top of page
Donate-to-a-veterans-charity .jpg

Donate to a veterans charity that puts compassion first.

Camouflage Chaplaincy offers free, confidential spiritual care to veterans, caregivers, and families who are hurting.

 

Every session is a sacred space, and it's made possible by people like you.

​

If you believe no veteran or caregiver should have to walk through grief, trauma, or burnout alone, you can be part of the healing. 

​

Each telechaplaincy session costs about $65. A gift of $520 covers eight sessions for one person, offering consistent, faith-rooted care that can help someone move from crisis to calm.

​

The truth is, more people are reaching out every week. Veterans. Spouses. Caregivers carrying invisible burdens. But without new funding, we can’t say yes to everyone.

​

We don’t receive government support. Every session is made possible by people like you.​

​

Your Gift Helps Provide:

​

  • One-on-one chaplaincy sessions for veterans and caregivers in crisis

  • Care that honours faith, but welcomes all

  • Support for those navigating PTSD, moral injury, relationship breakdown, addiction, or deep loss

  • A safe place to share, cry, pray, or just breathe

 

When you donate to a veterans charity like Camouflage Chaplaincy, you’re not funding a program. You’re helping someone feel seen, heard, and supported — maybe for the first time in a long time.

​

Ways to Give

One-Time Donation

Every dollar helps offer comfort, care, and hope to someone carrying a heavy burden.

​


​

​

Become a Monthly Giver

Help us offer ongoing care to veterans and families who need long-term support. Monthly gifts provide stability and allow us to walk with more people.


​

​

​

Give in Honour or Memory

Make a tribute gift in honour of someone who served, a loved one, or someone who offered care when you needed it most. Just use the notes section on the donation form, and we’ll send a personal note if you’d like.


​

​

​

​

“This is where healing begins, with one steady voice, one safe conversation, one act of kindness.”

bottom of page