This Passover,
you helped break the cycle of poverty.
When you provide Israel’s needy with food and matzah for Passover, you’re doing more than feeding the hungry—you’re giving them hope for a better future.
Donate Today

Jonathan Kelly
God bless you all and I pray you may all know the salvation of Jesus Christ.
Anonymous
Barry Slafkes
I am a messianic Jew I’ve lost family during invasion in Poland ww2
Mari Accavallo
Marie Houde
Marie Houde
I hope this helps I try to do the best I can with what I have PRAISE JESUS our provider
Marie Houde
Hope this helps
Anonymous
Anonymous
Anonymous
Anonymous
Anonymous


Poverty in Israel is growing–fast.
More and more people are finding themselves unable to provide for their families, and with more families unable to afford the basics, the holidays become increasingly more difficult. And now, over 15,000 Ukrainian refugees have joined Israel’s impoverished and don’t have a way to buy food for Passover.
Last
year
1,900,000+
Israelis living below the poverty line
690,000+
families in economic hardship
This
year
2,540,000+
Israelis living below the poverty line
932,000+
families in economic hardship
Next
year


This Passover,
you can help stop the cycle of poverty from growing.


When a family can’t afford to buy food for Passover, they fall down the cycle of poverty.
For generations.
Telling your children that they won’t be celebrating Passover this year “because we can’t afford it” is heartbreaking and unimaginable.




Some may buy food for Passover on a high-interest credit card.
Others will be forced to give up basic necessities like soap, clothing, or even paying their electricity bill to buy some food for Passover.
For so many, the credit card debt, or lack of basic necessities, quickly spiral into a cycle of poverty so vicious it could last for generations. And it doesn’t end there, their kids grow up in a poverty-stricken future, and the cycle repeats.
This year, you can help end the cycle of poverty.
For generations.




A little matzah
goes a long way.

