In the face of ongoing crises and increasing psychological pressure on families, mental health has become an essential pillar for fostering individual and collective resilience.
With this in mind, we launched the Psychosocial Support Project — a holistic initiative designed to create safe, empowering spaces for children and their caregivers, particularly in vulnerable and high-risk communities.
🔹 The project primarily targets children aged 3 to 16, providing them with three structured psychosocial sessions based on non-formal education methodologies. These sessions combine interactive movement, music, and hands-on activities to promote emotional expression, communication skills, and self-confidence in a safe, nurturing environment.
🔹 In parallel, the project provides three focused sessions for caregivers – including parents and guardians – addressing:
Emotion Normalization – Understanding and validating emotional experiences
Self-Care – Empowering caregivers to prioritize their own wellbeing
Crisis Management – Building resilience and practical coping strategies in times of stress
📍 The project also targets families in displacement shelters, schools, and surrounding host communities, ensuring that psychosocial support reaches those facing the most intense psychological challenges due to displacement, trauma, or poverty.
💡 More than 3,400 individuals are directly benefiting from this intervention – including 2,663 children and 767 caregivers – making this one of the most impactful community-based mental health projects implemented in the area recently.
🔹 Our vision is clear: to restore dignity, build emotional resilience, and empower individuals to overcome challenges not just with survival, but with strength.
We believe that psychosocial wellbeing is not a luxury – it is a right, and a fundamental step toward healing, growth, and a better future.
This project is not just a humanitarian response – it's an investment in human dignity and long-term recovery.