Starving slum children receive food

Posted: 1 July, 2008

Jul01-3pic.jpg

The food program saves these children from starvation and malnutrition, and helps them concentrate more on their education,

Haiti (MNN) ― World Hope International (WHI) is helping people impacted by the global food crisis in Haiti and Sierra Leone. 

Children in the Cité Soleil slum in Haiti have received a lot of attention because it was found that many were eating dirt in order to survive. Cité Soleil, located in the city of Port-au-Prince, is one of the worst slums in the world. 

It took WHI only two weeks to set up a feeding program at a Wesleyan church and school in the slum, which is now feeding more than 100 children. For a few hours a day, these children are able to learn and study in a refuge from the slum's dangerous and miserable living conditions.   

Haiti is the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere, and over 80 percent of its population makes less than $2 a day. Almost half are illiterate, and two-thirds have no formal employment. HIV/AIDS has impacted Haiti more than any other country in the Western Hemisphere. 

In Sierra Leone, 70 percent of the people live below the poverty line and make less than $2 a day. Like the people of Haiti, they are also severely impacted by the global food crisis.  Families in several communities in Sierra Leone praised the Lord joyfully when they received seed rice from WHI. They will have enough rice to feed themselves and to sell to others. 

When WHI loans seeds to farmers in Sierra Leone, the farmers repay the seeds after the first harvest, and WHI loans the new seeds to more needy families. 300 Sierra Leonean farmers received seed loans in 2007. For $35, you can supply seeds for farmers around the world. You can also sponsor a child for $30/month.

About this Organization


World Hope International

Phone: (703) 923-9414
Fax: (703) 923-9418
Web site
625 Slaters Lane, Suite 100 Alexandria, VA
22314

This Story in Audio

1min 2min 4.5min