Agricultural resilience support

Help sustain food production in Lebanon

HOPE Project raises funds for urgent agricultural support for farmers and communities affected by war-related disruption. Contributions help protect local food resilience, livelihoods, and seasonal production.

Live campaign progress

Mirroring the public Fundahope campaign status in real time.

Syncing current totals from the public campaign page.

Live

USD 750

Raised of USD 5,000 goal

15% of target reached

View source on Fundahope

Focused on practical agricultural support, transparent use of funds, and community food resilience.

Young seedling with water droplets in a nursery setting.

Nursery resilience

Early growth that supports the coming season

Seedling care, preparation, and protected cultivation are some of the practical steps donations help make possible.

Mission

A practical response to disruption

Across parts of Lebanon, war-related disruption is placing pressure on people, land, and food production systems. Farmers and rural communities are facing growing difficulty in sustaining crops, protecting animals, and continuing seasonal agricultural work.

HOPE Project supports practical interventions that help communities keep producing food under difficult conditions, with a focus on agricultural continuity, resilience, and clearly defined use of funds.

Implementation support

Working with AgriMovement.org and partners

Implementation will be carried out in collaboration with AgriMovement.org and partners to help support proper coordination, practical delivery, and follow-through across the campaign's agricultural priorities.

  • Grounded implementation support
  • Practical agricultural coordination
  • Focused follow-through on campaign priorities
Visit AgriMovement.org

Why now

Why support is needed now

Agricultural land, infrastructure, and seasonal production cycles are under strain. When planting, labor, transport, and livestock protection are interrupted, the effects extend beyond one harvest and put local food resilience under additional pressure.

Seasonal cycles are vulnerable

Missing a planting window can affect production for months, not just days.

Rural livelihoods are under pressure

Disruption to farming activity affects both income and food continuity for households and communities.

Support has practical outcomes

Seeds, seedlings, labor, and relocation support help preserve the ability to keep producing food.

What donations fund

What your support helps fund

Funds are directed to immediate agricultural needs that help communities continue producing food and protect essential rural livelihoods.

Heirloom seeds for farmers

Distribution of essential seeds, including molokheya, onions, and other key crops.

Seedling production

Nursery cultivation for the new season, including tomatoes, thyme, eggplants, and zucchini.

Agricultural labor

Support for workers involved in planting, preparation, handling, and local production efforts.

Livestock and beehive relocation

Shelter, feed, and transportation support for cattle and beehives moved from threatened areas to safer zones.

Planned support

Concrete areas of allocation

The campaign is designed around clear agricultural priorities that connect donations to practical outcomes on the ground.

Support is intended to strengthen the full chain of agricultural continuity: preparing seedlings, distributing seeds, sustaining labor, and helping protect animals and beehives where relocation to safer areas is necessary.

New season seedlings

Tomatoes, thyme, eggplants, and zucchini prepared through nursery production for upcoming planting cycles.

Heirloom seed distribution

Molokheya, onions, and other essential crops delivered to farmers and communities that need planting materials.

Labor support

Practical support for the agricultural work required to sustain cultivation and local food production.

Relocation protection

Transportation, shelter, and feed support for cattle and beehives moved away from threatened areas.

How it works

How support is put to work

The campaign is structured to direct contributions toward defined agricultural needs and practical continuity on the ground.

  1. 01

    Funds are collected through the campaign

    Contributions are gathered to support urgent agricultural priorities connected to food production and rural livelihoods.

  2. 02

    Resources are directed to priority needs

    Seed preparation, seedling cultivation, labor needs, and relocation support are identified and organized.

  3. 03

    Support reaches farmers and communities

    Planting materials and practical support are prepared for distribution where they can help sustain production.

  4. 04

    Continuity becomes more possible

    The aim is to help preserve seasonal production, protect livelihoods, and strengthen local food resilience.

On the ground

Support that strengthens resilience on the ground

The campaign is designed to back practical agricultural continuity. That includes helping farmers access planting materials, supporting the work needed for cultivation, and assisting with the protection of cattle and beehives where movement to safer areas is necessary. The goal is direct and practical: help communities preserve food production capacity under pressure.

Current support focus

  • Planting materials for the coming season
  • Support for agricultural work and handling
  • Protection for relocated cattle and beehives

Transparency

Built around clarity and practical use of funds

HOPE Project is structured to keep the campaign focused on clearly defined agricultural needs, with space for future reporting and campaign updates as the initiative develops.

Focused mission

Support is tied to practical agricultural resilience and food production needs rather than broad, undefined spending.

Clear funding categories

Visitors can see the main areas where contributions are intended to help, from seeds and seedlings to labor and relocation support.

Future reporting ready

The platform is designed to expand with updates, implementation notes, and transparency reporting as the project grows.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Clear answers to common questions about the campaign, intended fund use, and how the platform is being prepared for transparent giving.

What does HOPE Project support?

HOPE Project supports agricultural resilience and food production in Lebanon through fundraising for seeds, seedlings, labor, and the relocation support needed for cattle and beehives moved from threatened areas to safer zones.

Who benefits from the campaign?

The campaign is intended to support farmers, agricultural workers, and communities whose food production systems are under pressure due to war-related disruption.

What will donations be used for?

Donations help fund heirloom seed distribution, seedling production, agricultural labor, and shelter, feed, and transportation costs for relocated cattle and beehives.

Why focus on agriculture?

Agriculture supports both livelihoods and food access. Helping communities continue producing food is a practical way to strengthen resilience under difficult conditions.

Is online donation processing live yet?

Yes. Donations are processed securely through the public Fundahope campaign, while this site explains the mission, intended use of funds, and campaign progress in one place.

Visible outcomes

What your support helps make possible

From nursery preparation to field-ready growth, practical support helps communities protect the next season of local food production.

Rows of young seedlings prepared in trays.
01 Nursery preparation
Hands working with seedlings during early-stage growth.
02 Care and handling
Seedlings growing in containers under close care.
03 Seedling growth
Close-up of healthy young plants in cultivation.
04 Seasonal readiness
A vertical view of plants being grown for the coming season.
05 Protected cultivation
A wide agricultural scene showing plant growth in progress.
06 Food production continuity