A Week Away From a Lifetime of Hope

on  December 23, 2020

There is one week left in 2020. The final week of 2020 can mean plenty of things. Frantically finishing holiday projects. Celebrating; resting; recharging.It can also mean one final opportunity to lift up a family that needs your support to thrive. This week, Haika doesn’t need to worry about her two-year-old son falling ill. She doesn’t need to suppress her vision of growing, nurturing and supporting her family. She can dream.Haika lives in a remote village in Tanzania, where 30-40% of all children experience stunted growth. As a 24-year-old mother, she participates in a community-based, parent-driven program called Reaching Children’s Potential led by our partner Global Volunteers. She has access to nutritious food, micronutrient supplements, improved hygiene and healthcare, family planning and parental support and quality education for Michael.Yohana, a community leader in Haika’s district, describes her as patient and resilient. Experiencing empowerment and opportunity through Reaching Children’s Potential has motivated her to work harder than ever before.Haika’s week is hopeful because of the generous support of Hunger Champions worldwide. She will see Michael confident and energized and she will make plans for a successful tomorrow.There is one week left. How will you use it? There may be a lifetime of hope waiting ahead.Looking for ways to provide hope? Here are six! Interested in Reaching Children’s Potential and empowered families in Tanzania? Join Rise Against Hunger and Global Volunteers for a Virtual Impact Trip!

About the Author

Payton Docheff is our Marketing & Fundraising Specialist. Along with supporting local fundraising efforts, Payton helps connect donors and volunteers with opportunities to Join the Movement to end hunger.

Strength, Stability And Hope

The gift that filled Nelly’s table.

“We were yielding very little, and the crops could not sustain us the whole year,” Nelly remembers. As a mother of seven and a farmer with two decades of experience, the stress of inconsistent yields was all-consuming. A poor harvest not only strained her family financially, but also limited their own meals to just two a day. Their story reflects that of many in their fishing and farming village near a lake in the Karonga district of northern Malawi. Here, heavy rainfall makes conventional farming methods nearly impossible. The entire village is, quite literally, saturated in food insecurity — a reality that leaves families struggling to survive season after season without a dependable source of nourishment.

In 2019, Nelly began participating in Harvesting Prosperity and Resilience, a sustainable agriculture project implemented by Rise Against Hunger in partnership with the Foundation for Community Support Services (FOCUS). The project works with 3,100 smallholder farmers in Malawi’s Karonga and Mzimba districts to strengthen food and nutrition security by improving production methods, nutrition practices and household income.

Just one year later, Nelly was ready to expand the variety of crops on her farm. What land once only produced maize began to flourish with sesame, cowpeas, rice and groundnuts during the rainy season (summer), as well as maize and vegetables during the dry season (winter). Through climate-smart agriculture training, she learned new techniques like manure making, pit planting and mulching, crop rotation and intercropping. Equipped with these tools, Nelly’s farm began to thrive.

After the 2023–2024 growing season, she sold enough produce to purchase an ox cart. Her harvests in 2024-2025 season yielded over 500 pounds of crops, including 22 bags of groundnuts, seven bags of maize, 12 tins of sesame and three bags of rice. With this surplus, she was able to invest in a motorbike, which she now uses to transport African doughnuts (mandasi) that she cooks and sells — creating yet another source of income for her family.

The transformation reaches far beyond her finances. Nelly now has the stability to provide for her husband and children. “I am able to eat different food types, pay school fees for my children and fulfill the visions that I have made with my family,” she beams. “I am now sleeping peacefully without any fears of food or paying school fees for the children.”

Her leadership has also grown. Today, Nelly serves as a leader in the Harvesting Prosperity and Resilience project, teaching other farmers in her district to adopt climate-resilient, labor-saving practices. By sharing her knowledge, she is multiplying her impact — empowering her neighbors to experience the same transformation she has achieved.

Across Nelly’s community, food and economic security are on the rise. Lombani, a government extension officer for the region, explains, “I can see the community is being transformed in the sense that in the area, there is food, income and nutrition security. Development is also happening at the household level.”

Nelly reflects on what it means to invest in holistic programs that address the root causes of hunger: “We are now healthy people. Children are going to school after eating their breakfast, having high yields and different types of crops due to conservation agriculture practices. With the support from the project, we have food, and we can access other food items from the market after selling our produce.”

This is the gift that fills: a future full of stability, strength and hope. It fills tables with food, families with security and communities with the resources to thrive. It’s an investment in futures rooted in resilience and hope.