Tag Archives: United Nations Economic and Social Council

Life for Relief & Development at 51st ICNA Convention: Leveraging the Conference to Improve Gaza Shelter Tents & Build New Partnerships

  • Connecting donors with the urgent humanitarian needs of displaced families living in tents across Gaza.

The city of Baltimore, Maryland, recently hosted the 51st annual convention of the Islamic Circle of North America (ICNA) in collaboration with the Muslim American Society (MAS), attracting nearly 25,000 attendees from around the world. This year’s convention expanded significantly, featuring a large exhibition hall that brought together hundreds of exhibitors, sponsors, community organizations, and charitable institutions.

Humanitarian and relief organizations, particularly those supporting displaced families living in Gaza’s tent camps, played a central role throughout the event. Beyond showcasing their projects, the convention serves as one of the largest annual platforms in North America for fundraising, partnership development, and direct engagement with Muslim communities.

A Platform Connecting Humanitarian Action with Community Engagement

Speaking about Life for Relief and Development’s participation in the convention, Vicki Roob, Director of International Programs, emphasized that the event is among the most significant annual Islamic gatherings in the United States and North America. It serves as a strategic platform that brings together humanitarian, charitable, and community-focused initiatives while providing valuable opportunities for direct engagement with diverse segments of American and Muslim communities.

Roob explained that the organization’s participation reflects its commitment to maintaining a strong presence at events that unite thousands of individuals passionate about humanitarian and charitable work. Each year, the convention attracts tens of thousands of attendees from across the United States and Canada, including community leaders, activists, volunteers, donors, charitable organizations, and humanitarian agencies. This environment offers a valuable opportunity to showcase Life’s mission, programs, and global humanitarian projects.

She added that visitors demonstrated significant interest in global humanitarian issues, particularly communities affected by conflict, disasters, and the ongoing displacement crisis in Gaza. This provided an important opportunity to highlight the growing needs of vulnerable populations and mobilize additional support for those most affected.

Life: A Trusted Bridge Between Donors and Those in Need

Omar Mamdouh, Director of Executive Projects, explained that the organization used the convention to spotlight a wide range of humanitarian programs and initiatives, including food security projects, assistance for vulnerable families, orphan sponsorship programs, and water, health, and education initiatives. Special attention was also given to Life’s emergency relief efforts in countries facing escalating humanitarian crises, particularly its support for displaced families living in Gaza’s tent camps and the delivery of humanitarian aid throughout the Gaza Strip.

Mamdouh noted that one of the convention’s most important benefits is the opportunity to connect directly with donors and demonstrate the impact of their contributions. The organization provided attendees with a comprehensive overview of living conditions inside Gaza’s displacement camps, including the severe shortages of essential supplies, the challenges faced by displaced children, the effects of extreme weather conditions, and the broader housing and shelter crisis affecting families throughout the region.

To help donors better understand these realities, Life displayed one of its newly developed shelter tents used in Gaza. Whereas previous tents measured 4 by 4 meters, the updated model measures 4 by 6 meters and includes a dedicated bathroom space to provide greater privacy, particularly for women. Visitors were also shown a model of daily life inside the tents, along with improvements and modifications made in response to feedback from displaced residents.

The exhibition further highlighted Life’s humanitarian projects around the world, its partnerships with universities to raise awareness about global humanitarian challenges, and samples of food assistance, including canned meat products distributed to beneficiaries.

Mamdouh emphasized that face-to-face engagement with donors provides an invaluable opportunity to share success stories and demonstrate tangible results made possible through their generosity, strengthening public confidence in sustainable and organized humanitarian work.

Engaging Youth and Channeling Their Efforts Toward Good

According to Khalil Meek, Director of Development, the convention also serves as an important platform for promoting a culture of giving and volunteerism. Life actively seeks to recruit new volunteers and involve them in its humanitarian mission while introducing young people and families to opportunities for community engagement and charitable service both within the United States and internationally.

He further noted that participation in the convention enables the organization to establish partnerships and collaborative relationships with other humanitarian and charitable organizations, facilitating the exchange of expertise and best practices that ultimately enhance the effectiveness and reach of humanitarian programs and joint initiatives.

Life’s Gaza Tents Featured in Al Jazeera Coverage

The organization’s activities during the convention received coverage from Al Jazeera, as Life’s exhibition booth attracted significant interest and engagement from participants. Many visitors took part in solidarity activities and wrote messages of support expressing compassion for communities affected by humanitarian crises.

Palestine maintained a strong presence throughout the convention. Participants were invited to write messages of solidarity on a tent that is scheduled to be sent to Gaza through Life for Relief and Development. This initiative builds upon the organization’s shelter support projects launched since the beginning of the war, including nine displacement camps established across northern, central, and southern Gaza.

These camps feature durable, standards-compliant tents that have provided shelter for approximately 46,000 displaced individuals. Designed for easy assembly and relocation to accommodate repeated displacement, the tents are also fire-resistant, helping protect civilian lives. Each tent is equipped with bedding and blankets, while every camp includes a medical clinic, sanitation facilities, solar energy systems, and insulation materials designed to protect residents from winter rains and extreme summer heat.

Life: Ranked Among the World’s Leading Humanitarian Organizations

Life for Relief and Development has been operating in more than 60 countries for over 33 years through a network of 16 international offices. The organization holds Special Consultative Status with the United Nations Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC).

According to Charity Navigator, Life ranks third globally among leading humanitarian organizations, fifth among organizations supporting displaced Palestinians, and fifth among organizations combating poverty worldwide. The organization also received a perfect 100% rating for 2026. In addition, it has been recognized by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and named by Impactful Ninja as one of the leading humanitarian organizations in the United States.

Life for Relief and Development was also awarded the Dubai Humanitarian Award for Best Partnership in recognition of its Gaza shelter camp initiative.

For the Silo, Tasneem Elridi.

For more information:
https://lifeusa.org/#social-media

Daily Survival in Gaza Persists Post-Ceasefire: LIFE Continues Humanitarian Relief Amid Ongoing Needs

Post-Ceasefire, Gaza Families Face Prolonged Hardship as LIFE Continues Delivering Life-Saving Humanitarian Aid

Despite the perception that ceasefires offer meaningful relief, conditions on the ground in Gaza demonstrate that humanitarian emergencies do not end when active conflict pauses. For civilians, the period following a ceasefire is often marked by continued displacement, damaged infrastructure, shortages of food and clean water, and limited access to essential services.

Life for Relief and Development (LIFE), a global humanitarian organization, has maintained an active presence throughout these periods, remaining one of the few international NGOs authorized to deliver aid inside Gaza. LIFE continues to respond to urgent, life-saving needs while navigating significant challenges.

Ceasefires Without Recovery

While ceasefires may reduce immediate violence, they do not restore stability. Families in Gaza frequently return to homes that are damaged or destroyed, seek refuge in overcrowded shelters, or reside in temporary tents without adequate protection. Water networks remain compromised, food availability is inconsistent, fuel shortages persist, and access restrictions continue to impede the flow of humanitarian aid.

Field reports from LIFE-supported operations indicate that displacement remains widespread, with families moving repeatedly in search of safety, food, and water. Even during ceasefires, civilians continue to face severe challenges, including:

  • Limited access to clean drinking water due to damaged infrastructure
  • Inconsistent food supplies and a lack of functional cooking facilities
  • Exposure to harsh weather conditions in makeshift shelters
  • Elevated public health risks stemming from overcrowding and poor sanitation

These conditions underscore the reality that a ceasefire does not equate to recovery or safety.

LIFE’s Ongoing Humanitarian Response in Gaza

Despite restricted access and operational risks, LIFE has sustained a multi-sector humanitarian response aimed at meeting immediate survival needs and preserving human dignity. Through coordinated interventions across North, Central, and South Gaza, LIFE-supported programs have provided:

  • Emergency food assistance through hot meals, family food packs, and large-scale food convoys
  • Clean drinking water via tanker deliveries and the rehabilitation of damaged municipal water wells
  • Emergency shelter materials, including tents and weather-resistant covers for displaced families
  • Winter relief, such as warm clothing and footwear for children and vulnerable individuals
  • Infant nutrition support to address critical shortages for families with young children

These interventions have reached hundreds of thousands of individuals across multiple phases of emergency response, including periods identified as ceasefires—during which needs remained acute.

Operating Under Constant Constraint

Providing aid in Gaza requires continuous adaptation. LIFE-supported teams have had to navigate border delays, limited fuel supplies, communication disruptions, and security-related restrictions. Daily adjustments ensure that relief reaches the most vulnerable populations, including displaced families, children, older adults, and households with no access to essential services.

By maintaining operations both during and after ceasefires, LIFE helps bridge the gap between temporary pauses in hostilities and the ongoing humanitarian needs that continue long after media attention subsides.

One beneficiary, Neama, a 38-year-old mother of four who has been displaced multiple times, described the uncertainty that continued beyond the ceasefire. Her family faced overcrowded shelters, a lack of cooking facilities, and severe food scarcity. Through LIFE-supported hot meal distributions, her family received freshly prepared meals over several days.

The hot food meant more than nutrition,” she shared. “It restored dignity and gave my children a sense of normal life again, even in the middle of everything.”

Humanitarian Needs Beyond the Headlines

A ceasefire does not end the humanitarian crisis for families in Gaza. Many continue to face shortages of food, water, shelter, and basic services, with recovery dependent on sustained humanitarian support rather than temporary pauses in conflict.

“A ceasefire may pause active fighting, but it does not pause human need,” said Dr. Hany Saqr, CEO of Life for Relief and Development (LIFE). “Families in Gaza continue to experience daily challenges accessing food, water, shelter, and essential services. Our responsibility as a humanitarian organization is to remain present, impartial, and responsive, ensuring that assistance reaches civilians when they need it most, regardless of circumstances.”

For the Silo, Tasneem Elridi.

About Life for Relief and Development (LIFE)

Life for Relief and Development, headquartered in Southfield, Michigan, is a global humanitarian relief and development organization committed to assisting individuals regardless of race, gender, religion, or cultural background. LIFE is a registered 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization and holds Consultative Status with the United Nations Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC).