CLEVELAND – As tens of millions more people are at risk of acute hunger because of the global coronavirus pandemic, Catholic Relief Services is embarking on a campaign to raise awareness, advocate and raise funds to head off the brewing crisis.
The effort, called Lead the Way on Hunger, will address how the agency and the Catholic Church worldwide is responding to the needs of the people who are unable to access sufficient amounts of nutritious food.
"There's an urgency right now," said Sean Callahan, CRS president and CEO, in introducing the campaign during a teleconference May 14.
He said millions of people cannot afford nutritious food because they have been out of work since the start of the sweeping pandemic, while others are unable to purchase seed as the planting season begins in many parts of the world.
Citing a World Food Program report that projects more than a quarter billion people – nearly double the current amount – will experience acute hunger by the end of the year, Callahan said the Church is called to respond to the needs of "our brothers and sisters" who are facing a crisis.
The Global Report on Food Crises 2020 said 265 million people in low- and middle-income countries face a severe threat of hunger unless the world swiftly responds to the pandemic. Currently one in nine people, about 135 million, experience acute hunger.
Callahan said while there may be plenty of food around the world, access to it is being severely restricted because of the pandemic.
"Pope Francis has called all of us to respond," Callahan said. "He said we have two choices: turn inward or reach outward and be open outward. The Church is on the front line right now. The Church never stopped assisting those in need in the United States, it didn't stop pastoral outreach and it didn't stop overseas."
The campaign is being introduced as the Church observes the fifth anniversary of Pope Francis' encyclical "Laudato Si', on Care for Our Common Home," which focused on the environment and the relationship of human beings to each other and creation.
During the teleconference, Daniel Mumumi of CRS Sierra Leone described how such a framework functions to bring food in response to food insecurity among children.
CRS coordinates a program that provides meals to 50,000 school-age children and 1,500 teachers in 300 communities across the West African nation, Mumumi said.
"They come to school without breakfast and no guarantee of dinner," Mumumi explained. "Through the program, they are able to get nutrition and food."
The pandemic has worsened poverty for thousands of families in Sierra Leone, he said, comparing the current crisis to the one caused by the Ebola epidemic that rocked the country for 18 months beginning in December 2014.
CRS, the U.S. bishops' overseas relief and development agency, continues to seek funding from the U.S. government to address hunger around the world. Callahan said it is advocating that $12 billion be included in another emergency aid bill being considered by Congress.
The CRS leader also said that not responding to people in need could create greater problems and lead to widespread outbreaks of diseases such as measles, creating greater health concerns for the world.
Callahan invited Catholics to join a day of prayer May 24 that will mark Pope Francis' signing of his encyclical. The prayer at Noon local time concludes Laudato Si' Week, which is sponsored by the Vatican Dicastery for Integral Human Development.
The campaign is expected to continue at least through 2021.
Photo: Laborers carried bags of wheat on to roof-high stacks at a warehouse operated by Ethiopia's National Disaster Risk Management Commission in Shinile, Ethiopia, Feb. 9, 2019. As acute hunger is expected to double in vulnerable populations because of the coronavirus pandemic, CRS launched an advocacy campaign May 14, to raise awareness about the world's hungriest people. CNS Photo/Will Baxter, Catholic Relief Services.