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No More Hunger At School
Michael loves to play; he says it makes him happy. He finds schoolwork fun and interesting too but worries when he feels like he can’t focus on it properly.
The Global Hunger Crisis through the eyes of a child
Favour is a bright young girl who keeps up to date on current affairs and yearns to travel. The knock-on effect of the war in Ukraine is being felt by her community in Malawi. Read what she has to say about the rising cost of living and the impact it’s having.
Walking Towards Hope
Naomi Wanyoike joined Mary’s Meals as East Africa Programme Partner Coordinator two months ago. Here, she talks about the realities facing children and communities across the region during this devastating hunger crisis.
Meet the Children Behind the Numbers
Today, on International Day of Charity, we are celebrating some of the young people whose lives are being transformed with the promise of a daily meal at school.
Where Others Will Not Go
In Turkana, the dangers and logistics of operating a school feeding programme are extreme. Here is a first-hand account of how reaching children in the most difficult of places can change the fate of entire communities.
A family’s battle against the elements
One mother’s passionate will to change her family’s fate is constantly thwarted by their impossible circumstances.
Isaac’s Second Chance at Life
Mary’s Meals has supported children like Isaac in Haiti since 2006 and currently provides meals for more than 180,000 children.
IESE Business School's Global Alumni Reunion
Mary’s Meals founder, Magnus MacFarlane-Barrow, talks to a gathering of some of the world’s most illustrious business minds about the ever-worsening global hunger crisis.
Feedback Madagascar: Interview with Jamie Spencer
We speak with the founder of Feedback Madagascar – Jamie Spencer - about the disastrous effects of climate change on an already struggling nation.
Just One Meal a Day
The only food Abak and Aping eat in a typical day is a simple bowl of maize and beans served by Mary’s Meals at their school.
Living in Hope
We hear from Father Joson, from our partner BREAD. He runs our programme in India, where Mary’s Meals is currently feeding 64,000 children every school day.
The Struggle of a Lifetime
The war in Ukraine is tearing lives and livelihoods apart in villages, towns and cities across the country, with little sign of relief for its beleaguered people. And around the world, people of every nation are already feeling the ripple effects of the devastation in their own day-to-day lives. Hunger is the biggest concern for an increasing number of families.
International Day of Friendship 2022
International Day of Friendship shines a spotlight on the role friendship plays in enriching our lives, as well as entire communities. And, when friendship extends beyond borders, it can play an important part in promoting peace between people from different cultures and backgrounds.
How Do We Stop The Global Hunger Crisis?
After a visit to Kenya in Mary’s Meals’ 20th year, the founder lays bare the extreme hardships facing children in this increasingly unliveable environment, and makes plain the simple and achievable objective to eliminating child hunger in this world of plenty.
20 years of Mary’s Meals
Watch Magnus MacFarlane-Barrow, Founder of Mary's Meals, reflect on the organisation's 20th anniversary from the Shed in Dalmally, Scotland – the place where it all began.
Communities serve up mugs of change in Kenya
Three Mary’s Meals volunteers with one shared goal tell their stories.
Giving hope to the children of Madagascar
Mary’s Meals expands its programme in Madagascar with new partner, Money for Madagascar.
Sophie and Emma Thompson ‘Double The Love’ for Mary’s Meals
Our UK campaign attracts Hollywood stars of screen and stage.
Mary’s Meals 2021: A look back over the year
Join us as we take a look back over the past year at Mary's Meals, reflecting on our milestones and looking ahead to a new year and new chapter.
Tigray is crying
“The ongoing situation in Tigray is one which should be met with global outrage, political pressure, and an outpouring of support for a desperately needed humanitarian response. Instead, it continues largely unnoticed by a very distracted world.”
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