Many volunteered in the Syrian city of Raqqa to collect donations and send them to the areas affected by the great earthquake, including a large number of those whose relatives are in the affected areas.
Galaa Hamzawy, a Syrian, has been working tirelessly since the first day of the Eastern Mediterranean earthquake disaster, hoping to help her people in Salqin and Harem in Idlib governorate.
Hamzawy, who started collecting donations in campaigns launched by the people of Raqqa, says that she has four children from her uncles’ house, some of whom have been recovered, and some of whom are still under the rubble.
Jalaa added, “It is their duty to collect donations, and this is the least they can do for their people in Idlib.”
Convoys of medicines, clothes and food, in addition to dozens of tankers of fuel, are waiting to cross into the affected areas without the approval of the opposition on the one hand and the Syrian government on the other.
There are many names and the same destination, the Humanity Campaign and the Euphrates Dread, all of them are campaigns to donate to the afflicted Syrian people in all regions, some of whom donated their salary, others donated blankets, and others their children’s clothes, but the convoys are still waiting for someone to allow them to enter.