This is our goal. Clearly state what we want to do and how they can help in brief. This includes:

·       Catchy heading

·       Key message

·       Along with a prompt to give

INTRO

Help change lives today.

Deliver life-saving support to families facing hunger, disease, disasters, armed conflict, and other crises every single day.

Delivering essential items and cash assistance for displaced families

Mental heath services and trauma care

Delivering essential items, like tents, bedding, warm clothes and basic cooking items, to families who’ve lost everything.

Emergency healthcare and hospital support

We work with women, children and families across the Pacific and Asia to empower women to be financially independent so that they can support their families.

Help deliver life-saving and urgent humanitarian assistance to children and families.

The world is facing an unprecedented number of humanitarian emergencies resulting from natural disasters and war.

Innocent and vulnerable people including children have been killed or injured and huge populations have been displaced as homes have been destroyed.

In the most affected areas, access to the most basic human needs (food, safe water, shelter, medical supplies) is dwindling or exhausted.

Together, we can continue to provide help to those in need - ensuring that no family faces another disaster alone.

problem/ need

“We were pulled from the rubble.”

Help children and families in Gaza and worldwide

Your generous donation can provide children and families affected by the war in Gaza, as well as other disasters across the world, with life-saving essentials like food, water and crucial mental health support. It can also help create lasting change through longer-term programmes to alleviate poverty and the chronic impact of climate change.

Make a difference

Proof

Summary of why we need their help. What problem are we trying to solve. Ramp up urgency.

Hardship and loneliness in Cox’s Bazar 

She fled burning villages and armed soldiers in Myanmar. But in a refugee camp hundreds of miles away, Mumtaz would face a second heartbreak, one that left her more isolated than ever. 

Mumtaz Begum thought the worst was behind her when she escaped the violence that tore through her community. Soldiers stormed her village. Homes were torched. Families scattered. Alongside more than 700,000 other Rohingya people, she fled with nothing but her children and the will to survive. 

Hardship and loneliness in Cox’s Bazar 

She fled burning villages and armed soldiers in Myanmar. But in a refugee camp hundreds of miles away, Mumtaz would face a second heartbreak, one that left her more isolated than ever. 

Mumtaz Begum thought the worst was behind her when she escaped the violence that tore through her community. Soldiers stormed her village. Homes were torched. Families scattered. Alongside more than 700,000 other Rohingya people, she fled with nothing but her children and the will to survive. 

Hardship and loneliness in Cox’s Bazar 

She fled burning villages and armed soldiers in Myanmar. But in a refugee camp hundreds of miles away, Mumtaz would face a second heartbreak, one that left her more isolated than ever. 

Mumtaz Begum thought the worst was behind her when she escaped the violence that tore through her community. Soldiers stormed her village. Homes were torched. Families scattered. Alongside more than 700,000 other Rohingya people, she fled with nothing but her children and the will to survive.