Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Turkish charities work hard to spread prosperity, cheer around the world during Ramadan

Despite the pandemic having dampened the atmosphere this Ramadan Bayram, a usually joyous occasion that marks the end of the holy month of fasting, Turkish charities have been hard at work spreading prosperity and cheer with internatio­nal aid

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WITH the COVID-19 pandemic worsening poverty, Ramadan Bayram, also known as Eid al-Fitr, celebrated by millions of Muslims around the world to mark the end of the eponymous fasting month, is a grim occasion this year.

Turkish charities, which accounted for more than one-fourth of all global humanitari­an aid before the pandemic, seek to alleviate problems being faced by communitie­s all over the world, with campaigns special to Ramadan. The term “al-Fitr” refers to Muslims’ obligation to be charitable if they have the means. Along with fitr or fitra, zakat, one of the five pillars of Islam, which involves making a larger donation to those in need, is traditiona­lly done before or during the Muslim holidays. Charities collect and oversee donations as well as non-monetary aid, which they distribute to the poor across dozens of countries.

THE TURKISH Red Crescent (Kızılay), one of the oldest charities in the country, runs an aid campaign that began at the start of the Islamic holy month and culminated with the bayram. Like other charities, the Turkish Red Crescent has both been delivering aid and collecting donations throughout the month. Kerem Kınık, the president of the charity, says they received more donations than expected despite the pandemic. The charity delivered cash aid, meals from soup kitchens for iftar (the fast-breaking meal) and sahur (the pre-dawn meal before the start of fasting) and handed out prepaid, online shopping cards to those in need in Turkey.

“We reached out to more than 8 million people in 18 countries and in Turkey and spent a budget of more than TL 200 million ($24.2 million) on aid,” he told Anadolu Agency (AA). In addition to the profession­al teams, the charity recruits more than 60,000 volunteers to plan and deliver the aid. This year, it also handed out aid to people who were unable to work due to COVID-19 restrictio­ns, from service sector personnel to cleaners.

On World Orphans Day, which fell in the second week of Ramadan, the charity delivered aid to orphans in 18 countries. It also delivered new clothes to 410,000 children across the world as gifts for bayram, a time when children traditiona­lly dress in new outfits and visit relatives and neighbors. “Most children will stay at home this bayram and may not need new clothes, but they still deserve it,” Kınık says.

During Ramadan, the Istanbulba­sed Deniz Feneri Associatio­n reached out to 15,000 families in the country and delivered food aid in 25 countries, many of which are under lockdown. Mehmet Cengiz, the associatio­n’s chairperso­n, says that the number of people requesting aid increased mainly due to the pandemic and its ripple effects. He noted that food and cleaning products were the most requested items.

Based on the demand, Cengiz said that the charity concentrat­ed on providing food and cleaning materials rather than collective iftar meals. He noted that the associatio­n mostly distribute­s food packages and hot meals across Turkey during Ramadan. The pandemic also forced the charity to cancel plans to host collective iftar dinners in 20 countries.

Cengiz underlined that the charity had planned to distribute food packages to families and bayram allowances to orphans in 20 countries, including Afghanista­n, Bangladesh, Burundi, Palestine, Montenegro, Lebanon, North Macedonia, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen. Iftar programs were organized on a smaller scale for those in need in Burundi, Sudan, Bangladesh, Cameroon and Yemen while hot meals were distribute­d in Yemen and in Palestine’s Gaza Strip during the holy month.

The charity also distribute­d food and hot meals to displaced families in neighborin­g Syria. Food and cleaning materials were given out at two camps set up by Deniz Feneri in Syria’s Azaz region, home to thousands of people. During the bayram festivitie­s, the charity reached out to 5,000 orphans, offering them each TL 125 as “pocket money,” Cengiz said.

Bülent Yıldırım, director of the Humanitari­an Aid Foundation (İHH), says they delivered aid to more than 2 million in need across 50 countries throughout Ramadan. Yıldırım also noted that the delivery of 250,000 monthly food parcels had been expedited along with clothes for more than 100,000 orphans in 27 countries. “We reached out to families whose members lost their jobs during the pandemic in Turkey and the homeless as well throughout Ramadan,” he said. IHH focuses its aid on countries grappling with conflict and poverty, including Syria, Yemen, Libya, Lebanon, Somalia, Afghanista­n, Iraq and various African countries.

The Turkish Cooperatio­n and Coordinati­on Agency (TİKA), which is known for its developmen­t aid, organized aid campaigns to help hundreds of thousands of people in 87 countries. Instead of the traditiona­l dinners the agency normally hosts across the world, this year it delivered food to countries, including Afghanista­n, Albania, Bangladesh, Ethiopia, Pakistan, Colombia, Azerbaijan, Somalia and the Palestinia­n territorie­s.

The Diyanet Foundation (TDV) has distribute­d aid in 75 countries as well as in every district in the nation’s own 81 provinces throughout Ramadan. Speaking to AA, İhsan Açık, the deputy chairperso­n of the board of trustees of the TDV, said they aimed to “shoulder the burden of humanity’s conscience.”

By the end of the Muslim fasting month, the TDV, affiliated with Turkey’s Directorat­e of Religious Affairs, distribute­d more than 77,000 prepaid shopping cards for the needy and 1,100 food parcels across Turkey. Abroad, it distribute­d thousands of food packages and clothing in 14 countries. With the support of TL 31 million in donations gathered from across Turkey, the TDV was set to deliver aid to approximat­ely 1 million “oppressed and victims” in the country and abroad, with a total budget of TL 61 million, Açık said. Açık emphasized that many families who lost their livelihood­s or income due to the lockdown and pandemic this year had applied for aid and assistance to the TDV. On the other hand, he said, there was also an “obvious increase” in donations in 2021 compared to last year. “Although our people have their own problems, they don’t forget the needy at home (in Turkey) and abroad. They’re even more sensitive now,” he said.

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 ??  ?? A volunteer from the Humanitari­an Aid Foundation (İHH) carries an aid package delivered to an elderly woman, in Beirut, Lebanon, May 7, 2021.
A volunteer from the Humanitari­an Aid Foundation (İHH) carries an aid package delivered to an elderly woman, in Beirut, Lebanon, May 7, 2021.
 ??  ?? Children hold the boxes of gifts delivered to orphans by Turkey’s TİKA in Mazar-i-Sharif, Afghanista­n, May 12, 2021.
Children hold the boxes of gifts delivered to orphans by Turkey’s TİKA in Mazar-i-Sharif, Afghanista­n, May 12, 2021.

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