Foundations and funders
Organizations and grantmakers that want to support the mission through funding, co-funding, or deeper strategic interest.
Discuss the formatFOR PARTNERS
Helping War Victims is open to partnerships with organizations, foundations, companies, platforms, experts, and teams that can bring practical value to the mission. We look for collaborations that strengthen capacity, extend reach, and support the fund more meaningfully over time.
Explore partnership directions
ABOUT THIS PAGE
This page is for people and organizations that see partnership as a practical way to create value for the fund through resources, expertise, reach, infrastructure, audience access, or long-term working support. What matters to us is not the label on the collaboration, but the substance behind it.
WHO THIS FITS
We do not reduce partnership to one kind of contribution. Different forms of collaboration can strengthen the fund in different ways, from funding and business support to media, technology, specialist input, and other forms of practical cooperation.
TYPES OF PARTNERS
Organizations and grantmakers that want to support the mission through funding, co-funding, or deeper strategic interest.
Discuss the formatCompanies and platforms that can strengthen the fund through tools, access, infrastructure, resources, or shared initiatives.
Start the conversationPartners who can help the fund be seen, heard, and understood more clearly through media, reach, and distribution.
Expand the reachTeams that can support the fund through systems, implementation, technical tools, or practical digital problem-solving.
Support the digital sidePeople and organizations that can strengthen the fund through strategy, legal thinking, operations, communications, or growth expertise.
Offer expertiseStudios, authors, and production teams that want to support the mission through creative work, storytelling, and strong execution.
Discuss the contributionWHY IT MATTERS
Strong partnerships work best when each side brings something useful into the work: resources, expertise, access, infrastructure, trust, or speed. That is what makes collaboration more valuable than a one-off gesture and creates room for work that is more practical, focused, and durable.
PARTNERSHIP VALUE
Partnership helps the fund move on work that would otherwise take more time, more effort, or more limited capacity.
When outside expertise or infrastructure enters the process, the fund can move with more precision and better execution.
A good partner opens access to new people, new environments, and new opportunities the fund would not reach alone.
A strong collaboration helps not only with a current task, but also with the broader resilience of the fund over time.
HOW IT BEGINS
Most partnerships do not begin with a large agreement. They begin with a clear first conversation. You write to us, explain the format you have in mind, describe what you can bring into the work, and tell us why it matters to you. From there, we look at whether there is real value, a practical structure, and a next step that makes sense.
THREE STEPS
Share the type of partnership you have in mind and the value it could realistically bring to the fund.
We clarify the working format, the roles on each side, and the outcome that feels useful and realistic.
If the format fits, we can move forward with a clearer structure and a more practical working relationship.
WHAT MATTERS TO US
We are drawn to partnerships with clarity, discipline, and respect for the mission. What matters to us is not noise around the collaboration, but the quality of the work it makes possible. We would rather see less promise and more practical value than a beautifully worded partnership with no real substance behind it.
LONGER HORIZON
Helping War Victims is building more than a stream of direct support. Over time, we want to strengthen a more resilient support model. Partnerships matter because they help not only with immediate work, but also with the fund's overall capacity to grow, develop, and operate more sustainably over the long term.
TRUST AND SAFETY
If you are discussing collaboration with the fund or mentioning WVF publicly, use only official contacts, official pages, and confirmed facts. Do not present a partnership as active before it is agreed, do not use unverified donation routes, and do not promise anything on behalf of the fund that it has not confirmed publicly.
COMMON QUESTIONS
Good partnerships usually begin with one simple question: is there a practical form of collaboration here, and does it bring real value to both sides?
No. The fund can work with companies, foundations, platforms, media partners, expert organizations, creative teams, and other mission-aligned structures.
Yes. A partnership can be built not only around funding, but also around expertise, technology, visibility, infrastructure, content, or another practical contribution.
Yes. If you have interest in a particular direction or type of contribution, that can be discussed in advance so the format stays realistic and clear.
No. A partnership can be public, working, project-based, internal, or quieter in form if that makes sense for both sides.
Yes. In many cases, it is better to begin with a clear and useful smaller format than to build an overly broad structure too early.
For a first conversation, the best contact is partnerships@warvictimsfund.com. If your request is broader and you are unsure of the format, you can also use contact@warvictimsfund.com.
NEXT STEP
If your organization, team, or platform sees a meaningful way to work with Helping War Victims, contact us. We can look at whether there is a clear scope, a useful form of participation, and a next step that makes sense for both sides.
Primary contact: partnerships@warvictimsfund.com
Fallback: contact@warvictimsfund.com