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India Qurbani (Cow)

Qurbani icon Qurbani

India Qurbani (Cow)

India Qurbani (Cow)

Give the gift of Qurbani in India 

 

In the villages of West Bengal, 60% of families live below the poverty line. Many literacy rates sit below 50%. Qurbani is often the only time of year meat reaches their table. Last year, your generosity fed 60,000 people across 10 remote villages — widows, orphans, rickshaw pullers. This Eid, you feed them again. This Eid, your Qurbani is part of 1,649 cows reaching over 230,000 individuals across rural India.

 

Why Give Qurbani In India

 

  60% of families live below the poverty line in West Bengal

 

 Help feed 230,000 individuals across rural India

 

 Fulfill the Sunnah of Prophet Ibrahim

Qurbani 2025: Our India Impact 



  • 5,661 cows slaughtered and distributed

  • 77,688 households received Qurbani 

  • 505,080 vulnerable people benefited

“It is the Sunnah of your father Ibrahim. For every hair of the Qurbani you receive a reward from Allah.”
- Prophet Muhammad (ﷺ)

Our Promise

We always aim to deliver your Qurbani exactly where you have chosen. However, if logistical or security circumstances make that impossible, we will ensure your donation still reaches a community in need - of equal or greater value - so no Qurbani and no donor intention goes to waste.

Most Frequently Asked Questions

  • How does Human Appeal distribute Qurbani?

    Once you donate, our teams and trusted local partners source and slaughter your animal in-country, with fresh meat distributed to families on or around Eid day. Every Qurbani, in every country, is fulfilled to halal standards on your behalf.

  • Who receives my Qurbani in India?

    Local imams and community leaders know their neighbourhoods. They identify the families who need it most — widows, orphan-headed households, elderly couples, persons with disabilities, and families without a steady income. Your Qurbani reaches them because someone in their community vouched for them.

  • How does my Qurbani reach India?

    Livestock is ethically sourced from small-scale farmers in West Bengal — supporting 55+ rural livelihoods. Sacrifice follows Shariah guidelines with trained butchers. Distribution reaches 10+ remote villages.

  • What makes a Qurbani valid?

    For your Qurbani to be religiously valid, the animal must meet a few conditions:

    • Species: it must be a sheep, goat, cow, or camel
    • Age: at least 1 year for sheep and goats, 2 years for cattle, 5 years for camels
    • Ownership: it must belong to you, purchased with halal earnings
    • No outstanding claims on the animal: it can't be pledged as collateral or owed to someone else
    • Health: it must be free from obvious defects — clear blindness, illness, lameness, or severe emaciation
    • Timing: the slaughter must take place between the Eid al-Adha prayer (10 Dhul Hijjah) and sunset on the final day of Tashreeq (13 Dhul Hijjah)
  • Is it permissible to give my Qurbani online?

    Yes. The majority of Islamic jurists and scholars agree that giving Qurbani online is religiously valid — as long as the donor can be confident the animal meets the Islamic requirements (species, age, health) before slaughter.

  • What am I actually buying when I give Qurbani online?

    When you donate online, you are entering into a wikalah — an authorised agreement — between you and the organisation. You pay the value of one (or more) Qurbani shares, and the organisation acts on your behalf: sourcing the animal, performing the Qurbani during the days of Eid al-Adha, and delivering the meat to families in need — all in line with the Islamic conditions of a valid Qurbani.

  • Does giving Qurbani online count as my Qurbani for the year?

    Yes. If you give the funds with the intention that a Qurbani be performed on your behalf — and the animal is slaughtered within the days of Qurbani and the meat reaches families in need — then this is a valid Qurbani. You receive its full reward, by Allah's permission. It is not a separate Sadaqah; it is the Qurbani itself.

  • Do I have to slaughter the animal myself?

    No. Islamic law permits wikalah — authorising someone else to perform the Qurbani on your behalf. If you cannot carry out the slaughter yourself, you can appoint a trusted person, a charity, or another representative to do it for you. Giving Qurbani online with Human Appeal USA is one way of doing this.

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