Mary’s Meals celebrates feeding ONE MILLION children every school day

Mary’s Meals supporters around the globe join together to celebrate a very special milestone and return to Malawi where our school feeding programme first began.

Back to all stories | Posted on 19 May 15 in News

Celebrations are taking place today across the globe to mark some wonderful news – Mary’s Meals is now providing one million of the world’s poorest children with a nutritious meal every day they attend school.

The biggest party has been taking place in Malawi itself, the nation in south-east Africa which ranks as one of the poorest and least-developed in the world.

In the country’s Machinga district – where the expansion of our school feeding programme has enabled it to surpass the million threshold – celebrations are underway at Chirimba Primary School, one of the latest schools to benefit from the generosity of Mary’s Meals’ supporters.

Mary’s Meals’ founder and CEO, Magnus MacFarlane-Barrow, has joined invited guests – including government education officials and village chiefs – to mark the occasion and recognise the importance of our feeding programme in allowing children across Malawi to gain an all-important education. They were entertained by speeches, songs and theatre pieces, all written and performed by the pupils and community volunteers at Chirimba,

One of the children at Chirimba is 14-year-old orphan Marita Wyson, who lives with her frail grandmother Doris and younger sister Maria. Since the children’s mother died tragically in childbirth a few years ago, Doris has found it increasingly difficult to provide for them.

Marita has regularly missed school because she’s had to go out and work in rice fields in order to earn enough money to buy food for her family or because she’s too hungry to concentrate in class.

Marita said: “We are so happy to be receiving this food in school! When you feel hungry, it can be difficult just to stand up in the morning. But the phala [the vitamin-enriched maize porridge Mary’s Meals serves in Malawi] is making a huge difference.

“It makes me feel strong and I am able to understand what my teachers are telling me. My grandmother doesn’t have to worry so much about how she will provide food for me and my sister.

“I am determined to do well at school, because I know how important getting an education is. I have promised my family that I will not fail.”

The exact number of children Mary’s Meals is now feeding is 1,035,637 – across countries including Liberia, Kenya, Zambia, Haiti and India – meaning that the continued support of our supporters has allowed us to expand our global programme by more than 45,000 children since the beginning of 2015 alone.

Founder and CEO Magnus MacFarlane-Barrow said: “It is quite remarkable to think that a million children are now eating Mary’s Meals every school day in some of the world’s poorest countries. The extraordinary ways in which this work has grown and developed have continually surprised me and filled me with a sense of mystery and awe.

“It would not be true, though, to say that I never expected our work to grow so big. I have long felt that the vision of Mary’s Meals – that every child receives a daily meal in their place of education – is so compelling, and people of goodwill so numerous, that it must be fulfilled.

“As I stand here in Malawi today, meeting all the children at Chirimba Primary School who are the latest to receive Mary’s Meals, I am struck by the fact that this landmark can be regarded as no more than just ‘the first million’. With 57 million children out of school today and many millions more around the world chronically hungry, it is clear that our work has only just begun.”

Mary’s Meals began in 2002, when Magnus visited Malawi during a famine and met a mother dying from AIDS. When he asked her eldest son, Edward, what his dreams were in life, he replied simply: “I want to have enough food to eat and to go to school one day.”

Enrolment and attendance rates at schools supported by Mary’s Meals increase dramatically after the introduction of feeding, with enrolment rising by an average of 24% in Malawi within the first six months. Meanwhile, the charity has experienced enrolment increases of more than 50% at large numbers of schools in Liberia.

A book, The Shed that Fed a Million Children, written by Magnus MacFarlane-Barrow and telling the extraordinary story of Mary’s Meals is being published on 21st May by William Collins, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers. The book is being published in the USA and Canada on 26th May by HarperCollins 360. For more information on Mary’s Meals, please visit www.marysmeals.org