Our Mission
A new model of impact investment for Palestine
Turbeh exists to close a structural financing gap — channeling flexible, patient, and locally anchored capital to Palestinian agricultural and rural enterprises.
Vision
A resilient, self-reliant Palestinian economy
A resilient, inclusive, and self-reliant Palestinian economy where agricultural and rural enterprises thrive through sustainable investment, locally rooted capital, and equitable access to finance — driving food security, decent work, climate resilience, and long-term community prosperity.
Mission
Mobilize patient capital where it matters most
To mobilize blended and patient capital to empower high-potential agricultural and rural MSMEs and cooperatives in Palestine — especially in underserved and politically constrained areas — through flexible investment solutions, strategic partnerships, and technical support that enable enterprises to grow, formalize, create decent employment, and generate measurable impact.
Overall Goal
To transform Palestine's agricultural and rural financing ecosystem by bridging the "missing middle" financing gap and building a sustainable impact investment model that shifts development pathways from aid dependency toward resilient, investment-driven, and locally anchored economic growth.
Purpose & Rationale
Why conventional finance has failed Palestinian agriculture
Palestinian agricultural and rural enterprises continue to face significant barriers to finance and sustainable growth. Conventional financial institutions often avoid investing in the sector due to political instability, collateral limitations, geographic and operational risks, weak infrastructure, agricultural cash-flow cycles, and the overall perception that agriculture represents a high-risk investment environment.
As a result, many otherwise viable enterprises remain undercapitalized, informal, dependent on short-term grants, and unable to expand or scale their operations sustainably. These challenges are even more severe for women-led enterprises, youth entrepreneurs, cooperatives, and businesses operating in marginalized and politically constrained areas such as Area C.
