Saturday Star

Food for thought on hunger issue

- CATHERINE CONSTANTIN­IDES

AS A humanitari­an, there are certain days of importance that are powerful moments for reflection, a realignmen­t of where we are and where we ought to be, a moment to drive awareness and education on some of the most pressing issues of our time. On Friday, May 28, we observe World Hunger Day.

Across the world, more than enough food is produced to feed the global population, yet 690million people live with chronic hunger.

World hunger is on the rise, affecting 8.9% of the global population. From 2018 to 2019, the number of undernouri­shed people grew by 10million and there are now almost 60million more undernouri­shed people than there were seven years ago.

Additional­ly, 60% of people living in hunger are women, with 98% of people suffering from undernouri­shment living in low-and-middle-income countries.

Hunger kills more than Aids, malaria and TB do combined. Through my work, I have seen the horrifying levels of hunger, and they are inextricab­ly connected to poverty and social injustice. The poverty trap remains one of the leading causes of hunger.

A few weeks ago, I had the opportunit­y of travelling with Sa-based NGO Africa Muslim Agency, as part of a women-led delegation to Afghanista­n, under the banner of “More Than A Meal”.

As I think back on this humanitari­an mission, I’m reminded of moments that will forever remain with me.

It is said that what we do may be insignific­ant – but we must do it anyway. It is about the moments we carve out when we submerge ourselves in the time spent with people, those we know and those we have met for the first time. It’s about how we give of ourselves to others. How we allow our beings to connect, understand and listen, without responding, without judgement and without trying to do anything more than live within that moment.

How can I ever be the same after walking the mountains of Kabul, listening to the cries of women widowed at a young age, left with between four and 6 children? The pain and hardship carried in the eyes of the children we met and worked with. Understand­ing the social dynamics such as child marriage, understand­ing the hardship, anger and suffering, that little children no more than 5 years old carry with them. When children have no understand­ing of how old they are because age means nothing, when you sell plastic bags for a few cents to simply bring home money.

From the age of 4, children become the breadwinne­rs of their homes and all that matters is if you’re able to buy a single potato to boil for a family of four, to share. The levels of hunger can be seen and felt in every home, in the suffering and struggle of the faces of every mother. I met children of all ages who merely exist, because living isn’t an option. Happiness is an emotion they are unable to unlock because it is not a feeling they know or have access to within the frame of life as they know it. Afghanista­n is the fifth poorest country in the world with a population of just under 41million people; 54% of the population live in poverty, according to the Afghanista­n Living Conditions Survey done in 2016 and 2017, and 12.5 million people have been identified as severely food insecure.

Being able to travel to a part of the world where few go, I was given an opportunit­y to truly understand and engage people on the ground. I felt their torment, I could hear, see and feel the anguish of hunger and starvation. Education is not a primary focus, and when you can see such hunger and the fight to merely exist, children do not go to school because being able to eat is far more important than school.

I will forever carry the mountains of Kabul within me. I will forever be changed by my time in Afghanista­n and will do all that I can to continue supporting #Morethanam­eal, in a quest to give more than a meal to the forgotten people of Afghanista­n, giving them dignity, security, nourishmen­t and, most importantl­y, a reason to live. My time in Afghanista­n allowed me to see such a programme in action. The work done on the ground by AMA is powerful, impactful and life-changing for families who benefit from the programme. Visit its website www.africamusl­imsagency.co.za.

When we take a look closer to home, we begin to understand that food security is a complex challenge wedged between a myriad social problems that need to be urgently addressed. Statistics show that approximat­ely 50% of our population is food insecure yet 10 million tons of South Africa’s food supply is lost or wasted every year and 70% of

Constantin­ides

households in informal settlement­s are eating only one meal a day.

There are many organisati­ons, that before Covid-19 and even during the hard lockdown last year, have continued to drive the distributi­on of food for the most vulnerable across communitie­s in South Africa.

Many ask: “What can I do?”

As we observe World Hunger Day, consider supporting an organisati­on committed to feeding our communitie­s through soup kitchens and

| Catherine food security programmes.

Visit: Muslim Associatio­n of South Africa: www.muslim.org.za; Build The Future: www.buildthefu­ture.org. za; Shalam Jackson: www.shalamjack­son.org.za; Salaam Foundation: www.salaamfoun­dation.com; or visit a Community Action Network chapter in your area.

Constantin­ides is a humanitari­an and social justice activist. Follow @Changeagen­tsa

 ??  ?? IN THE mountains of Kabul, Afghanista­n, the writer met children who are the breadwinne­rs in their home, many of whom have been orphaned by the ongoing conflict.
IN THE mountains of Kabul, Afghanista­n, the writer met children who are the breadwinne­rs in their home, many of whom have been orphaned by the ongoing conflict.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa