Friday, 15 May 2026
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Aid & ReliefInternational

Samaritan's Purse Brings Relief to 500+ Lebanese Families Through Church Partnerships

Samaritan's Purse teams are working alongside partner churches in Lebanon to assist families displaced by ongoing conflict. More than 500 families have received food baskets, hygiene kits, and vouchers, with the aid creating opportunities to share the gospel.

Church volunteers in Lebanon distributing food baskets and hygiene kits to a displaced family outside a makeshift shelter

Analysis

As Lebanon continues to bear the weight of regional conflict, Samaritan's Purse is reporting on a relief operation that is as much about presence and trust as it is about food and hygiene kits. Working alongside partner churches on the ground, their teams have now reached more than 500 families with food baskets containing staples such as milk, rice, pasta, lentils, beans, and oil, alongside hygiene kits, bedding, and vouchers for purchasing essential items locally.

The scale of displacement in Lebanon is staggering: as many as one million people — roughly one sixth of the country's population — have been forced from their homes. Around 128,000 are sheltering in makeshift camps, and some are living on the streets of Beirut. The church partners that Samaritan's Purse works with are identifying those in greatest need and providing relief in a context where trust in outside agencies has often been eroded.

One story from the report captures the depth of what this kind of consistent, church-rooted aid can mean. A church team walking the streets of Beirut identified many sick people with no access to medication. They returned the very next day with the exact medicines needed, as well as food. One recipient began weeping and said: 'You didn't lie to us. Everyone else takes our pictures and disappears, but you came back the next day.'

This is the model Samaritan's Purse has long championed: relief delivered through local churches, in Jesus' name, in ways that build lasting relationships rather than dependency. The organisation notes that the work has built trust even among displaced Muslims, and has opened doors to share the Word of God. For UK supporters, this is a reminder that prayer and financial giving translate directly into presence and compassion in some of the world's most painful places.

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