Clear Structure
We want people to understand where they are and what they can do next.
ACCESSIBILITY
For us, accessibility is not a formal label or a technical showcase. It is an effort to make the site easier to understand and easier to use for people with different needs and different ways of interacting with content.
OUR APPROACH
We believe a good website should not only look clean, but also feel easier to understand and navigate. That is why we treat accessibility as part of clear communication, predictable navigation, and a more respectful user experience.
PRINCIPLES
We want people to understand where they are and what they can do next.
We aim to write in a way that feels clearer, calmer, and easier to follow.
We try to avoid noise, pressure, and unnecessary confusion in the experience.
If something is hard to use, there should be a clear way to tell us.
HOW WE THINK
For us, accessibility is not only about standards, code, or settings. It is also about whether a person can understand where they are, what they can do next, and how to get help if something is not working well.
We want the site to feel easier to follow, less crowded, and more predictable to use. That applies to navigation, page structure, content, and support routes.
IF SOMETHING IS HARD
If a page is hard to read, difficult to navigate, or unclear in a way that stops you from using the site comfortably, please write to us. For this page, the main contact route is contact@warvictimsfund.com.
If your question is privacy-related, you can also use privacy@warvictimsfund.com. We do not want accessibility issues to stay invisible just because someone does not know how to describe them in technical language.
HONESTLY TODAY
At this stage, we do not want to make formal claims about compliance, testing processes, or conformance levels that we have not publicly confirmed. It is more honest to explain our direction clearly and give people a simple route to report a barrier.
This page exists to offer a direct and respectful feedback path, not to imitate a finished accessibility policy that does not yet exist.
CONTACT ROUTES
If your issue is about accessibility, use contact@warvictimsfund.com as the main address. If your question is about privacy, use privacy@warvictimsfund.com.
If the issue is not about accessibility but about suspicious activity or a false message using the fund’s name, the correct route is report-scam@warvictimsfund.com and the Report a scam page. If the question is donation-related, use donations@warvictimsfund.com.
FAQ
Because accessibility is part of a respectful user experience. This page gives people a simple explanation of our approach and a clear way to tell us when something on the site becomes a barrier.
No. We do not use this page to make formal claims that have not been publicly confirmed. We use it to explain our approach honestly and to give people a clear contact route if something does not work well.
Write to contact@warvictimsfund.com and explain what made the page difficult to use. That can be a reading issue, a navigation problem, a broken flow, or anything else that makes the experience harder.
No. It is enough to say what was difficult, what page you were on, and what you were trying to do. We do not expect people to explain accessibility issues in developer terms.
For us, accessibility is connected to clarity, respect, and the removal of unnecessary barriers. If a person cannot use the site comfortably, that is not only a technical issue but also a question of how well we respect their time and attention.
Yes. As the site develops and more confirmed practices are added, this page can become more detailed. But it should continue to include only statements we can explain honestly and support clearly.
NEXT STEP
If you run into a barrier, cannot complete an action, or want to report an accessibility issue, use the official contact route. For this page, practical help matters more than formal language on its own.