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Religious organization · Fund dedicated to the quake

Fundación Red de Casas Don Bosco (Salesians of Don Bosco, Venezuela)

A solid Salesian operation with real nationwide presence; an emergency fund dedicated to the earthquake is LIVE and confirmed on the European channels (Misiones Salesianas and Bosco Global, Spain), where you can donate safely from abroad.

In brief

A Salesian operation with a documented nationwide presence since 2004, taking in more than 1,300 street children. After the earthquake of June 24, 2026 it activated a dedicated first-response emergency fund, which can be donated to from outside Venezuela via Misiones Salesianas (Spain) and Bosco Global (Spain), both with a page specific to the quake. The U.S. channel (Salesian Missions, 501c3) has an earthquake landing page, but its button still routes to a global fund with no online designation.

Why it is trustworthy

  1. Fact

    Misiones Salesianas (Spain) published a page dedicated to the earthquake ('Emergencia terremotos en Venezuela') with a 'DONA AHORA' button that directs the donation to 'Emergencia Venezuela'; confirmed live on June 26, 2026

    misionessalesianas.org →
  2. Fact

    Bosco Global ONGD (Spain) opened the dedicated campaign 'Emergencia en Venezuela' with its own IBAN, BIZUM 38075 and a card button, stating that funds go directly to the Inspectoría Salesiana San Lucas (Venezuela); confirmed live on June 26, 2026

    boscoglobal.org →
  3. Fact

    The U.S. channel Salesian Missions is a verifiable 501c3 with EIN 80-0522035 and published a landing page for the 2026 Venezuela earthquake

    salesianmissions.org →
  4. Fact

    The Inspectoría Salesiana San Lucas (Venezuela) is responding on the ground (accompanying the population, damaged buildings in Sarria) after the double quake of June 24, 2026, according to the international Salesian network

    salesianos.info →
  5. Fact

    Documented presence in Venezuela since 2004 (the Casas de Acogida Don Bosco project), with operations for street children and a nationwide scale (~1,300 children)

    es.zenit.org →

Sources (14)