A largely Muslim campaign has raised about $75,000 so far for the victims of Wednesday’s terror attack at the Inland Regional Center in San Bernardino, an organizer said.

A network of local, regional and national organizations — most of which are Muslim or Muslim-led — plans to raise a total of $100,000 for the immediate and short-term needs of victims and their families, which could include funeral expenses, medical expenses, rent and mortgage payments, said Dr. Faisal Qazi, a Pomona-based neurologist and the co-founder of the family-centered development organization MiNDS.

As of Monday evening, more than $65,000 had been raised online through the crowdfunding site LaunchGood under the banner “Muslims United for San Bernardino.” Another $10,000 or so has been raised through the MiNDS website and from offline checks, Qazi said.

Qazi, an American-Muslim who lives in Fullerton, set up a small fund on behalf of MiNDS — a non-religious entity which caters to the economic, medical and educational needs of under-served families in the Inland Empire, Pomona and north Orange County — on Wednesday after hearing about the mass shooting.

• Photos: San Bernardino mass shooting Day 6

Many of Qazi’s patients’ families take their children to the center, which caters to those with developmental disabilities, and he was concerned that children may have been affected, he said.

It soon became clear that the terror attack involved mostly San Bernardino County public health department employees at a holiday party, and that the perpetrators — Syed Rizwan Farook and his wife Tashfeen Malik — were Muslims apparently inspired by extremists abroad. Fourteen people were killed in the rampage and at least 21 wounded, authorities said.

On Thursday, MiNDS began to reach out to its partner social service organizations, including the Muslim organizations Sahaba Initiative and Uplift Charity. And on Friday, they received a request from area Muslim scholars led by Imam Mohammed Faqih to make it a national, Muslim-led interfaith campaign, he said.

“This is something that affects all of us; it affects us as (U.S.) citizens,” Faqih, religious director of the Islamic Institute of Orange County, said. “This particular incident affected us as Muslims. This is the response that everyone, especially Muslim Americans should (have) in every case, regardless of who the perpetrators are.”

The attack struck close to home and a good number of Muslims had some kind of connection to the victims and their families, he said.

Qazi said he’s working with San Bernardino County public health officials and the Arrowhead United Way in San Bernardino to figure out how to best distribute the funds raised.

“We sincerely appreciate the support of Dr. Qazi and his organization and we look forward to working with him to distribute these funds,” said Doug Rowand, president of the Arrowhead United Way, in an email.