Tulsa Nonprofit Teams with Lush to Produce Bath Bombs Benefiting Homeless
Tulsa nonprofit BeHeard teamed with Lush to produce banana-shaped bath bombs whose sales will benefit people experiencing homelessness in Tulsa and Oklahoma City.

BeHeard Movement, a Tulsa-based nonprofit that provides mobile shower, laundry and outreach services to people experiencing homelessness, announced in a Facebook post that someone from Lush Corporate reached out to collaborate on a bath-bomb product, KJRH reported on Feb. 23, 2026 under the byline By KJRH Digital. The resulting banana-shaped bath bombs are billed as a fundraiser for unhoused people in Tulsa and Oklahoma City, though KJRH noted it is not clear when they will be for sale.
BeHeard serves both Tulsa and Oklahoma City with showers, services, and assistance and has run winter shelter operations that KJRH said 2 News Oklahoma spoke with the nonprofit about. The KJRH item relayed BeHeard’s social mission and the outreach work that frames the partnership, but the article did not publish the full Facebook post text or direct quotes from BeHeard leadership.

KJRH identified Lush as the handmade cosmetics retailer known for making bath bombs, soaps, and similar products and reported that the banana-shaped bath bombs will be available in both the Tulsa and Oklahoma City stores. The local story did not include a launch date, retail price, production numbers, or specifics on how proceeds will be split between Lush and BeHeard.
Lush’s own corporate pages provide context for how the company has paired products with causes in the past. We Are Lush materials say the New Day Rising Bath Bomb and Brighter Day Soap raised over $150,000 to support Free Grassy Narrows and Justice For Greenwood and other organizations pursuing reparations across North America. We Are Lush also notes that a May 31, 2024 report showed ongoing mercury pollution in Grassy Narrows waterways and that, then on June 4, the community announced legal action and staged a sit-in at Queens Park in Toronto.
We Are Lush further records that sales of the Guardian Of The Forest Bath Bomb raised $350,000 and prompted over 800 pledges to support Indigenous women land defenders and water protectors, and that the limited-edition 31 States Bath Bomb raised $132,000 while collecting more than 23,000 petition signatures for abolition of the death penalty. The brand has produced documentary projects including Water Has a Memory with Casey Camp-Horinek and Exonerated, which features Kwame Ajamu who spent 27 years in prison.
The KJRH article page carries three identical image file references labeled 641150303_1239019221664552_7721148471098856881_n.jpg and included a NewsBreak widget showing 16K posts and 41K followers. Local headlines and site prompts also accompanied the item on the KJRH page, which framed the collaboration as a locally driven effort pending Lush’s public sales and financial details.
Without an on-sale date or published financial terms, the banana-shaped bath bombs currently represent a promise of fundraising tied to BeHeard’s mobile shower, laundry and outreach work in Tulsa and Oklahoma City; Lush’s past campaigns show the potential scale if and when the product reaches stores and generates sales.
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