"Nobility is inestimable," perused the signs as a great many workers of the UN office for Palestinian outcasts walk through focal Gaza City.
They fear Washington's current choice to withhold $65m (52.5m euros; £46m) in assets could influence their positions and in addition fundamental administrations which the majority of them, as displaced people, depend on.
"Unrwa was there each minute for me," says Najwa Sheik Ahmed, a data officer with the UN Relief and Works Agency.
"It gave sustenance, garments, training and human services as well as work and the open door that offers your family."
Najwa was conceived in Khan Younis outcast camp and raised in extreme conditions.She moved to Nuseirat camp when she wedded her better half, who is additionally Unrwa staff. They have five kids.
When I visit, we go along limit roads to the nearby center, painted in the blue and white shades of the UN, so Najwa can get a medicinal check.
I watch her eldest little girl, Salma, as she exceeds expectations in an English lesson. She is one of 270,000 Unrwa understudies in Gaza.
Salma Sheik Ahmed in English lesson"As a mother I feel exceptionally stressed," Najwa trusts.
"On the off chance that the financing hole isn't spanned, at that point Unrwa may end up in a circumstance where [it has] to close the schools and wellbeing administrations. My kids will be in danger."
Ties cut
The US is the biggest single contributor to Unrwa. A year ago, it gave the office around $360m - about portion of the aggregate sum it gave in help to the Palestinians.
President Donald Trump initially demonstrated an adjustment in approach on 2 January when he Tweeted that his nation got "no thankfulness or regard" for the huge entireties of help it gave.