Food with Education is the Key to Afghanistan's Future

Part of: Ending World Hunger

Washington Post columnist Kathleen Parker recently wrote about the importance of education for stability in Afghanistan. Let's take this one step further. It is food and education that hold the key for lifting Afghan children, and their country, out of poverty.

When you combine food and education, you have a powerful one-two punch. Meals serve as an incentive for parents to send their kids to school. When a family is struggling in poverty, the safety net of a meal at school for their children becomes quite precious. If you add a take-home ration component to the school feeding, the child even becomes a sort of breadwinner. The whole family benefits and school attendance increases.

Once in school, it is the food that gives children the nourishment and energy they need to concentrate and learn. School feeding should be for all Afghan children. But many are not taking part.

The Aschiana Foundation says that there are 600,000 working street children in Afghanistan between the ages of 5 and 16. They support their families by scavenging on the streets or in garbage dumps for whatever they can get. These children are not in school learning about math, science, literature or conflict resolution. They are learning very early some of the worst hardships.

The BBC recently aired a television report on the tragedy of street children in Kabul. It was hardly the picture of reconstruction one would hope to see in Afghanistan.

The Aschiana Foundation works to help the street children enter the regular school system. They provide them with a few hours of tutoring and a nutritious meal.


The children of Afghanistan have been victims of years of war. Aschiana helps children who are forced to work to support their families (photo courtesy of the Aschiana Foundation)

 

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Article Author: William Lambers

William Lambers is the author of Ending World Hunger. This book features over 50 interviews with officials from the UN World Food Programme and other charities discussing school feeding programs that fight child hunger. …

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