JAM currently feed more than 350,000 children each day.
JAM is an internationally registered non-governmental
organization, working in Angola, Mozambique, Rwanda,
South Africa and Sudan. Our nutritional feeding programs
are aimed at alleviating poverty and malnutrition and
encouraging improved education, especially for girls, in
African nations. Nutritional feeding is at the core of
creating environments for sustainable development within
communities.
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JAM’s Nutritional Feeding
Objectives
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Reduce the strain
on the family unit, particularly the strain that is
placed on the woman to provide for their families
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Alleviate
short-term hunger
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Address
micronutrient deficiencies
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Increase
enrollment in school and reduce absenteeism
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Improve learning
ability and scholastic results
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Through education,
assist in the upliftment of young girls to achieve
equality in society
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Current
Nutritional Feeding Activities
Mozambique
More than 200,000 children are being fed
through our nutritional feeding programs, where 95% is
through school based feeding and the remaining 5% through
health and social welfare programs. Our operations are based
in the Gaza, Inhambane, Manica and Sofa provinces.
South
Africa
JAM has an immediate goal to feed 350,000
children in South Africa alone, through school feeding.
One of the most exciting projects initiated
recently is in Orange Farm, the largest informal settlement
in South Africa, situated near Soweto. JAM is working
closely with the South African Government, and various
officials to assist with the development, improvement and
expansion of current school feeding activities. JAM
currently feeds 10,000 children in the Orange Farm region in
Primary and Intermediate schools.
In the Eastern Cape, one of South Africa’s poorest provinces,
JAM is working with local and provincial government on
redesigning the current school feeding model, to ensure that
the maximum number of children receive the highest quality
food, utilizing the available school feeding budget. JAM is
planning to start school feeding program implementation in
2006.
Angola
In Angola, JAM’s nutritional feeding programs are
reaching more than 120,000 children, 85% through school
based feeding and the remaining 15% through social welfare
programs in the Benguela province. Social Welfare programs
include the provision of food to HIV/AIDS orphans, child
headed households and people living with HIV/AIDS.
"UNICEF
reported that, almost half of Angola’s children are out of
school, 45% suffer chronic malnutrition and a quarter of
children die before their fifth birthday."
Sudan
Sudan is one of the most difficult countries to
work in and still has a lot of fundamental work to be done.
It is one of our newest recipients to school feeding. In
many areas schools need to be constructed and teachers re-trained
before school-feeding activities can be initiated. Other
challenges faced in Sudan are culturally related, where some
tribes still see no value in sending children to school. JAM
currently assists more than 1,600 children through school
feeding activities in Pibor County, and more work is being
developed in Boma. This assistance is more than just food
distribution; it includes water, sanitation and medical
assistance. We plan to increase to 15,000 beneficiaries. |