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Starting Early

Gyan Shanae
An Indian woman and her children carry water in containers.

An essay about food insecurity and child hunger by the Council's Roger Thurow.

"In many countries, people do not have enough food or water to survive. The most kind of people that are dying are children. We need to get food and water to them before they die."

The clamor begins just inside the door of Ridge Academy elementary school on Chicago’s south side. Short essays and drawings shout out to all those who pass:

"Many people are dying now because of hunger."

"In many countries, people do not have enough food or water to survive. The most kind of people that are dying are children. We need to get food and water to them before they die."

"People are sick and I want to help. If you want to make a difference, get them clean water and healthy food. We don’t want them to die."

"When you are hungry your tummy makes a sound."

"In many places there are people and children who can’t drink good water. At the school that I go to we are trying to get hungry people to get food and get safe water to drink.  Some—I mean a lot—of children and babies are dying. That's all folks."

That’s all folks! What more needs to be said? Simple, declarative sentences from Skylar and Rebecca and Aixa and Camra and Chloe and Vinny, Tia and Joshua that are eloquent appeals to end world hunger. They are all part of Action Against Hunger's campaign to get even the youngest citizens involved in the clamor.

"We want to get them while they're young, get them thinking about something beyond their own worlds," says Barbara McKinnon of Action Against Hunger's school campaign.

In far off places of the world, Action Against Hunger is on the front lines of the hunger battle, deploying innovations like Plumpy'nut, a peanut spread fortified with nutrients that often brings severely malnourished children back from the brink of starvation. In the U.S., the organization is working with about 100 schools this year spreading a different kind of elixir to more fortunate children—awareness.

The educational program, now in its third year in this country, leads up to a Race Against Hunger. It is modeled on an initiative in France (where Action Against Hunger began) that has been running for 13 years now; some 750 French schools raised about Euros 2.2 million from the races last year. American schools, just starting out, raised $66,000.

Yesterday morning, the students of Ridge Academy began running in a light drizzle. A clap of thunder introduced a downpour, and the runners retreated to the school. There, the education continued.  The seventh and eighth graders presented reports on Afghanistan and talked about hunger emergencies in other countries that have suffered wars and natural disasters.  And they talked about their three annual visits to help out at the local food pantry.

"We have a responsibility to make the world a better place," said their teacher, Jan Cardella-Koll.

"Hunger is an issue that can be solved.  We have to talk about it," said Ms. McKinnon.

"Just by running you’re raising awareness," added Ms. Cardella-Koll. "Just by talking to your parents and friends."

She asks how many of the students will join service organizations in high school. A forest of arms shoots up. "I want to do something," says one of the students. "We take so many things for granted here."

On the other side of the world, in Rome, the United Nations' Food and Agriculture Organization was also urging people to do something—namely, to get angry and raise the clamor for governments to make ending hunger their top priority.

"We should be extremely angry for the outrageous fact that our fellow human beings continue to suffer from hunger," said FAO Director-General Jacques Diouf.

The FAO has launched a campaign called the "1billionhungry project." Its logo is a yellow whistle, encouraging people to blow the whistle against hunger by signing a petition to the governments of the world to act, particularly at the G8 meeting in Canada next month.

Outrage and Inspire

This blog post originally appeared in Roger Thurow's Outrage and Inspire blog which has now been incorporated into the Global Food for Thought blog.

About the Author
Roger Thurow
Former Senior Fellow, Global Food and Agriculture
Headshot for Roger Thurow
Roger Thurow spent three decades at The Wall Street Journal as a foreign correspondent based in Europe and Africa prior to joining the Council in 2010. His coverage spanned the fall of the Berlin Wall, the release of Nelson Mandela, the end of apartheid, and humanitarian crises. He is the author of three books.
Headshot for Roger Thurow