undeniable. Under this state of duress, gestures of kindness and thoughtfulness often have a profound impact. Therefore, in the last two years, we’ve provided gift bags for over 3,000 children of refugees.

How YOU Can Help Refugees Fleeing to Greece

Please donate today or volunteer for refugees in Greece to help us provide them not only a significant cushion to fall on during tough times, but the means to integrate themselves into their new country. Thanks to the efficient system we have in place for refugees, they have the tools to positively impact their new communities. And YOU can make it part of your Year-End Resolutions to be a part of this meaningful evolution!

About Our Year-End Resolutions

A take on New Year’s Resolutions, our Year-End Resolutions is something you can do—right here, right now—that has an impact before the year is officially over. For example, contributing to one of Embrace Relief’s many humanitarian causes (check them all out here). And the best thing is—by doing so, you’ll officially make 2021 a great year. Not just for yourself, but for people who need support but have nowhere and no one to turn to, because together, we can provide the resources needed to save and change lives. Happy Year-End!

Embrace Relief Wins The 2021 GreatNonprofits Top-Rated Award!

That’s right, we’ve done it again. We’re now officially a winner of the GreatNonprofits Top-Rated Award for the fifth straight year in a row! This award is highly prestigious, as it’s allotted to only the best of the best nonprofit organizations in the world—an enormous staple in the industry that every nonprofit strives to achieve. According to GreatNonprofits, Embrace Relief is among “nonprofits which are rated highly by people who experience their work firsthand—clients served, volunteers, and donors.” So, we are deeply honored and grateful to be named a winner this year, as always. And so should you, because we couldn’t have accomplished this landmark achievement without YOUR tireless devotion to promoting the underprivileged and helping those most in need around the world. However, the year’s still not over yet…

Make This Already Great Year Even Greater!

With two months left before the official end of the year, there is still so much good we can all do in the world. And we here at Embrace Relief would like to do as much good as possible! That’s our Year-End Resolutions, anyway. Somewhat of a take on New Year’s Resolutions, Year-End Resolutions is something special, gracious, and selfless you can do to make an impact—before the year is officially over. For example, contributing to one of Embrace Relief’s many humanitarian causes, such as:

  • Providing food for the hungry in Yemen
  • Helping refugees in Greece build new lives in their new country
  • Providing clean water to people lacking it in sub-Saharan Africa
  • Helping support 130 children across three orphanages in the same region
  • Providing food to people who are struggling to find their next meal in the United States

Please Donate Today

So, please donate today to one of Embrace Relief’s many humanitarian causes, and help us make 2021 an even greater year. Not just for us and yourself, but people who need support but have nowhere and no one to turn to,  because we provide them the tools and resources necessary to improve their lives. Happy Year-End!

Fatma ve Seref Sertkaya Water Well

Code Country Town/Village Inauguration Depth Serving

CAMEROON

BABOU

09/2021 45m / 148ft 1100 people


Raise the Children: Educating Underprivileged Children in Africa

Seven-year-old Barth just lost the two people who loved and cared for him the most in this world—and the two people he also loved and cared for the most himself: his parents. They both died from HIV/AIDS, a major disease in The Democratic Republic of the Congo, and, as a result, Barth is both heartbroken and uncertain about his future. Extremely fortunately for him, though, he managed to find the Galaxie Foundation Orphanage, supported by Embrace Relief, which immediately inducted him into its home. Barth can’t contain his relief despite the tragedy, as he now receives the food, water, shelter, health insurance, and other things he needs to survive.

Providing Vital Education, Too

Now Embrace Relief is also looking to provide Barth and the 26 children at the Galaxie Foundation Orphanage with private, primary-level education. Primary-level education entails elementary, middle, and high school, and we’d like to provide private rather than public (which is free) schooling because it’s far more effective for the children.

The State of Public Education in the Congo

Currently, public education in The Democratic Republic of the Congo is suffering from an overabundance of students and the government’s inability to pay teachers adequately. This results in teachers being unable to effectively teach all of their students, many of whom cannot find a desk or chair to sit at during class. The COVID-19 pandemic is only exacerbating the situation, too, since so many children are packed so close together. On the other hand, private institutions provide adequate teachers, allowing them to follow up with each student individually continually. They also offer special courses for weak or struggling students. Therefore, it’s essential Barth, and the vulnerable children at the Galaxie Foundation Orphanage receive private schooling, as it’s the only way they’ll be able to move on to higher education and, subsequently, higher-level, more lucrative jobs. Without investing in these children’s education, they’ll be unable to pave brighter, more prosperous futures for both themselves and their communities.

Donate to Kids Today

Please consider donating today to not just help a child in need like Barth, but 26 of them in The Galaxie Foundation Orphanage in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and hopefully many more in the future! It costs $1,000 USD to supply a needy child with vital education for an entire year. You can either make a one-time payment of $1,000 USD or contribute $85 per month, and it’s up to you how many of Galaxie Foundation Orphanage’s children you would like to support. Together, we can do our part to limit the number of underprivileged kids in Africa and provide them with the strong encouragement they need to succeed!