Goto main content

Ways to Give

Explore ways you can support our inclusive actions around the globe

A small child and his mother sit on a play mat with a man wearing and HI vest surrounded by toys.

Nasolo, 16 months old, participates in a stimulation therapy session with his mother at a hospital in Madagascar. Stimulation therapy helps prevent developmental delays caused by malnutrition. | © R. Crews / HI

Join our network of compassionate supporters

Your generosity can help people with disabilities across 60 different countries—including Ukraine, Pakistan, Yemen, Afghanistan, Haiti, Ethiopia, and many more.

While our technology has come a long way since Humanity & Inclusion was founded in 1982 (we weren’t 3D printing artificial limbs back then!) our mission has stayed the same. Needed now more than ever, HI responds to emergencies, prevents injuries from weapons, and promotes the full inclusion of people with disabilities.

Explore all of the ways you can deliver help and hope to the people we serve.

Contact Us

Humanity & Inclusion
50, Saint-Catherine West
Suite 500b
Montreal, H2X 3V4
Charity number: 88914 7401 RR0001

[email protected]

 

 
 

Want to join our first responder community and leave a positive mark on the world?

 
 
A white woman wearing a green shirt and white glasses smiles. A white woman wearing a green shirt and white glasses smiles. A white woman wearing a green shirt and white glasses smiles. A white woman wearing a green shirt and white glasses smiles.

Get in touch

To speak to us in confidence about your philanthropic goals, please contact Jean by emailing [email protected]. Thank you.

Jean Maso, Acting Philanthropic Development Manager

To go further

Sudan: Stimulation therapy helps Sadia’s children overcome the effects of malnutrition
© HI
Emergency Rehabilitation

Sudan: Stimulation therapy helps Sadia’s children overcome the effects of malnutrition

21.2 million Sudanese are facing acute hunger due to the war.¹ For young children, this heightens the risk of lasting developmental delays.

Sudan: Ahmed, victim of the war’s brutal violence
© HI
Emergency Rehabilitation

Sudan: Ahmed, victim of the war’s brutal violence

A lack of timely medical care often turns war injuries into permanent disabilities, as in Ahmed’s case, who lost his leg after being shot.

For Stéphania, being a physiotherapist is both a vocation and a vision for the future
© T. Noreille / HI
Emergency Rehabilitation

For Stéphania, being a physiotherapist is both a vocation and a vision for the future

Stéphania Saint-Val is a physiotherapist in Port-au-Prince. Driven by a desire to help, she works with displaced people with professionalism and compassion.