SolHaelan

1.5M ratings
277k ratings

See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna
hyamshehabb
gazavetters

سنقوم بنشر بعض من تم توثيقهم من فريقنا @gazavetters .. ويارب Tumblr ما يزعل منا😁

We will be posting some of vetted campaigns by our team @gazavetters.. Hopefully Tumblr won’t mind 😁

Our verfied list here


@mohammedshehab92

127 Mohammed Shehab

Help Zaen and Yehya to get out of Gaza


@ibrahem-4

129 Ibrahim's family

Help Ibrahim's family get out of Gaza


@najah-meshal

113 Ahmed's Family

Urgent Help me meet my father and get out to safety


@palestinianmina0

114 Mena & Family

Help my family escape Gaza to safety


@maryomak

115 Maryam Akram

Save Janna from malnutrition & help her get treatment



@family-aya

100 Aya's Family

Help Displaced Family in Gaza


@mohmad-3

47 Muhammad Abd ElHabil

Help us build new hope for me and my family


@melhindips

121 Mohammed EL-Hindi

Help my family fleeing the conflict in Gaza


@hiyammostafa98

118 Hiyam Family

Help mohammed & his Family Get Out Of Gaza


@monashehab1999

111 Mohammed Shehab

Help this family to get out of Gaza


@hebamatarsblog

125 Heba Matar

Help Heba and her 3 children survive and reunite with father







.

Pinned Post free palestine vetted fundraisers
ahmadfamily
ahmad-ashi

A Cry for Help: Stand with Us in Our Suffering ⚰

Oh world, ⚰
Can you hear our cries? Can you see our pain? We are in great suffering!
Killing, siege, famine, oppression, and death... everything has become part of our daily reality.
Where is humanity? Where is the support? Where is the voice shouting for us?
We need you now more than ever.
Help us spread our message, donate what you can, or even share these words so the world knows what is happening.

Don’t leave us in the dark, we need you!
We are here, suffering, but we won't give up if your humanity stands with us.

Don’t forget us, world! Do something to ease our suffering.

vetted by :@/90-ghost @/bilal-salah0 This campaign #152 on Butterfly Effect Project vetted list!

Gaza is full of oppression #The worst is yet to come #Genocide #A resilient people

sajafamily
sajafamily

What Strength Really Means 💪

✅️ Vetted by @gazavetters {537}✅️

Hey everyone, my name is Abdelmajed. I don’t usually talk much about myself, but today, I want to share a little piece of my story.

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I was born and raised in Gaza, a place that has always been my home 🏡. I grew up surrounded by my family, my friends, and the streets that I knew like the back of my hand. Life wasn’t always easy, but we had love, laughter, and dreams. I used to think that no matter what happened, home would always be here. But life has a way of changing things in ways we never expect.

Over the past months, everything I once knew has disappeared. The streets that were once filled with children playing are now silent. The houses that held so many memories are now just rubble. And the people I loved—some of them are gone forever. 💔

✅️ Vetted by @gazavetters {537}✅️

hopeformusab
noor-68
aisha2o

🚨 My Mom is on the Edge – Save Her Life Before It's Too Late! 🚨

I write these words with a heavy heart and a heavy heart. My mother, a symbol of tenderness and giving, is now suffering from unbearable pain, as she suffers from deadly blood cysts on her liver that threaten her life at every moment. The situation has become like an endless nightmare; every minute that passes brings us closer to eternal separation.

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The hospital is asking for $3,789 to perform the urgent surgery, and these amounts seem unattainable in these circumstances that turn our lives into a continuous battle against death. I see the pain in her eyes, and the tears running down her cheeks, and I can only beg you with all my hope: Help me save my mother, as every donation, no matter how small, could be the difference between life and death.


This appeal comes from the depths of the heart, filled with sadness and tears, and I appeal to every kind soul to give us a second chance, a chance to keep our mother among us. If you can't donate, please share this message with everyone you know; you may be able to help save her life before it's too late.


My mom needs you now, more than ever... Please help me face these dark moments before death snatches her away from us.❤️🙏

Verified by

@bilal-salah0

@schoolhatergirl @schoolhater98 @schoolhaterlunchlover @sayruq @sayruq @francescamarchese @fawfulthegreat64 @fsdsdfsdfsdgfsrwegfdsjpg @fsacre @timetravellingkitty @meagancignoli @briarvintage @vakarian-shepard @mahoushojoe @rhubarbspring @schoolhaterfoodlover-blog @pogasssm @commissions4aid-international @wellwaterhysteria @deepspaceboytoy @post-impressionisms @junglejim4322 @kibumkim @neechees @kyra45 @marnotrawstw-o @tortiefrancis @tortiefrancis @appsappsapps @toiletpotato @fromjannah @vague-humanoid @vague-humanoid @criptocromo @komsomolka @neptuneringzz @riding-with-the-wild-hunt @heritageposts

@fancysmystery @brokenbackmolars @motoriginal @aleciosun @sericate @fluoresensitivearchived @khizuo @nesmamomen @transmutationdice @schoolhaterfoodlover-blog

ahmadfamily
family4
abedmajeed

What Strength Really Means 💪

Hey everyone, my name is Abdelmajed. I don’t usually talk much about myself, but today, I want to share a little piece of my story.

image

I was born and raised in Gaza, a place that has always been my home 🏡. I grew up surrounded by my family, my friends, and the streets that I knew like the back of my hand. Life wasn’t always easy, but we had love, laughter, and dreams. I used to think that no matter what happened, home would always be here. But life has a way of changing things in ways we never expect.

Over the past months, everything I once knew has disappeared. The streets that were once filled with children playing are now silent. The houses that held so many memories are now just rubble. And the people I loved—some of them are gone forever. 💔

And I'm now waiting to be Vetted by @gazavetters 🙏

anarchistmemecollective
thepromiscuousfinger

image
disgruntled-foreign-patriarch

May he plow the Lord’s fields in heaven

en-shaedn

Dave Brandt was probably the longest running no-till farmer in the state; he'd been running his land no-till since 1971. He experimented with fertilizers, cover crops, and different irrigation techniques and he'd been doing all of that for a very long time.

The guy was an institution all on his own; look at this.

  • The “A” profile in his soil is now 47 inches deep compared to less than 6 inches in 1971 and acts like a giant sponge for water infiltration and retention.
  • From 1971 through 1989 David used an average of 150-250 pounds of nitrogen fertilizer per acre to grow his corn crops. After adding peas and radishes as a cover crop mix, he cut his nitrogen needs in half and was able to get it down to 125 pounds per acre.
  • When he added multiple species and became more aggressive with his cover crop mixes, he was able to achieve an additional drop in applied fertility. His starter fertilizer is now just 2 lbs of N, 4 lbs of P, and 5 lbs of K. His corn crop now only requires 20-30 lbs of N throughout the entire growing season. He requires no fertility for his soybeans, relying on fertility gained solely through his cover crops. He uses only 40 lbs of 10 N – 10 P – 10 K for his small grains.
  • Ten years ago (source study published 2019) David stopped using any fungicides and insecticides. This occurred at a time when fungicide and insecticide use has increased significantly with the average commodity farmer.
  • Four years ago he stopped using any seed treatment, including neonicotinoids.
  • His cash crop yields have been increasing by an average of 5% annually for the past 5-6 years, with far less fertilizer and no fungicides, insecticides or seed treatment.
  • What started as a basic heavy clay soils when David purchased the farm in 1971 have been officially re-classified by Ohio State University soil scientists as a highly fertile silty loam soil.
fox-bright

I know I've said it before, but--that first point, there, about the "A" profile of his soil? Every time I think of it, I am taken aback with genuine awe.

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So this is a picture of the soil horizons. The O profile/O horizon is stuff like fallen leaves, sticks, and so on, which are biodegrading into the A profile. A fair amount of soils might have no O profile at all.

If you are a gardener, the A profile is what you're concerned with most of the time; it's what we also call "topsoil." Your seeds germinate into it, and shallower plants might root into it alone without ever reaching the B profile. Worms and other small delvers live in it. It's what you're amending, what you're testing, what you're tilling, what you're trying to fill up with good microorganisms to work with your plants and provide you with food or flowers or cover.

I see this quote around sometimes, attributed to radioman Paul Harvey:

Man — despite his artistic pretensions, his sophistication, and his many accomplishments — owes his existence to a six inch layer of topsoil and the fact that it rains.

Without the topsoil, bluntly, we starve. And there are other problems, in places with a lack of it; without the topsoil, when the rains come, the water strikes hard soil. Hard soil doesn't accept water easily, so instead it pools and runs downhill. That action makes flooding, makes flash floods, makes standing water that carries disease, it contaminates the water table. Cholera is a huge problem in places with a low A profile that receive too much water at once.

We are seeing topsoil depletion across the US. I can't speak for other countries, but the heavy-tilling agricultural habits we've adopted here have obliterated inch after inch of our topsoil; in the 1800s the average depth was fourteen inches! Today it is six. Many suburban lawns have even less. This has knock-on effects we don't even consider on the day-to-day (for instance, there's some suggestion that the lower amounts of various minerals in vegetables and fruits today in comparison with earlier decades might be because of the lower amount of minerals in the soil for the plants to take up into themselves).

And this gentleman took soil that had been that abused and not only returned it to what it had been before the aggressive, destructive European agricultural policy had its way, but trebled that earlier depth.

His land protects the land around it from flooding. His land grows plants less susceptible to disease, because of all the various stressors and pressures those plants aren't confronted with. His land almost certainly has a considerably higher concentration of microorganisms and it would follow that we'd also see greater diversity of macroorganisms thereby.

Honestly, it just takes my breath away.

anarchistmemecollective

it’s honest work, and by god he did a lot