COVID-19 is pushing people to the brink. Rise Against Hunger and its partners are pushing back. While the ongoing pandemic is causing severe disruptions, it is also showcasing humanity’s ingenuity and ability to overcome any obstacle, even that which threatens not only our lives but our livelihoods and our quality of life. The rise of COVID-19 is expected to hit the most vulnerable countries hardest as it compounds on existing drivers of food insecurity.As people lose their livelihoods as a result of protective measures to inhibit the spread of the disease, countries must devote more resources to social safety net initiatives. Not only must countries address the root causes of hunger, but they also deal with this crisis, further straining their already limited resources. We cannot save lives from the disease only to lose them to hunger, but this doesn’t mean we have to choose one or the other. It means we have to change the way we go about addressing the levels of food insecurity that people experience due to the pandemic.Other partners have adopted an emergency response model to address hunger exacerbated by the protective policies in the communities they serve. In Honduras, we’ve witnessed a shift from a school feeding program to distributing food relief packages, which include Rise Against Hunger meals and local commodities, to meet the needs of families for two weeks at a time. In the Philippines, eight containers of Rise Against Hunger meals have been released for distribution to families affected by COVID-19. Community leaders are able to report via SMS messaging the type of emergency affecting families and the number of families affected. Then those families are made eligible to receive enough food to meet a week’s worth of their needs. Frontline workers are taking special precautions to lower the risk of catching or spreading the disease such as limiting the number of people transporting food to minimize exposure.
It’s easy to lose ourselves to fear, to let ourselves be swept away in a sea of discouraging statistics, but what humanity is demonstrating at this very moment is there is nothing with all our spirit, our resourcefulness, and each other that we cannot overcome. It’s important to understand that this is not an international crisis, it is transnational, meaning that the crisis is not bound by national borders. We have to learn to tackle issues such as COVID-19 and hunger less as individuals and more as a whole. We ask now that you band with us as Rise Against Hunger, our partners and the people we support to continue to meet this challenge head-on.