Thank you for your compassionate support |
NO KID HUNGRY JANUARY
2021 Newsletter
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Meals being distributed thanks to your support
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A Nation of Heroes Feeding Hungry Kids
In some respects, the moon landing was a walk in the park
compared with the challenge of feeding hungry kids during the
pandemic. Overnight, thousands of educators, chefs, school nutrition
directors, bus drivers and others had to shift from school-based
programs to new and untested approaches.
Meet some of the remarkable people whose work you helped
make possible in 2020. They come from all walks of life, but they
share a single-minded commitment to feeding hungry kids.
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Their work would not have been possible without the urgent
and kind support from you and thousands of others. On behalf of
frontline heroes everywhere, thank you for having their backs.
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This Month's
Short Stories
Your Impact By the Numbers
You helped No Kid Hungry make $65 million in local emergency grants.
Grantees served a reported 847 MILLION meals to kids and families
across 23,500 LOCATIONS NATIONWIDE from March to September.
Smiling family
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Moving Mountains to Feed Hungry Kids
The phrase 'necessity is the mother of
invention' has been around for centuries. In that fashion, the
pandemic and recession have driven a needed burst of creative local
solutions to reach the growing masses of hungry kids and families. A
new No Kid Hungry report spotlights creative approaches to connecting
kids in need with food, from using school buses to deliver food to
involving local communities to forging new partnerships.
Read More
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ADD PASSION AND STIR
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ADD PASSION AND STIR: Inequality, Mass Incarceration, and
Social Justice for Native Americans
Nowhere are the deep connections that link hunger to
social injustice and inequality more stark than among Native American
communities. In this must-listen podcast, Pulitzer Prize winning
journalist Nicholas Kristof and Johns Hopkins Center for American
Indian Health Director Allison Barlow join host Billy Shore to talk
about poverty, education, and the struggle for social justice in
Native American communities.
"We as a country have had this narrative that when
people struggle, it's because of a lack of personal
responsibility and bad choices. When a child born in a certain county
has a life expectancy shorter than that of Cambodia, that's not
because that infant is making a bad choice. It's because we as a
society are making bad choices about healthcare, education and
jobs," says Kristof.
Listen Here
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1 in 4 kids in America could face hunger because of the
coronavirus. Our monthly donors play a special role in our efforts to
feed hungry kids by providing a reliable source of income to support
No Kid Hungry's efforts. If you can, please consider joining the
ranks of monthly supporters today.
Donate Today
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