With a hunger crisis engulfing nearly one billion people worldwide, leaders need to step up. Drew Brees of the New Orleans Saints is doing just that.
Brees has been named an ambassador for the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP), the largest food aid organization. WFP, which fights hunger in over 70 countries, is a UN agency that depends entirely on voluntary donations.
Bettina Luescher of WFP says, "We are thrilled to welcome Drew Brees to join WFP's team as our US National Ambassador Against Hunger. The very same qualities that have brought him success, both on and off the football field, will make him an incredibly powerful and effective advocate for the hungry poor."
Brees, the 2010 Super Bowl MVP, is urging support for famine relief in the Horn of Africa.
Severe drought, coupled with conflict, has caused massive food shortages in Somalia, Ethiopia, Kenya, and other parts of East Africa. WFP is the lead agency in fighting the famine which has put over 13 million people at risk of starvation. Children are suffering from severe malnutrition and thousands have already perished. Many can still be saved if relief efforts are supported.
Brees' advocacy will be critical in keeping focus on the crisis which will extend for many more months until harvests can improve.
Brees says, "Right now, millions of people are at risk of starvation in the Horn of Africa. As the father of two, it's hard for me to imagine what it must be like for parents to watch helpless as their children suffer."
WFP is currently short over $200 million for its East Africa relief mission. At the same time, severe food shortages are also being reported in Afghanistan, Sudan, and many other corners of the globe. WFP faces funding shortages in these areas as well and has been forced to scale back child feeding programs.
Global hunger issues struggle to get the media spotlight. Even the famine in East Africa, which was one of the worst humanitarian tragedies in decades, failed to attract a great deal of media attention when the story broke this summer.
Food ambassadors like Drew Brees are desperately needed right now to spread the word, and take the lead in sounding the alarm for this massive hunger crisis.
Visit the Horn of Africa donation page.
Published by William Lambers
William Lambers is the author of Ending World Hunger. This book features over 50 interviews with officials from the UN World Food Programme and other charities discussing school feeding programs that fight c... View profile
Famine in Horn of Africa Highlights Pettiness of Problems in U.S.Across the Horn of Africa, tens of thousands of people are perishing because of a devastating famine. Children who are weak and dying are being left on the side of the road as t...
Where is Hope and Famine Relief for East Africa?The victims of drought and famine in East Africa need help. They need food. They need hope.- Clinton to Rally Support for Global Hunger FightThe global hunger crisis afflicting nearly one billion people will be the focus of Hillary Clinton's visit to Rome this week.
Ella Brown of WFP Talks About Keeping Haiti and Global Hunger in the NewsElla Brown started an internship at the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) office in Washington DC during January. Almost as as soon as her new job got started the massiv...
School Feeding in Mauritania the Latest Victim of the Global Hunger CrisisAcross the globe, child feeding programs are being cut at a time when more people are suffering from hunger and malnutrition than any time in history.
- The World Food Programme is Looking for Bloggers to Help Fight Hunger
- Hear the Pleas of the Sick and Starving in East Africa
- Why Famine Will Not Easily Go Away in Africa
- Hunger Crisis in Yemen: An Interview with Jennifer Mizgata of the World Food Progr...
- Horn of Africa Famine: How to Help
- Transformational Leadership in Tackling Global Hunger Crisis
- Cincinnati Art Museum Taking on Global Hunger Crisis




