
They Fled War to Find a Brighter Future. Now, This Power Couple is Using Their Success and Influence to Give Back.
From refugees to record-company mogul and Miss USA, Sal and Rima Slaiby tell us their stories and why they’re supporting WFP USA.

From refugees to record-company mogul and Miss USA, Sal and Rima Slaiby tell us their stories and why they’re supporting WFP USA.

On World Bee Day, we take a look back at the story of one man who lost everything to civil war but found hope in honey.

WFP is scaling up its work in Iraq to help refugees affected by the pandemic.

Iran has been one of the countries hit hardest by COVID-19. In that context, 70 refugees have come forward to give back to their community.

Through the program, each family member receives $22 per month, and studies show that the 1.7 million refugees mostly spend it on rent, utilities, food and other household needs.

The dangerous escalation in Northwest Syria is leaving one third of the Syrian people food insecure, 1 in 3 children out of school, and over half of all health facilities non-functional.

Families are arriving by the thousands at already over-crowded camps and they need everything — blankets, medicine, tents and, of course, food.

On this episode of Hacking Hunger, we speak with WFP’s Annabel Symington in Yemen. The stories she tells us of Yemen’s women are either heartbreaking or heartwarming…sometimes both.

More than 689,000 people are on the move in northwest Syria as fighting forces families further north. The journey is dangerous, and WFP is working hard to support people who are displaced.

Airstrikes and armed clashes in northwest Syria have displaced over 800,000 people since December 2019 – 80% of whom are women and children. Many families were forced to flee on foot in the middle of winter, with temperatures at night reaching 14 degrees Fahrenheit.