Can sponsorship really help stop extreme hunger?

Child in Africa holds produce that her family grew thanks to support from sponsors
Wednesday, October 20, 2021

Child Sponsorship is an opportunity to personally connect with a child, family, and community in need. But what does this mean when fighting a global hunger crisis which has 41 million people on the brink of famine? Can sponsorship really make a difference in a crisis that’s already so vast and overwhelming?

It’s an important question!

Extreme hunger creates a cycle that people easily can’t escape from. It causes people to be less productive and more prone to disease, which in turn can make it harder to improve their livelihoods or earn a better income. Sponsorship can break that cycle by empowering communities to create lasting change.

Sponsorship is a hand up, not a hand out

When crisis or conflict disrupts people’s ability to grow food, earn a living or go to markets, we deliver emergency food relief, which is critical to ensuring people survive. As the largest distribution partner of the World Food Programme, our teams reached more than 10 million people with lifesaving food aid in 2020. 

Sponsorship multiplies the benefits of this emergency relief by empowering people to break free from poverty, for good. When you sponsor a child, you don’t just provide life-saving food for today, but tools for a more resilient, hunger-free future. Sponsorship works alongside a community over longer periods of time - usually around 15 years - to equip communities to tackle the root causes of poverty so they have the knowledge, skills and resources they need to handle future challenges. Every community is different, so sponsorship works with the community to develop local solutions to their biggest challenges and put them into action. That can include interventions like climate-smart agricultural skills development or financial literacy training, which not only combat food crises in the present but set the community up to thrive in years to come. 

Take Mayra, for example. Looking back on the pandemic, the single mum of four in Bolivia, doesn’t know where she would be without sponsorship. Three years ago she joined a savings group that sponsorship helped establish; she bought a hen to lay eggs. She’d always sold the eggs to supplement her income, but hadn’t done anything more with it… until the pandemic claimed her job. Then she was forced to rely on her egg business as a way to keep her children out of the grips of hunger. From the sale of eggs, she bought corn and beans and planted a garden. The income generated from her vegetables enabled her to buy a few more chickens. She kept expanding her business and eventually was able to rely on the income it generated without looking for another job. Not only did she keep her children from going to bed hungry, but she contributed to the community by helping keep growing food insecurity at bay.

Family in Latin America cooks food
Mayra, the single mom of four and her children, who are sponsored. Three years ago she joined a savings group that sponsorship helped establish; she bought a hen to lay eggs.

 

Sponsorship is a community-focused model

Decades of experience has proven the most effective way to change the life of a child is to change the community where they live. This is true for solving hunger too!

Sponsorship has the double benefit of being both long-term and flexible, which means we can work continually with communities to identify their most pressing needs and provide the assistance that children need most. We do this by pooling your monthly sponsorship donation with those of other sponsors in the community.

When a food crisis strikes, we are able to act immediately to meet the needs of the entire community, even if it means shifting gears from our initial programming. Staying in communities for the long-haul means we can continue to mold and adapt our programming to the development of the community.

In India, when a deadly second wave of COVID-19 engulfed the country, the communities where sponsorship was already working benefitted immediately from pandemic relief. For 9-year-old Ashmitha, whose father was suddenly claimed by COVID-19, that meant her family could receive food parcels, psychosocial care and livelihoods support to help them through their darkest hours.

Sponsored child in india who lost his father to the secondary impacts of COVID-19
Ashmitha, 9, couldn’t imagine the absence of her father. The sweet aroma on him, which used to make her happy when her father returned from his incense stick making work, still seemed to fill the house, kindling painful emotions and memories for Ashmitha and the family. Now Ashmitha’s family is in dire need of support to run their life. World Vision India needs supporting hands in holding up the family of Ashmitha and many more as well. 

 

Sponsorship has a multiplying effect

The global hunger crisis is growing at an alarming rate. The amount of children on the brink of starvation has doubled since 2019. Sponsoring a child can feel insignificant in light of a crisis that is so large—but it’s not!

There is more than just one way we can make a difference against global poverty. Sponsorship is just one solution, but it’s a powerful one. Because of World Vision’s community-focused solutions, when you sponsor one child, four more benefit too. That means the impact you make when you help one child will keep growing exponentially.

Help children and their families overcome hunger and poverty, sponsor a child today.