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Hunger and Food Security

 

"We urge one another to be conscious of the poverty, hunger and injustice suffered by the great majority of the human family."

- IHM Constitutions,
Article  13

 

 

 

hunger and food security

CHECK OUT THE LATEST Resources!

 

U.S.C.C.B.'s First Fridays for Food Security

 

Politicians Take Food Stamp Challenge to Call Attention to Program - National Catholic Reporter

 

Benedict XVI's Message on World Food Day

 

Should Food Stamp Nutrition Be Madated? - Huffington Post

 

G.O.P. Front Runners Fight Aid for Starving Americans

 

9 Ways to Go Local With Your Food - Green America

 

The Issue

 

Eight hundred million people around the world suffer from hunger - not because there is too little food to go around but because of inequalities in access to power that result in unequal distribution of resources. Ending hunger is central to resolving the interrelated issues of population growth, civil unrest and environmental destruction that increasingly threaten the quality of life for everyone.

 

The work of ending hunger must build from people's own creativity - their own skills, resources and decision making. It is essential to create an enabling environment in which people have the opportunity and empowerment they need to develop self-reliance. Women and girls are the most affected by hunger and poverty. Traditionally, women bear the primary responsibilities in the most relevant areas - food production, nutrition, family planning, primary health and education. A central component of effective strategy must be the empowerment of women.


At the same time, food security, ensuring that all people have access to safe and nutritious food, is threatened by the following trends:


The use of pesticides and harmful chemicals to grow food

Pests become resistant to the effects of pesticides, requiring farms to adopt new and more potent poisons, to which pests eventually become resistant. When a group of pests is exposed to a toxic chemical, some survive. These hardy few reproduce and their offspring inherit genes resistant to this particular chemical. More than 500 insects have now developed resistance to one or more pesticides. So have 270 species of weeds and 150 plant diseases.

 

Factory farming

One of the most significant changes in the food system today is the relentless loss of family-sized farms. The number of family farms has dropped by 300,000 since 1979, as multinational agribusiness corporations have gained more control over farm production, commodities and markets. The Federal Centers for Disease Control have linked the dramatic increase in food-borne illnesses to the industrialization of agriculture and the enormous size of many processing facilities. Today 60% of hog farming is controlled by just four meat packing companies.

 

Increasing pressure from corporations to produce genetically modified food

The planting of genetically modified crops has grown exponentially in the past decade. There have been no long-term studies on health or environmental effects and the industry has operated within a weak regulatory system. Concerns about unknown allergenic effects, infiltration to native species, increased insect resistance, pollution of organic crops and impacts on local and indigenous growers due to the patented seeds have not been answered.


 

IHMs in Action

St. Mary Organic Farm

Down to Earth - by Joan Glisky, IHM and Dorothy McDaniel

Prayer and Reflection Materials

Full Harvest Prayer - Education for Justice

Prayers for a Good Harvest - National Catholic Rural Life Conference

Resources

Learn More about Hunger/Food Security - An annotated bibliography (PDF, 64 KB)

On Agricultural Work - Pope Benedict XVI

Action You Can Take

Help Save the USDA's "KnowYour Farmer, Know Your Food" Program

Local Harvest - Find out where you can buy locally grown/organic produce near you

 

Disclaimer regarding external links

 

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