Featured Blog
“I can walk again”: hope for amputees in Gaza
As of April 2025, the UN reports that 4,500 people have lost limbs due to the ongoing conflict, including more than 800 children. Many have been left to suffer with limited or no access to medical care and support.

A man walks with a prosthetic leg provided by a Caritas backed program. Photo: Caritas Jerusalem
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Caritas Lebanon staff responding to blast.
After a devastating explosion rocked a city and a society which was already facing enormous challenges, your support is helping to rebuild and restore livelihoods in Lebanon’s capital, Beirut.Â

Willy Tan in the field. Photo: Caritas Australia
26 FEB 21
For Arsad in Indonesia, improved hygiene and infrastructure have improved his family’s health. Willy Tan, Caritas Australia’s Program Coordinator for Indonesia and the Philippines, explains how.

Margret standing outside a classroom at the San Isidro Care Centre in the Solomon Islands. Photo credit: Neil Nuia.
Margret, is a teacher at a vocational school for deaf students in the Solomon Islands. She was born deaf so she knows the challenges it poses to education and employment. Â

Community in DRC use tippy taps in response to COVID-19. Photo: CAFOD.
DRC faces multiple threats, tackling new Ebola outbreak amidst fears of first COVID-19 era famine. Caritas Australia’s Africa Program Co-ordinator reflects on two decades of work in the Democratic Republic of Congo and its current situation

Jamila and her daughter stand outside their shelter in a refugee camp in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh. Credit: Inmanuel Biswas/Caritas Bangladesh.
Jamila, a twenty-two-year old single mother, lives in the world’s largest refugee camp in in Bangladesh. A Rohingya woman, she fled the armed conflict in Myanmar’s Rakhine State to save herself, her elderly mother and eight-month-old baby daughter.Â

Caritas Australia stands in solidarity with the people of Myanmar during these particularly challenging times. We pray for all of the people in Myanmar, especially the vulnerable and marginalised communities who will be most severely impacted by the recent political upheavals.

Shrove Tuesday celebration with Archbishop Patrick O'Regan at Thomas More College, Adelaide.
At a time of such upheaval and challenge across the globe, possibly the greatest world-wide challenges since the inception of Project Compassion, Caritas Australia encourages all Australians to ‘Be More’ this year to help vulnerable communities.

Caritas India has encouraged social distancing at handpumps and other public facilities. Photo: Caritas India.
Caritas Australia’s partner, Caritas India, has recently been awarded the prestigious Mahatma Gandhi Award 2020 for COVID-19 Humanitarian Efforts.
The award recognises the tireless work of Caritas India during the pandemic to reach the most vulnerable communities.

Recovery from natural disasters is an ongoing challenge in Indonesia, as demonstrated by this recent photo of flood damage in South Kalimantan, Borneo. Photo: ABC
Natural disasters, including two cyclones and an earthquake, have struck the Asia-Pacfic in recent months, with already vulnerable communities struggling to deal with displacement and upheaval, amidst the COVID-19 pandemic.

Photo credits: Jesuit Refugee Service (JRS)
19 JUN 20
Aiya is one of over 93,000 people, mostly from the Karen or Karenni ethnic groups, who live in nine camps along the border, who have endured decades of displacement, after fleeing widespread conflict in Myanmar.
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