Our Work

1. Distributing Food and Water

Aid Gaza provides emergency food parcels, hot meals, and clean water to displaced families facing famine. With 100% of Gaza’s population experiencing acute food insecurity and 70,000 children urgently needing malnutrition treatment, the team distributes rations through community kitchens and mobile units. This addresses critical shortages where markets have collapsed, prices have skyrocketed, and families survive on minimal aid.

2. Digging Wells & Installing Water Systems

To combat water scarcity exacerbated by destroyed infrastructure, Aid Gaza drills wells and deploys solar-powered desalination units. This effort mirrors confirmed projects (e.g., UNDP/Kuwait Fund’s mobile plants producing 250m³/day) that provide safe drinking water to thousands 16. Solar energy ensures sustainability amid fuel shortages

3. Fixing Water Networks

The team repairs bomb-damaged water pipelines and sanitation facilities in high-risk areas. Similar initiatives (e.g., USAID/ANERA’s work in Gazan villages) have reconnected water for 5,000–12,000 residents per location by replacing pipes and installing tanks 4. These projects prevent disease outbreaks in overcrowded camps

4. Cooking Food for Al-Shifa Hospital

Aid Gaza supports kitchens at Al-Shifa Hospital, which shelters 50,000 displaced people while functioning as a critical medical site. This aligns with WHO/UNICEF missions delivering fuel and kitchen supplies to the hospital to feed malnourished patients and displaced families

5. Providing Urgent Cash to Families

The organization distributes e-cash transfers (typically ₪1,000/$270 per family) to help vulnerable households—especially female-headed homes, elderly, or disabled members—buy food, medicine, and essentials. This model, validated by UNICEF/EU programs, reaches 30% of Gaza’s population, allowing families to prioritize urgent needs amid inflation and scarcity

Impact & Challenges

Aid Gaza’s work occurs amid near-total aid blockades, with only “tiny amounts” of supplies entering Gaza since March 2025. The team relies on local partnerships for distribution, often facing security risks and resource theft. For example, 260,000 liters of fuel were looted in northern Gaza in June 2025 14, highlighting operational hurdles.

Conclusion

Aid Gaza merges emergency relief (food, water, cash) with sustainable infrastructure (wells, pipe repairs) to save lives while fostering resilience. Their approach—documented across UN and NGO reports—addresses both immediate survival and long-term recovery, though access constraints remain a critical barrier