Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options
A girl eats her meal next to a relative shucking corn in Terrabona, Nicaragua. (CNS photo/Oswaldo Rivas, Reuters)

Providing food aid to people in need is not enough to eradicate world hunger, Pope Francis said in a message marking the celebration of World Food Day on Oct. 16. An overhaul of the entire framework of aid policies and food production is needed so that countries can be in charge of their own agricultural markets, he said. “For how long will systems of production and consumption that exclude the majority of the world’s population even from the crumbs that fall from the tables of the rich continue to be defended?” he asked. “The time has come to start thinking and deciding based on each person and community and not from market trends,” he said. The United Nations estimates that 842 million people worldwide are chronically hungry. Pope Francis said it is “one of the most tragic paradoxes of our time” that there can be so many people going hungry in a world where there is an “enormous quantity of food wasted, products destroyed and price speculation in the name of the god of profit.”

Comments are automatically closed two weeks after an article's initial publication. See our comments policy for more.
Mike Evans
9 years 6 months ago
Every time there is a famine or drought or war, many people suffer starvation and even death from lack of food. Then there is the constant strain for people in third world countries to even afford food when it is available. We in the northern hemisphere produce way more foodstuffs than we can ever consume. Yet due to market arrangements, artificial price controls, and pure trading greed, we make this gross surplus unaffordable and thus unavailable to those in need. Everyone should reread the story of Dives and Lazarus. How will we answer the Lord?

The latest from america

The two high-profile Catholics are among a diverse group of 19 individuals to be honored by President Biden for making “exemplary contributions to the prosperity, values, or security of the United States.”
Speaking May 3 on the need for holistic higher education, the pope said that some universities are “too liberal” and do not place enough emphasis on forming their students into whole people.
Manifesting techniques abound in the online world. But creators are conflating manifesting with prayer, especially in their love lives.
Christine LenahanMay 03, 2024
This week on Jesuitical, Zac and Ashley share their conversation with Cardinal Wilton Gregory—the archbishop of what he calls “the epicenter of division”—on the role of a church in a polarized society.
JesuiticalMay 03, 2024