Hello Dears! I Am Asking You To Support My Campaign To Help Me Reach My Goal. I Am Now In Bad Need Your
Hello dears! I am asking you to support my campaign to help me reach my goal. I am now in bad need your support to help me stay alive and safe. Gaza is a very dangerous place either on the level of livelihood or on the level of souls. I need your monetary support to enable me to get the basic needs for my family till Rafah crossing point reopens to move my family to safety and peace. Please help a family be alive through your small donations or througn your shares to others. Thank you so Much for your stand beside people in need.
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More Posts from Neverbraverthanhercules
Urgent update my little brother is dying 😭
Today we took our little brother to the hospital because he suffers from an infection that affects his breathing and causes him pain. I hope that every living conscience will help us save our young son’s life and donate any amount you can.
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Unfortunately, there is no treatment in the hospital for my little. Help us before it is too late.
Updated Aug 25
List of my promoted campaign masterlists:
Current
Aug 21-28: Campaigns close to goal 1
Aug 22-Sep 1: Art raffle for Haboub family
Aug 25-Sep 1: Evacuating families with children 1
The Haboub family
The Alanqar family
The Al-Habil family
Past
Not currently updated/promoted, but I encourage sharing and donating!
Aug 5-12: Campaigns at less than 10% of their goals
Aug 8-15: Urgent campaigns
Aug 13-20: Urgent evacuations
Aug 17-24: Euros 1
Sarah, a five-year-old girl, has not yet completed Kg1.
She takes great pride in her appearance and enjoys taking care of her clothing. She often refers to herself as the "queen of the house."
Sarah has a passion for fashion and enjoys playing with dolls and electronic games related to the subject.
She misses her friends and kindergarten and is eager to learn and experience all that life has to offer.
Sarah deserves the opportunity to learn and grow in a safe and peaceful environment. Her house was bombed and partially destroyed.
She's really scared and can't bear to see pictures of her home like this.
She's heartbroken about her toys and her beautiful room, which were destroyed in the bombing.
I want her to live safely and peacefully like other children.
Any support, regardless of its magnitude, would be greatly appreciated.
Even a modest contribution can have a significant impact on my family's circumstances.
https://gofund.me/345e1bc0
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Support!!!
Why are they mining so much right now?
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Cobalt has become the center of a major upsurge in mining in Congo, and the rapid acceleration of cobalt extraction in the region since 2013 has brought hundreds of thousands of people into intimate contact with a powerful melange of toxic metals. The frantic pace of cobalt extraction in Katanga bears close resemblance to another period of rapid exploitation of Congolese mineral resources: During the last few years of World War II, the U.S. government sourced the majority of the uranium necessary to develop the first atomic weapons from a single Congolese mine, named Shinkolobwe. The largely forgotten story of those miners, and the devastating health and ecological impacts uranium production had on Congo, looms over the country now as cobalt mining accelerates to feed the renewable energy boom—with little to no protections for workers involved in the trade.
The city of Kolwezi, which is 300 km (186 miles) northwest of Lubumbashi and 180 km from the now-abandoned Shinkolobwe mine, sits on top of nearly half of the available cobalt in the world. The scope of the contemporary scramble for that metal in Katanga has totally transformed the region. Enormous open-pit mines worked by tens of thousands of miners form vast craters in the landscape and are slowly erasing the city itself.
[...]Much of the cobalt in Congo is mined by hand: Workers scour the surface level seams with picks, shovels, and lengths of rebar, sometimes tunneling by hand 60 feet or more into the earth in pursuit of a vein of ore. This is referred to as artisanal mining, as opposed to the industrial mining carried out by large firms. The thousands of artisanal miners who work at the edges of the formal mines run by big industrial concerns make up 90 percent of the nation’s mining workforce and produce 30 percent of its metals. Artisanal mining is not as efficient as larger-scale industrial mining, but since the miners produce good-quality ore with zero investment in tools, infrastructure, or safety, the ore they sell to buyers is as cheap as it gets. Forced and child labor in the supply chain is not uncommon here, thanks in part to a significant lack of controls and regulations on artisanal mining from the government.
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[...]When later atomic research found that uranium’s unstable nucleus could be used to make a powerful bomb, the U.S. Army’s Manhattan Project began searching for a reliable source of uranium. They found it through Union Minière, which sold the United States the first 1,000 tons it needed to get the bomb effort off the ground.
The Manhattan Project sent agents of the OSS, precursor to the CIA, to Congo from 1943 to 1945 to supervise the reopening of the mine and the extraction of Shinkolobwe’s ore—and to make sure none of it fell into the hands of the Axis powers. Every piece of rock that emerged from the mine for almost two decades was purchased by the Manhattan Project and its successors in the Atomic Energy Commission, until the mine was closed by the Belgian authorities on the eve of Congolese independence in 1960. After that, the colonial mining enterprise Union Minière became the national minerals conglomerate Gécamines, which retained much of the original structure and staff.
[...]Dr. Lubaba showed me the small battery-operated Geiger counters that he uses in the field to measure radioactivity. He had begun the process of trying to find and interview the descendants of the Shinkolobwe miners, but he explained that tracing the health consequences of working in that specific mine would be difficult: Many long-established villages in the area have been demolished and cast apart as cobalt extraction has torn through the landscape. His initial inquiries suggested that at least some of the descendants of the Shinkolobwe miners had been drawn into the maelstrom of digging in the region around Kolwezi.
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In her book Being Nuclear: Africans and the Global Uranium Trade, historian Gabrielle Hecht recounts the U.S. Public Health Service’s efforts to investigate the effects of uranium exposure on people who worked closely with the metal and the ore that bore it. In 1956, a team of medical researchers from the PHS paid a visit to Shinkolobwe while the mine was still producing more than half of the uranium used in America’s Cold War missile programs. Most of their questions went unanswered, however, as Shinkolobwe’s operators had few official records to share and stopped responding to communications as soon as the researchers left.
[...]“Don’t ever use that word in anybody’s presence. Not ever!” Williams quotes OSS agent Wilbur Hogue snapping at a subordinate who had said the mine’s name in a café in Congo’s capital. “There’s something in that mine that both the United States and Germany want more than anything else in the world. I don’t know what it’s for. We’re not supposed to know.”
Is it my fault that I am Palestinian? No one wants to help me. No one is donating to me. The donations are very few. I do not know what the reason is. Please help me and save my family.😭💔🙏
I am asking for your help and I hope you will not leave me alone. A small donation from you can make a difference. Spread the link everywhere before it is too late.🍉❤️❤️👇🔗
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Donate, share, send it to your friends everywhere.
Let us achieve the goal as soon as possible💪🙏
2360€->80000€
Please don't leave me alone and help me 😔😔💔