Blog Archives - Noor Relief Fund (NRF) https://www.nrf.org.uk Be the Change Fri, 08 Jan 2021 12:53:53 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.4 https://www.nrf.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/cropped-favicon-32x32.png Blog Archives - Noor Relief Fund (NRF) https://www.nrf.org.uk 32 32 Yemen and COVID https://www.nrf.org.uk/yemen-and-covid/ https://www.nrf.org.uk/yemen-and-covid/#respond Sun, 18 Oct 2020 17:00:00 +0000 https://www.nrf.org.uk/?p=13017 “Help Yemen now, or watch the country fall into the abyss” United Nations Under-Secretary-General The world’s largest humanitarian crisis has never been worse as Covid-19 has spread out of control. UN Humanitarian Coordinator of Yemen Lise Grande warns, “the death toll from the virus could exceed the combined toll of war, disease, and hunger over […]

The post Yemen and COVID appeared first on Noor Relief Fund (NRF).

]]>
“Help Yemen now, or watch the country fall into the abyss”

United Nations Under-Secretary-General

Distribution in Yemen

The world’s largest humanitarian crisis has never been worse as Covid-19 has spread out of control. UN Humanitarian Coordinator of Yemen Lise Grande warns, “the death toll from the virus could exceed the combined toll of war, disease, and hunger over the last five years”. At an alarming 28.7%, Yemen currently holds the highest reported Covid-19 case-fatality rate worldwide; due to the scarcity of Covid-19 testing kits, the actual mortality risk could be exceedingly worse. With millions of poverty-stricken Yemenis already suffering from the long-term impacts of the unrelenting conflict, the emergence of Covid-19 further exacerbates the Yemeni people’s need for humanitarian aid. 

The displacement of over 3.6 million Yemenis living in unsanitary and overcrowded sectors exponentially increases the risk of exposure. The lack of access to clean water and adequate living space have thwarted necessary public health preventative measures such as social distancing, wearing masks, and frequent hand-washing. Women and children are disproportionately at risk of contracting the virus as they comprise nearly 83% of the internally displaced Yemenis. Coupled with the high prevalence of acute malnutrition and communicable diseases amongst IDPs, the rate of contraction and transmission of the virus is exceedingly high. 

Furthermore, years of unabated war have crumbled Yemen’s healthcare system. Ceaseless airstrikes have demolished countless hospitals and clinics across the country. Only half of the nation’s medical facilities remain functional and about two-thirds of the population lacks access to obtain treatment. Many of these facilities face shortages of the necessary medical supplies to manage the uncontrollable spread of the virus. Currently, Yemen only has 700 intensive care beds and 500 ventilators available in the entire country. Unless healthcare facilities receive more foreign aid, millions of Yemenis can potentially be left to suffer from the detrimental health effects of the virus on their own.

Yemen is on the brink of reaching the point of no return. Roughly 80 percent of the country’s population – 24 million people – are in need of humanitarian aid for survival, half of which are children. Nearly 3 million children and pregnant or lactating women suffer from acute malnutrition. 400,000 children are severely malnourished and are at risk of life-threatening complications. In addition to the worst famine the world has seen in 100 years, Yemen has been also plagued by the worst cholera outbreak in human history. The state of Yemen is frighteningly dire and the rise of Covid-19 creates an unprecedented emergency within the world’s largest humanitarian crisis.

Despite the atrocities of the conflict of Yemen reaching the global stage, the increasing need for humanitarian aid has reached an all time high. The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs reports that Yemen has only received 18 percent of the funding needed for this 2020. The Yemen pledging conference generated only 1.35 billion dollars in commitments, almost half of the 2.4 billion dollar goal set by the UN to sustain basic humanitarian operations. While UN agencies and aid operations have run out of financial resources, the people of Yemen are in need of help now more than ever. They now turn to us, their brothers and sisters in faith, as a last hope. While the world may turn its back, we must stand united and do all we can to contribute because the people of Yemen are running out of food, running out of resources, and running out of time. 

-Ali

With the amazing generosity of our donors and fundraisers, Noor Orphans Fund has raised enough money to equip four coronavirus quarantine centres in Yemen. These centres will now be able to take care of people who show COVID-19 like symptoms. 

The funds raised will go towards providing these centres with essential hygiene and medical items.  

A thank you from the bottom of our hearts for helping the Yemini people fight this disease in the midst of a war torn country. 

Your donations have and will help in saving many Yemeni lives.  

The post Yemen and COVID appeared first on Noor Relief Fund (NRF).

]]>
https://www.nrf.org.uk/yemen-and-covid/feed/ 0
Noor Orphans Fund Goes Hiking! https://www.nrf.org.uk/noor-orphans-fund-goes-hiking/ https://www.nrf.org.uk/noor-orphans-fund-goes-hiking/#respond Mon, 05 Oct 2020 11:21:00 +0000 https://www.nrf.org.uk/?p=12982 On Sunday, 4th October 2020 a group of dedicated Noor Orphans Fund fundraisers and supporters hiked 8 miles to reach the summit of mount Snowdon, – the highest mountain in Wales and England – to raise funds for the orphans and widows in Iraq.   The orphaned families are now in desperate need more than ever and that is why […]

The post Noor Orphans Fund Goes Hiking! appeared first on Noor Relief Fund (NRF).

]]>
NOF Team at the peak of mount Snowdon

On Sunday, 4th October 2020 a group of dedicated Noor Orphans Fund fundraisers and supporters hiked 8 miles to reach the summit of mount Snowdon, – the highest mountain in Wales and England – to raise funds for the orphans and widows in Iraq.  
 
The orphaned families are now in desperate need more than ever and that is why this Muharram and Safar, Noor Orphans Fund has focused its fundraising efforts on acquiring more orphan sponsorships to enable them to reach out to more and more families.  
 
By donating towards Noor Orphans Fund’s Orphan Sponsorship Programme you are helping orphaned families afford basic living costs such as food, clothes and other essential supplies. You are helping the orphans to thrive as well as providing them with hope for the future. Together with your kindness, we can make a difference to the lives of millions of children in Iraq. 
 
If you would like to do something similar to raise funds for Noor Orphans Fund please get in touch and we will be more than happy to help! 
 
It is not too late to donate towards this fundraising campaign! Please follow the link below to donate! 

Sponsor an Orphan

The post Noor Orphans Fund Goes Hiking! appeared first on Noor Relief Fund (NRF).

]]>
https://www.nrf.org.uk/noor-orphans-fund-goes-hiking/feed/ 0
The desensitisation to the pain of others https://www.nrf.org.uk/the-desethe-desensitisation-to-the-pain-of-others/ https://www.nrf.org.uk/the-desethe-desensitisation-to-the-pain-of-others/#respond Fri, 21 Aug 2020 14:26:44 +0000 https://www.nrf.org.uk/?p=12157 By: Reda Zarrad What comes to mind when I say ‘information’? Is it the media? The internet? Libraries and books? No matter what form it takes, information is all around us, an integral part of our daily lives. But there’s a second type of information, arguably more important than the first, that isn’t restricted to […]

The post The desensitisation to the pain of others appeared first on Noor Relief Fund (NRF).

]]>

By: Reda Zarrad

What comes to mind when I say ‘information’? Is it the media? The internet? Libraries and books? No matter what form it takes, information is all around us, an integral part of our daily lives.

But there’s a second type of information, arguably more important than the first, that isn’t restricted to the flesh of a book or the database of a search engine. What am I talking about? The best way I can describe it (though it’s still a complex and ambiguous definition) is the life code of the universe.The sights you see, the sounds you hear, the sensations you feel; all of these are your experiences of this information. Fundamentally, the relationship you have with this type of information is very similar (if not identical) to the relationship between a computer and data. As the computer would with the data, your mind is constantly at work processing, organising and storing your experiences of this information into a network that can be drawn on in the future.

By this point, you’re probably wondering how this has anything to do with Noor Orphan’s fund, and I don’t blame you. At an eye’s glance, it seems like this concept is completely unrelated, even irrelevant, to Noor Orphan fund’s mission. But upon further examination, there is one outstanding aspect, one tiny detail, that makes this concept incredibly relevant and topical: the numerous consequences of repetitive exposure…

To prevent itself from being overwhelmed by the sheer quantity of information around it, the mind has adapted to become more efficient in the way it organises our experiences. When a person experiences something for the first time (be it a new sight, smell, taste or otherwise), the person’s mind recognises that this is its first encounter with this new information, and creates a new category (similar to a new folder on a computer) to store this information in its ‘database’. After that however, the experience is stored in the same category, and the person gradually becomes more and more used to it, and pays less and less attention to it over time. And while this technique is undoubtedly beneficial as it allows the mind to focus on new experiences, and increase its knowledge of the world around it, it has the potential to cause much more harm than good.

Let me give you an example: say you’re watching tv , and a charity advert appears between the programmes, showing poverty stricken, needy people and the conditions they’re forced to live in. Naturally, you would feel upset, and probably angry as well, that this suffering was allowed not only to happen in a world that could easily cater for all of its inhabitants, but to continue as well. And while these aren’t nice ways to feel, they drive you to help those people in need, by donating, volunteering or otherwise, and therefore lead to a positive outcome. Now imagine that that same advert was the only one played between the programmes, looped again and again and again. Would you still feel as upset the second time you watched it? The third time? The fourth? The tenth?

The more we see it, the more we become used to it, and the less significant it becomes to us. After the initial flurry of emotion we feel, our minds gradually become accustomed to it, leading to a more stifled emotional response each time. The result? We become desensitised. Normalised to the pain and suffering of others. We see it not for what it is but for what our minds tell us it is: a normality. Maybe even a fact of life. And that, that is truly a dangerous and debhilitating mindset to have, not least because it robs us of a reason to give and donate. Why would we, when our minds , like miniature satans whispering in our ears, tell us that we can’t make a difference?

And unfortunately, no one is immune to the shackles of desensitisation. But that’s not to say we can’t break free of them. And the remedy, the antidote some might say, is so wonderfully simple

that it’s a mystery why it isn’t more widely known. All it needs is for us to truly reflect on the pain and suffering of others. Because desensitisation is like a veil between us and reality: with only a quick glance, and barely a thought given to the matter, we’ll always be confined to the narrow minded, distorting lens created by the veil. But just a moment to ponder on the suffering of others, and the devastating hardships a lot of people endure, will lead to this veil being taken down, allowing us to see clearly, if not with our eyes then with our hearts, reality as it is. And in doing so, we can transform an undeniably detrimental side effect into an opportunity to see reality even clearer than before.

If you’re not convinced, try it. Take a few moments just to think, deeply and wholeheartedly about, about the calamities that have afflicted people all around the world, and the daily struggles they endure.

People like 8 year old Ruqayah, whose father was killed by criminals before she was born. Her mother, living in fear and poverty, was forced to send her and her brother away to live with a relative when the same criminals began to threaten her brother.

Or like Muhannad, whose father was killed on duty as a soldier, and whose mother passed away during childbirth, to a baby that did not live to two months. He lives in a house with 17 other children, all looked after by his amazingly resilient aunt.

Or like Ghadeer, who lost her leg in a tragic accident, and lives in an overcrowded house with fifteen other children. She lost her parents years ago.

And the list continues. The scale of suffering in our world is overwhelming, sickening even, as behind it lies a story of human greed and selfishness, and a willingness to profit from the suffering of others. Suffering epitomised in the life of these orphaned children. Suffering that’s multi faceted and emotionally scarring, ranging from parental loss and trauma, to a life of poverty and hardship. And this pain has only increased during this epidemic. The enforcement of a lockdown has crippled the already fragile Iraqi economy, leaving those most vulnerable to suffer at the hands of increased prices, and shortages of basic goods like food and medicine. To them, it must seem as though this is just the latest edition of a series of calamities plaguing Iraq and its citizens.

But, as is often seen throughout history, the suffering of some brings out the best in others. Noor Orphans Fund works tirelessly to ensure not only that as many orphaned children as possible are lifted from poverty and helped to flourish, but that they are all served in a comprehensive and dignified manner. And this work simply couldn’t happen without the many generous donors supporting them, who believe in a brighter future for the orphaned children they support. Today, Noor orphan’s fund serves a few thousand orphaned children, each and every one with different skills, talents, strengths and weaknesses, each and every one embracing their own unique beliefs, personality and identity.

So rest assured that any contribution you make, no matter how small, will mean the world to someone else who needs it most. And that your contributions will go towards changing a life forever.

The post The desensitisation to the pain of others appeared first on Noor Relief Fund (NRF).

]]>
https://www.nrf.org.uk/the-desethe-desensitisation-to-the-pain-of-others/feed/ 0