When borders close and laboratories collapse, research becomes a doorway to hope. In Gaza, medicine is not limited to treatment — it extends to understanding humanity under pressure. Every injury and every field case is an opportunity to learn, to document, and to produce knowledge that can make a difference globally.
The Mofeed Foundation is building a research network that connects doctors and scholars from conflict zones with international academic institutions. The goal is to document daily medical challenges and turn them into actionable data that informs healthcare policy and humanitarian response. This evidence-based approach places frontline physicians at the center of the global conversation on health in crises.
In an environment where funding and equipment are scarce, scientific creativity becomes a necessity, not a luxury. Many studies emerging from Gaza have offered vital insights into war injuries, crisis management, and training in low-resource settings. By supporting young researchers and promoting their publications, the Foundation reinforces a crucial belief: local knowledge is not secondary — it is the most authentic and essential form of understanding.
Here, research is not an academic privilege but an act of resilience. It is proof that science has a place even amid devastation — and that humanity can transform pain into knowledge that saves lives.









