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This Eid, Let no one go hungry.

“It is neither their meat nor their blood that reaches Allah, but it is piety from you that reaches him” – Surah Al-Hajj 22:37

A sacrifice that crosses
every border.

Every year during Dhul Hijjah, Muslims around the world honour the devotion of Prophet Ibrahim (AS) through Qurbani — the sacrifice of an animal whose meat is shared with those most in need.

For over 46 years, Human Concern International has carried your Qurbani to the families who need it most: across conflict zones, refugee camps, and forgotten communities.

For a child in a war-torn country, a widow with nothing left, a family that hasn’t eaten meat in months — your Qurbani is not just a meal. It is the reminder that they are seen, remembered, and loved by a community across the world.

What your last
Qurbani
Achieved

Because of donors like you, families in 23 countries sat down to an Eid meal in 2025; many for the first time that entire year. Here is what your trust made possible.

Individuals received Qurbani meat
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Households fed with halal fresh meat on Eid
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Animals ethically sacrificed under Islamic guidelines
0

What your Qurbani really does

You didn’t just provide food. You interrupted cycles of hardship. Every share you gave created a ripple of dignity, nourishment, and belonging.

Physical nourishment in food-scarce regions

In Gaza, Yemen, and Sudan, fresh animal protein is nearly inaccessible due to conflict, blockades, and collapse of food systems. Families, especially children, go months without it.

The impact:

Children’s cognitive development and immunity are supported. Nursing mothers receive critical nutrition. Elderly individuals who cannot access markets eat with dignity.

Restoration of dignity and Eid celebration

For displaced families and orphaned children, Eid can be a painful reminder of loss. Your Qurbani transforms that day into one of belonging, a proper celebration that they are part of the Ummah.

The impact:

Psychosocial well-being improves. Children experience joy rather than absence. Families feel remembered and valued, reducing social isolation and feelings of abandonment.

Local economic resilience

HCI sources animals locally wherever possible, from farmers and traders within the communities we serve. Your Qurbani supports livelihoods, not just bellies.

The impact:

Local farmers earn income during Eid season. Traders are supported. Communities gain economic activity rather than creating dependency on foreign food imports.

Relief from the mental burden of scarcity

When a parent cannot feed their child, the mental load is crushing. Food insecurity is not just physical, it produces chronic stress, anxiety, and hopelessness that affects every dimension of life.

The impact:

A guaranteed Eid meal reduces acute stress. Families can celebrate rather than worry. The psychological relief of a full Eid, even once, restores hope that better days are possible. Through your Qurbani, that parent has one less burden to carry. That’s not a small thing.

Reaching those hardest to reach

HCI prioritises women-headed households, families with disabled or elderly members, orphaned children, and pregnant and breastfeeding mothers, those excluded by most commercial food networks.

The impact:

The most vulnerable receive priority, not whoever is closest to the road. Your Qurbani goes where markets don’t, and to people who would otherwise go without on Eid.

Preserving the tradition of sacrifice across the Ummah

When conflict, poverty, or displacement cuts families off from practicing Eid al-Adha, the tradition is eroded for a generation. Your Qurbani helps preserve it for communities in crisis.

The impact:

Families observe Eid with meat on the table, a ritual connection to faith, culture, and the global Muslim community. The tradition lives on, even in displacement camps and conflict zones.

23 Countries. One Ummah.

In 2026, HCI is expanding our Qurbani program to serve more families in more crisis-affected regions than ever before. We go where others cannot. Here’s who you reached in 2025: 

India
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Bangladesh
0
Egypt
0
Gaza
0
Pakistan
0
Turkey
0
Jordan
0
Lebanon
0
Syria
0
Yemen
0
Kenya
0
Somalia
0
Uganda
0
Rwanda
0
Mozambique
0
Zimbabwe
0
Tanzania
0
Malawi
0
Swaziland
0
Sierra Leone
0
Zambia
0
South Africa
0
Canada
0

Gaza - Special Arrangements:

As livestock is currently unavailable inside Gaza, HCI carries out Qurbani outside the region in accordance with halal guidelines, ensuring it reaches families in Gaza as conditions permit. Your Qurbani will be ready, waiting to reach them.

Given with confidence.
Fulfilled with integrity.

HCI upholds the highest Islamic and humanitarian standards at every stage of the Qurbani process.

Animal Welfare

All animals are selected to meet strict Islamic standards and treated with compassion from farm to sacrifice.

Islamic Compliance

Every Qurbani performed through HCI meets the requirements of major Islamic schools of thought.

Distribution Ethics

HCI uses a rigorous needs assessment to prioritize the most vulnerable without bias or favouritism.

Transparency & Accountability

As Canada’s oldest Muslim relief organization, HCI is accountable to donors, the CRA, and the communities we serve.

The Prophetic Qurbani

Every Eid, the Prophet ﷺ performed a second sacrifice, for those in his Ummah who could not afford one. You can revive that beautiful act of mercy.

“The Prophet ﷺ sacrificed for the one who could not sacrifice from his Ummah, one who bore witness to the Oneness of Allah and his Prophethood.” Reported by Masnad Ahmad

By giving a second Qurbani share, you follow in the footsteps of the Prophet (PBUH), ensuring that a family who cannot afford their own Qurbani still receives meat on Eid.

The Prophetic Eid pass them by.

Right now, families in Gaza, Yemen, Sudan and beyond are hoping someone hasn’t forgotten them. Your Qurbani is their Eid. Give early; our teams need time to reach the most remote families.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Qurbani / Udhiyah?

Qurbani (also known as Udhiyah) is the annual ritual sacrifice of a livestock animal performed by Muslims during the days of Eid al-Adha, the 10th, 11th, and 12th of Dhul Hijjah. It commemorates Prophet Ibrahim’s (AS) willingness to sacrifice his son Ismail (AS) in obedience to Allah, who then replaced him with a ram. The word Qurbani means “nearness”, a reminder that through this act, Muslims draw closer to their Lord.

This depends on your school of thought: Hanafi madhab considers Qurbani wajib (obligatory) for every sane adult Muslim who possesses wealth equal to or above the Nisab. Maliki and Hanbali schools consider it sunnah mu’akkadah, a strongly confirmed recommended act. Shafi’i school considers it a sunnah. If in doubt, giving Qurbani is always the safer and more rewarding choice.

Under the Hanafi ruling: a sane, adult Muslim (post-puberty), who is not a traveller, and who possesses wealth above the Nisab threshold, essentially, if you are eligible to pay Zakat, you are required to give Qurbani. Each qualifying person in a household gives their own Qurbani.

Within some schools of thought, it is a recommended (mustahabb) act to refrain from cutting your hair and nails from the 1st of Dhul Hijjah until your Qurbani is performed. Since HCI performs all sacrifices between the 10th and 12th of Dhul Hijjah, it is safest to wait until after the 12th (or 13th in regions where this is accepted) before trimming.

The time for sacrifice ends at sunset on the 12th of Dhul Hijjah (or 13th in regions where this is accepted). To ensure your Qurbani is fulfilled in time, we recommend donating before Eid begins. HCI pre-purchases animals in advance based on projected donations, the earlier you give, the better we can plan and reach the most remote areas.