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  • Laura Martin (right) supervises the preparation of lunch at the XYZ Senior Center, a project of the Nome Community center in Nome, Alaska. The Nome Community Center is supported by United Methodist Women.
    usa-2012-jeffrey-alaska-080.jpg
  • Children eat lunch at the school in Hiowa, Guyana.
    guyana-2019-jeffrey-amazon-338.jpg
  • 26 March 2022, Moshi, Tanzania: Lunch is served at the Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Tanzania. An institution of the ELCT closely linked with the Lutheran World Federation from the outset in the early 1960s, the hospital serves today some 800-1,000 outpatients on a daily basis. [Image captured on assignment for the Lutheran World Federation, whose member churches and partners can use it free of charge to report about the LWF’s work, with credit to LWF/Albin Hillert upon publication.]
    Tanzania-2022-Hillert-20220326_AH2_0...jpg
  • 26 March 2022, Moshi, Tanzania: Lunch is served at the Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Tanzania. An institution of the ELCT closely linked with the Lutheran World Federation from the outset in the early 1960s, the hospital serves today some 800-1,000 outpatients on a daily basis. [Image captured on assignment for the Lutheran World Federation, whose member churches and partners can use it free of charge to report about the LWF’s work, with credit to LWF/Albin Hillert upon publication.]
    Tanzania-2022-Hillert-20220326_AH2_0...jpg
  • A girl carries her plate of food during lunch at the kindergarten of the St. Dominic Savio Primary School in Riimenze, South Sudan. The school is supported by Solidarity with South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2021-jeffrey-riimenze-A4...jpg
  • Assisted by Robert Moses (left) and Ina Contreras (right), Laura Martin supervises the preparation of lunch at the XYZ Senior Center, a project of the Nome Community center in Nome, Alaska. The Nome Community Center is supported by United Methodist Women. Contreras is an immigrant from El Salvador.
    usa-2012-jeffrey-alaska-081.jpg
  • Laura Martin (right) supervises the preparation of lunch at the XYZ Senior Center, a project of the Nome Community center in Nome, Alaska. Assisting her are Michael Eakon (left) and an unnamed man. The Nome Community Center is supported by United Methodist Women.
    usa-2012-jeffrey-alaska-079.jpg
  • Laura Martin (right) supervises the preparation of lunch at the XYZ Senior Center, a project of the Nome Community center in Nome, Alaska. Assisting her are Robert Moses (left) and an unnamed man. The Nome Community Center is supported by United Methodist Women.
    usa-2012-jeffrey-alaska-078.jpg
  • Panditi Shanthi hands lunch to her son Yesu Corneli in the morning before he leaves their one-room home for school in Guntur, Andhra Pradesh, India. Shanthi is a widow. She's also HIV positive, as is her son.  (Note restriction on use in Special Instructions below.)
    india-2010-jeffrey-aids-346.jpg
  • School children wait for their lunch at a street stall in Nairobi, Kenya
    Kenya_Hawkey_AP-ACT_20191011_2607.jpg
  • Hands reach for a shared Bolivian lunch including potatoes and oca tubers
    bolivia_hawkey_20071102_003.jpg
  • It's lunch time for six-year old Anthony Bahkindo and other students at the St. Dominic Savio Primary School in Riimenze, South Sudan. The school is supported by Solidarity with South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2021-jeffrey-riimenze-A4...jpg
  • Students eat lunch at the Loreto Primary School in Maker Kuei, South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2021-jeffrey-rumbek-B172.jpg
  • It's lunch time for six-year old Anthony Bahkindo and other students at the St. Dominic Savio Primary School in Riimenze, South Sudan. The school is supported by Solidarity with South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2021-jeffrey-riimenze-A4...jpg
  • It's lunch time for six-year old Anthony Bahkindo and other students at the St. Dominic Savio Primary School in Riimenze, South Sudan. The school is supported by Solidarity with South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2021-jeffrey-riimenze-A5...jpg
  • Students in the kindergarten of the St. Dominic Savio Primary School in Riimenze, South Sudan, take their pick of plates during the school's lunch program. The school is supported by Solidarity with South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2021-jeffrey-riimenze-A4...JPG
  • A boy finishes his lunch at the Loreto Primary School in Maker Kuei, South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2021-jeffrey-rumbek-B174.jpg
  • Students eat lunch at the Loreto Primary School in Maker Kuei, South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2021-jeffrey-rumbek-B173.jpg
  • Students eat lunch at the Loreto Primary School in Maker Kuei, South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2021-jeffrey-rumbek-B171.jpg
  • Students eat lunch at the Loreto Primary School in Maker Kuei, South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2021-jeffrey-rumbek-B167.JPG
  • Lunch is served to students at the Loreto Primary School in Maker Kuei, South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2021-jeffrey-rumbek-B162.JPG
  • Lunch is served to students at the Loreto Primary School in Maker Kuei, South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2021-jeffrey-rumbek-B163.JPG
  • Lunch awaits students at the Loreto Primary School in Maker Kuei, South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2021-jeffrey-rumbek-B160.jpg
  • A girl eats lunch while sitting on the ground at the Loreto Primary School in Maker Kuei, South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2021-jeffrey-rumbek-A564.jpg
  • Students line up for lunch at the Loreto Primary School in Maker Kuei, South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2021-jeffrey-rumbek-A562.jpg
  • Students line up for lunch at the Loreto Primary School in Maker Kuei, South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2021-jeffrey-rumbek-A559.JPG
  • Students line up for lunch at the Loreto Primary School in Maker Kuei, South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2021-jeffrey-rumbek-A555.jpg
  • Members of United Methodist Women serve lunch to hungry people at the Community Kitchen on May 17, 2018, in Columbus, Ohio. The women were observing the Ubuntu Day of Service on the eve of the organization's Assembly 2018.
    usa-2018-jeffrey-umw-assembly-010.jpg
  • Members of United Methodist Women serve lunch to hungry people at the Community Kitchen on May 17, 2018, in Columbus, Ohio. The women were observing the Ubuntu Day of Service on the eve of the organization's Assembly 2018.
    usa-2018-jeffrey-umw-assembly-009.jpg
  • Students eat lunch at the Loreto Primary School in Rumbek, South Sudan. While the school, run by the Institute for the Blessed Virgin Mary--the Loreto Sisters--of Ireland, focuses on educating girls from throughout the war-torn country, it also educates children from nearby communities.
    south-sudan-2018-jeffrey-H570.jpg
  • A child eats lunch in a preschool run by Church of the American Ceylon Mission in Kudathanai, Sri Lanka.
    sri-lanka-2018-jeffrey-1022-148.jpg
  • A child eats lunch in a preschool run by Church of the American Ceylon Mission in Kudathanai, Sri Lanka.
    sri-lanka-2018-jeffrey-1022-150.jpg
  • A child eats lunch in a preschool run by Church of the American Ceylon Mission in Kudathanai, Sri Lanka.
    sri-lanka-2018-jeffrey-1022-146.jpg
  • Students eat lunch together in the Catholic school in Kauda, a village in the Nuba Mountains of Sudan. The area is controlled by the Sudan People's Liberation Movement-North, and frequently attacked by the military of Sudan. The church has sponsored schools and health care facilities throughout the war-torn region.
    sudan-2018-jeffrey-nuba-E0205.jpg
  • Mona Ahmed, a refugee from the Darfur region of Sudan, prepares lunch for her children to take to school in the kitchen of her family's crowded apartment in Cairo, Egypt. She and her husband have both taken adult education classes provided by St. Andrew's Refugee Services, which is supported by Church World Service.
    egypt-2013-jeffrey-refugees-157.jpg
  • Lunch is served to students at the Loreto Primary School in Maker Kuei, South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2021-jeffrey-rumbek-B161.jpg
  • Children eating lunch in class  in the Morningstar School, an elementary program in Aleppo, Syria, for Iraqi refugee children as well as Syrian children, which is sponsored by the Chaldean Catholic Church. The Chaldean  Bishop of Aleppo, Antoine Audo, has spoken out vociferously on behalf of Iraqi refugees, and his church provides educational and other services to some of the 60,000 Iraqis living in the Aleppo area.
    syria-2008-jeffrey-011.jpg
  • At the Bethune House Migrant Women's Refuge, a ministry with migrant domestic workers in Hong Kong, residents of the shelter cook lunch for all the women.
    hong-kong-2008-jeffrey-bethune-03.jpg
  • Lunchboxes await after being dropped by parents for their children at a Methodist school in Chennai, India.
    india-2019-jeffrey-chennai-school-36...jpg
  • Shane Scott delivers the day's Meals on Wheels serving to Beverly Black, 90, at her home in St. Joseph, Missouri. Scott, who has cerebral palsy, is a volunteer with the program, which is coordinated by InterServ Community Services, an ecumenical ministry long supported by United Methodist Women.
    usa-2014-jeffrey-missouri-community-...jpg
  • Anna Hurt delivers the day's Meals on Wheels serving to Lorraine Haney in her home in St. Joseph, Missouri. Yokley, who has cerebral palsy, is a volunteer with the program, which is coordinated by InterServ Community Services, an ecumenical ministry long supported by United Methodist Women.
    usa-2014-jeffrey-missouri-community-...jpg
  • Shane Scott delivers the day's Meals on Wheels serving to Eva Frump at her home in St. Joseph, Missouri. Scott, who has cerebral palsy, is a volunteer with the program, which is coordinated by InterServ Community Services, an ecumenical ministry long supported by United Methodist Women.
    usa-2014-jeffrey-missouri-community-...jpg
  • A woman carries food on her head as she walks to work in her farm field in Nallur, a small village in the state of Tamil Nadu in southern India.
    india-2010-jeffrey-rural-30.jpg
  • In the morning, Panditi Shanthi fixes food for her son Yesu Corneli to take with him to school, before he leaves their one-room home for classes in Guntur, Andhra Pradesh, India. Shanthi is a widow. She's HIV positive, as is her son. (Note restriction on use in Special Instructions below.)
    india-2010-jeffrey-aids-341.jpg
  • A woman distributes food to children in the Kaya Refugee Camp in Maban County, South Sudan. The county is host to more than 130,000 refugees from the Blue Nile region of Sudan, and Misean Cara has supported Jesuit Refugee Service as it provides educational and psycho-social services to both refugees and the host community.
    south-sudan-2018-jeffrey-maban-E255.JPG
  • Food being divided into cups for children in a school in the Kaya Refugee Camp in Maban County, South Sudan. The county is host to more than 130,000 refugees from the Blue Nile region of Sudan, and Misean Cara has supported Jesuit Refugee Service as it provides educational and psycho-social services to both refugees and the host community.
    south-sudan-2018-jeffrey-maban-E240.JPG
  • Workers pause the potato harvest in order to eat a meal in the village of Chanchil in Guatemala's western highlands. The Fraternidad de Presbiteriales Mayas works with women and families in this Mam-speaking Maya community, providing education, credit, health care, and empowerment. Many of the women in this group weave and embroider, using credit from the Fraternidad to buy materials they need to produce a product they then sell, utilizing the income to better their family’s quality of living.
    guatemala-2007-jeffrey-highlands-094.jpg
  • A family pauses to rest while harvesting rice in Guangolola, Honduras. Once free trade brought imported rice to Honduras, it became more difficult to earn a living growing rice.
    honduras-2007-jeffrey-34.jpg
  • 11 April 2018, Gotland, Sweden: Flyfishing for seatrout with Swedish flyfishing guide company FishYourDream. Here, FishYourDream guide Jerome Saunders (right) and Erik Sjödin (left).
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20180411_AH2_671...jpg
  • 4 November 2019, Montserrado, Liberia: Students gather to receive a hot meal during recess. Started as a school for internally displaced children during the First Liberian Civil War, Mother Tegeste Stewart Apostolic Pentecostal Mission School in Montserrado county currently teaches 486 students from kindergarten up through 12th grade.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20191104_AH2_570...jpg
  • 4 November 2019, Montserrado, Liberia: Students gather to receive a hot meal during recess. Started as a school for internally displaced children during the First Liberian Civil War, Mother Tegeste Stewart Apostolic Pentecostal Mission School in Montserrado county currently teaches 486 students from kindergarten up through 12th grade.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20191104_AH2_567...jpg
  • 6 December 2017, Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire: Zainab from Côte d'Ivoire takes orders as a food truck named "Bon Appetit" parked near the Global Village provides food to participants in ICASA 2017. The 19th International Conference on AIDS and STIs in Africa (ICASA) 2017 gathers thousands of researchers, medical professionals, academics, activists and faith-based organizations from all over the world, all looking to overcome the HIV epidemic and eliminate AIDS as a public health threat.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20171206_AHP_118...jpg
  • 6 December 2017, Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire: Zainab (left) from Côte d'Ivoire takes orders, as a food truck, named "Bon Appetit" parked near the Global Village provides food to participants in ICASA 2017. The 19th International Conference on AIDS and STIs in Africa (ICASA) 2017 gathers thousands of researchers, medical professionals, academics, activists and faith-based organizations from all over the world, all looking to overcome the HIV epidemic and eliminate AIDS as a public health threat.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20171206_AHP_318...jpg
  • In the morning, Panditi Shanthi fixes food for her son Yesu Corneli to take with him to school, before he leaves their one-room home for classes in Guntur, Andhra Pradesh, India. Shanthi is a widow. She's HIV positive, as is her son. (Note restriction on use in Special Instructions below.)
    india-2010-jeffrey-aids-340.jpg
  • Heydi Foster, the CEO of Mision Cara, and Paul Gichuki, a Misean Cara development mentor, distribute food to children in the Kaya Refugee Camp in Maban County, South Sudan. The county is host to more than 130,000 refugees from the Blue Nile region of Sudan, and Misean Cara has supported Jesuit Refugee Service as it provides educational and psycho-social services to both refugees and the host community.
    south-sudan-2018-jeffrey-maban-E251.JPG
  • Children package cooked cassava to take with them to school in Lukaya, Uganda, where the Good Samaritan Women's Project has helped rural women improve their financial literacy, thus improving the quality of life for the women, many of whom are widows who also care for children who lost their parents to AIDS. The program was funded by the Call to Prayer and Self-Denial of United Methodist Women. These children belong to an extended family, where a widow with three children has adopted four children of her sister who died.
    Uganda_2015_Jeffrey_women_641.JPG
  • 6 December 2017, Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire: Zainab (left) from Côte d'Ivoire takes orders, as a food truck, named "Bon Appetit" parked near the Global Village provides food to participants in ICASA 2017. The 19th International Conference on AIDS and STIs in Africa (ICASA) 2017 gathers thousands of researchers, medical professionals, academics, activists and faith-based organizations from all over the world, all looking to overcome the HIV epidemic and eliminate AIDS as a public health threat.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20171206_AHP_318...jpg
  • 17 September 2018, Biruwa, Kavre district, Nepal: Women clean the dishes after lunch in the village of Biruwa. What may have appeared an ordinary lunch was in fact quite special. As Dalits find themselves among the most marginalized in Nepal society, members of other castes will often not receive food from them even if offered. Today, however, a range of visitors, including local authority officials sit and eat with them, to affirm the equality and dignity of all people, no matter their ethnic group, economic situation, or caste. The Lutheran World Federation World Service programme runs a Post-Earthquake Rehabilitation and Livelihood Recovery Project, in which Biruwa is one of the supported communities.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20180917_AH1_159...jpg
  • Jin-Yang Kim, the coordinator of pilgrim teams for justice and peace of the World Council of Churches, helps serve lunch to women at the Sunlit Sisters Center in the Anjeong-ri neighborhood of Pyeongtaek, South Korea. The center, which is supported by United Methodist Women, provides accompaniment and services to elderly former sex workers still living around a giant U.S. military base.
    south-korea-2017-jeffrey-sunlitsiste...JPG
  • Jin-Yang Kim, the coordinator of pilgrim teams for justice and peace of the World Council of Churches, helps serve lunch to women at the Sunlit Sisters Center in the Anjeong-ri neighborhood of Pyeongtaek, South Korea. The center, which is supported by United Methodist Women, provides accompaniment and services to elderly former sex workers still living around a giant U.S. military base.
    south-korea-2017-jeffrey-sunlitsiste...JPG
  • 26 March 2022, Moshi, Tanzania: Hospital staff chat in the lunch queue at the Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Tanzania. An institution of the ELCT closely linked with the Lutheran World Federation from the outset in the early 1960s, the hospital serves today some 800-1,000 outpatients on a daily basis. [Image captured on assignment for the Lutheran World Federation, whose member churches and partners can use it free of charge to report about the LWF’s work, with credit to LWF/Albin Hillert upon publication.]
    Tanzania-2022-Hillert-20220326_AH2_0...jpg
  • School dinner ladies cook a huge couldron of posho for the students' lunch, Yambio, Western Equatoria
    mobile50_Hawkey_20210908_013.jpg
  • 1 December 2017, Geneva, Switzerland: On World AIDS Day 2017, the World Council of Churches – Ecumenical Advocacy Alliance (WCC-EAA) brought together representatives of faith-based organizations as well as public sector and inter-governmental organizations at the Ecumenical Centre in Geneva on 1 December. The event saw a commemorative prayer service, an interactive art exhibition, and a round table discussion on how to improve access to testing and treatment for children and adolescents living with HIV, particularly by means of education. "Painting for an Education" brought to the event an interactive exhibition, "Kisumu - Nairobi - Geneva - art from them to us", featuring paintings and artwork from HIV positive children and adolescents in Kenya. ”Through works of art, we are able to strengthen the confidence of young people living with HIV, and encourage them to find ways to share their stories,” explained Gelise McCullough, the initiator of the exhibition. “Children and adolescents face a lot of stigma relating to HIV, and we need to hear their stories, and help them get access to education, with all that this means by way of affording the books, uniforms, meals, etc. But ultimately, education is not only vital in itself, but can help young people living with HIV make healthier life choices, for example by adhering to treatment, and it can also offer opportunities to improve their livelihoods, and strengthen their health-seeking behaviour. But if we all do a little, together we can achieve a lot,” McCullough said. Through an interactive workshop, children and adolescents were invited to contribute by producing awork of art of their own. The art was sold, to gather money for school and lunch fees for children living with HIV in Kenya.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20171201_AHP_261...jpg
  • 1 December 2017, Geneva, Switzerland: On World AIDS Day 2017, the World Council of Churches – Ecumenical Advocacy Alliance (WCC-EAA) brought together representatives of faith-based organizations as well as public sector and inter-governmental organizations at the Ecumenical Centre in Geneva on 1 December. The event saw a commemorative prayer service, an interactive art exhibition, and a round table discussion on how to improve access to testing and treatment for children and adolescents living with HIV, particularly by means of education. "Painting for an Education" brought to the event an interactive exhibition, "Kisumu - Nairobi - Geneva - art from them to us", featuring paintings and artwork from HIV positive children and adolescents in Kenya. ”Through works of art, we are able to strengthen the confidence of young people living with HIV, and encourage them to find ways to share their stories,” explained Gelise McCullough, the initiator of the exhibition. “Children and adolescents face a lot of stigma relating to HIV, and we need to hear their stories, and help them get access to education, with all that this means by way of affording the books, uniforms, meals, etc. But ultimately, education is not only vital in itself, but can help young people living with HIV make healthier life choices, for example by adhering to treatment, and it can also offer opportunities to improve their livelihoods, and strengthen their health-seeking behaviour. But if we all do a little, together we can achieve a lot,” McCullough said. Through an interactive workshop, children and adolescents were invited to contribute by producing awork of art of their own. The art was sold, to gather money for school and lunch fees for children living with HIV in Kenya. Participants in the event were further invited to become Paediatric HIV Champions, committing to speak about HIV and AIDS among their piers, to raise awareness and help move towards an AIDS-free world. The children and adole
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20171201_AHP_260...jpg
  • 1 December 2017, Geneva, Switzerland: On World AIDS Day 2017, the World Council of Churches – Ecumenical Advocacy Alliance (WCC-EAA) brought together representatives of faith-based organizations as well as public sector and inter-governmental organizations at the Ecumenical Centre in Geneva on 1 December. The event saw a commemorative prayer service, an interactive art exhibition, and a round table discussion on how to improve access to testing and treatment for children and adolescents living with HIV, particularly by means of education. "Painting for an Education" brought to the event an interactive exhibition, "Kisumu - Nairobi - Geneva - art from them to us", featuring paintings and artwork from HIV positive children and adolescents in Kenya. ”Through works of art, we are able to strengthen the confidence of young people living with HIV, and encourage them to find ways to share their stories,” explained Gelise McCullough, the initiator of the exhibition. “Children and adolescents face a lot of stigma relating to HIV, and we need to hear their stories, and help them get access to education, with all that this means by way of affording the books, uniforms, meals, etc. But ultimately, education is not only vital in itself, but can help young people living with HIV make healthier life choices, for example by adhering to treatment, and it can also offer opportunities to improve their livelihoods, and strengthen their health-seeking behaviour. But if we all do a little, together we can achieve a lot,” McCullough said. Through an interactive workshop, children and adolescents were invited to contribute by producing awork of art of their own. The art was sold, to gather money for school and lunch fees for children living with HIV in Kenya. Participants in the event were further invited to become Paediatric HIV Champions, committing to speak about HIV and AIDS among their piers, to raise awareness and help move towards an AIDS-free world. The children and adole
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20171201_AHP_260...jpg
  • Boys eating lunch at the "House for the Dying", a hospice for AIDS patients and other seriously ill patients run by the Sisters of Charity in Port au Prince, Haiti.
    haiti-2009-jeffrey-283.jpg
  • Boys eating lunch at the "House for the Dying", a hospice for AIDS patients and other seriously ill patients run by the Sisters of Charity in Port au Prince, Haiti.
    haiti-2009-jeffrey-282.jpg
  • Boys eating lunch at the "House for the Dying", a hospice for AIDS patients and other seriously ill patients run by the Sisters of Charity in Port au Prince, Haiti.
    haiti-2009-jeffrey-281.jpg
  • Seven-year old Asawer Kusai eats lunch in a shelter near Beirut for Iraqi refugees and other residents of Lebanon who have suffered from domestic violence and other forms of violent abuse. The shelter, a program of the Caritas Lebanon Migrant Center, which is funded by Catholic Relief Services, the relief and development agency of the U.S. Catholic community, is located in an unnamed community on the outskirts of Beirut.
    lebanon-2008-jeffrey-38.jpg
  • Seven-year old Asawer Kusai eats lunch in a shelter near Beirut for Iraqi refugees and other residents of Lebanon who have suffered from domestic violence and other forms of violent abuse. The shelter, a program of the Caritas Lebanon Migrant Center, which is funded by Catholic Relief Services, the relief and development agency of the U.S. Catholic community, is located in an unnamed community on the outskirts of Beirut.
    lebanon-2008-jeffrey-34.jpg
  • Phumla Mdaka, a caregiver at the St. Francis Care Centre's Rainbow Cottage for Babies in Johannesburg, South Africa, feeds lunch to Xolani, a child living with HIV. The centre is a project of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Johannesburg, and is supported by Catholic Relief Services, a member of the Ecumenical Advocacy Alliance.
    south-africa-2009-jeffrey-HIV-42.jpg
  • Lisa eats lunch at the St. Francis Care Centre's Rainbow Cottage for Babies in Johannesburg, South Africa. The centre, a residence for HIV positive people,  is a project of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Johannesburg, and is supported by Catholic Relief Services, a member of the Ecumenical Advocacy Alliance.
    south-africa-2009-jeffrey-HIV-39.jpg
  • Lisa eats lunch at the St. Francis Care Centre's Rainbow Cottage for Babies in Johannesburg, South Africa. The centre, a residence for HIV positive people,  is a project of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Johannesburg, and is supported by Catholic Relief Services, a member of the Ecumenical Advocacy Alliance.
    south-africa-2009-jeffrey-HIV-41.jpg
  • Lisa eats lunch at the St. Francis Care Centre's Rainbow Cottage for Babies in Johannesburg, South Africa. The centre, a residence for HIV positive people,  is a project of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Johannesburg, and is supported by Catholic Relief Services, a member of the Ecumenical Advocacy Alliance.
    south-africa-2009-jeffrey-HIV-40.jpg
  • Refugees from Zimbabwe and other African countries are served lunch in the basement of the Central Methodist Church in Johannesburg, South Africa. The church is home to more than 3,000 refugees suffering from economic desperation and sporadic xenophobic attacks.
    south-africa-2009-jeffrey-refugees-c...jpg
  • 4 January 2018, Atlas Mountains, Morocco: Lunch break in the Atlas Mountains. In rural areas, Mules are maintained by local Berbers as a practical means of transport and support.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20180104_AH1_462...jpg
  • 1 December 2017, Geneva, Switzerland: On World AIDS Day 2017, the World Council of Churches – Ecumenical Advocacy Alliance (WCC-EAA) brought together representatives of faith-based organizations as well as public sector and inter-governmental organizations at the Ecumenical Centre in Geneva on 1 December. The event saw a commemorative prayer service, an interactive art exhibition, and a round table discussion on how to improve access to testing and treatment for children and adolescents living with HIV, particularly by means of education. "Painting for an Education" brought to the event an interactive exhibition, "Kisumu - Nairobi - Geneva - art from them to us", featuring paintings and artwork from HIV positive children and adolescents in Kenya. ”Through works of art, we are able to strengthen the confidence of young people living with HIV, and encourage them to find ways to share their stories,” explained Gelise McCullough, the initiator of the exhibition. “Children and adolescents face a lot of stigma relating to HIV, and we need to hear their stories, and help them get access to education, with all that this means by way of affording the books, uniforms, meals, etc. But ultimately, education is not only vital in itself, but can help young people living with HIV make healthier life choices, for example by adhering to treatment, and it can also offer opportunities to improve their livelihoods, and strengthen their health-seeking behaviour. But if we all do a little, together we can achieve a lot,” McCullough said. Through an interactive workshop, children and adolescents were invited to contribute by producing awork of art of their own. The art was sold, to gather money for school and lunch fees for children living with HIV in Kenya.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20171201_AHP_012...jpg
  • 1 December 2017, Geneva, Switzerland: On World AIDS Day 2017, the World Council of Churches – Ecumenical Advocacy Alliance (WCC-EAA) brought together representatives of faith-based organizations as well as public sector and inter-governmental organizations at the Ecumenical Centre in Geneva on 1 December. The event saw a commemorative prayer service, an interactive art exhibition, and a round table discussion on how to improve access to testing and treatment for children and adolescents living with HIV, particularly by means of education. "Painting for an Education" brought to the event an interactive exhibition, "Kisumu - Nairobi - Geneva - art from them to us", featuring paintings and artwork from HIV positive children and adolescents in Kenya. ”Through works of art, we are able to strengthen the confidence of young people living with HIV, and encourage them to find ways to share their stories,” explained Gelise McCullough, the initiator of the exhibition. “Children and adolescents face a lot of stigma relating to HIV, and we need to hear their stories, and help them get access to education, with all that this means by way of affording the books, uniforms, meals, etc. But ultimately, education is not only vital in itself, but can help young people living with HIV make healthier life choices, for example by adhering to treatment, and it can also offer opportunities to improve their livelihoods, and strengthen their health-seeking behaviour. But if we all do a little, together we can achieve a lot,” McCullough said. Through an interactive workshop, children and adolescents were invited to contribute by producing awork of art of their own. The art was sold, to gather money for school and lunch fees for children living with HIV in Kenya.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20171201_AHP_013...jpg
  • Cotton picking is traditionally done collectively, everyone helps each other out, and the plot owner gives their helpers a good lunch. Here women farmers with their babies on their backs pick cotton in Sitaoulé Bananding, near Tambacounda, Senegal.
    senegal_hawkey_20121215_310.jpg
  • Fatoumata Diallo with a baby, eats lunch in a cotton field
    senegal_hawkey_20121212_100.jpg
  • A group of cotton workers take lunch together
    senegal_hawkey_20121212_093.jpg
  • Luciana Cordoba Martinez is the cook on the San Antonio coffee farm, cooking breakfast and lunch for 26 workers. Here she is perparing tortillas. Cooperativa Regional de Cafetaleros de San Juan de Rio Coco, CORCASAN, in Nicaragua, is Fairtrade-certified.
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_CORCASAN_20111117_0...jpg
  • sorting rice for lunch in the Egongu kitchen in Otubet, Amuria District, Uganda.
    Uganda_Hawkey_20170605_327.jpg
  • Peeling cassava for lunch in Uganda
    Uganda_Hawkey_20170605_278.jpg
  • Preparing a hen for a good lunch in Concepción Actelá, Alta Verapaz. Most of the people here eat vegetarian meals most of the time, simply because they can't afford meat. A chicken soup is a special meal for everyone.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_Alta_Verapaz_201607...jpg
  • 1 December 2017, Geneva, Switzerland: On World AIDS Day 2017, the World Council of Churches – Ecumenical Advocacy Alliance (WCC-EAA) brought together representatives of faith-based organizations as well as public sector and inter-governmental organizations at the Ecumenical Centre in Geneva on 1 December. The event saw a commemorative prayer service, an interactive art exhibition, and a round table discussion on how to improve access to testing and treatment for children and adolescents living with HIV, particularly by means of education. "Painting for an Education" brought to the event an interactive exhibition, "Kisumu - Nairobi - Geneva - art from them to us", featuring paintings and artwork from HIV positive children and adolescents in Kenya. ”Through works of art, we are able to strengthen the confidence of young people living with HIV, and encourage them to find ways to share their stories,” explained Gelise McCullough, the initiator of the exhibition. “Children and adolescents face a lot of stigma relating to HIV, and we need to hear their stories, and help them get access to education, with all that this means by way of affording the books, uniforms, meals, etc. But ultimately, education is not only vital in itself, but can help young people living with HIV make healthier life choices, for example by adhering to treatment, and it can also offer opportunities to improve their livelihoods, and strengthen their health-seeking behaviour. But if we all do a little, together we can achieve a lot,” McCullough said. Through an interactive workshop, children and adolescents were invited to contribute by producing awork of art of their own. The art was sold, to gather money for school and lunch fees for children living with HIV in Kenya. Participants in the event were further invited to become Paediatric HIV Champions, committing to speak about HIV and AIDS among their piers, to raise awareness and help move towards an AIDS-free world. The children and adole
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20171201_AHP_020...jpg
  • 1 December 2017, Geneva, Switzerland: On World AIDS Day 2017, the World Council of Churches – Ecumenical Advocacy Alliance (WCC-EAA) brought together representatives of faith-based organizations as well as public sector and inter-governmental organizations at the Ecumenical Centre in Geneva on 1 December. The event saw a commemorative prayer service, an interactive art exhibition, and a round table discussion on how to improve access to testing and treatment for children and adolescents living with HIV, particularly by means of education. "Painting for an Education" brought to the event an interactive exhibition, "Kisumu - Nairobi - Geneva - art from them to us", featuring paintings and artwork from HIV positive children and adolescents in Kenya. ”Through works of art, we are able to strengthen the confidence of young people living with HIV, and encourage them to find ways to share their stories,” explained Gelise McCullough, the initiator of the exhibition. “Children and adolescents face a lot of stigma relating to HIV, and we need to hear their stories, and help them get access to education, with all that this means by way of affording the books, uniforms, meals, etc. But ultimately, education is not only vital in itself, but can help young people living with HIV make healthier life choices, for example by adhering to treatment, and it can also offer opportunities to improve their livelihoods, and strengthen their health-seeking behaviour. But if we all do a little, together we can achieve a lot,” McCullough said. Through an interactive workshop, children and adolescents were invited to contribute by producing awork of art of their own. The art was sold, to gather money for school and lunch fees for children living with HIV in Kenya.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20171201_AHP_012...jpg
  • 1 December 2017, Geneva, Switzerland: On World AIDS Day 2017, the World Council of Churches – Ecumenical Advocacy Alliance (WCC-EAA) brought together representatives of faith-based organizations as well as public sector and inter-governmental organizations at the Ecumenical Centre in Geneva on 1 December. The event saw a commemorative prayer service, an interactive art exhibition, and a round table discussion on how to improve access to testing and treatment for children and adolescents living with HIV, particularly by means of education. "Painting for an Education" brought to the event an interactive exhibition, "Kisumu - Nairobi - Geneva - art from them to us", featuring paintings and artwork from HIV positive children and adolescents in Kenya. ”Through works of art, we are able to strengthen the confidence of young people living with HIV, and encourage them to find ways to share their stories,” explained Gelise McCullough, the initiator of the exhibition. “Children and adolescents face a lot of stigma relating to HIV, and we need to hear their stories, and help them get access to education, with all that this means by way of affording the books, uniforms, meals, etc. But ultimately, education is not only vital in itself, but can help young people living with HIV make healthier life choices, for example by adhering to treatment, and it can also offer opportunities to improve their livelihoods, and strengthen their health-seeking behaviour. But if we all do a little, together we can achieve a lot,” McCullough said. Through an interactive workshop, children and adolescents were invited to contribute by producing awork of art of their own. The art was sold, to gather money for school and lunch fees for children living with HIV in Kenya. Participants in the event were further invited to become Paediatric HIV Champions, committing to speak about HIV and AIDS among their piers, to raise awareness and help move towards an AIDS-free world. The children and adole
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20171201_AHP_014...jpg
  • 1 December 2017, Geneva, Switzerland: On World AIDS Day 2017, the World Council of Churches – Ecumenical Advocacy Alliance (WCC-EAA) brought together representatives of faith-based organizations as well as public sector and inter-governmental organizations at the Ecumenical Centre in Geneva on 1 December. The event saw a commemorative prayer service, an interactive art exhibition, and a round table discussion on how to improve access to testing and treatment for children and adolescents living with HIV, particularly by means of education. "Painting for an Education" brought to the event an interactive exhibition, "Kisumu - Nairobi - Geneva - art from them to us", featuring paintings and artwork from HIV positive children and adolescents in Kenya. ”Through works of art, we are able to strengthen the confidence of young people living with HIV, and encourage them to find ways to share their stories,” explained Gelise McCullough, the initiator of the exhibition. “Children and adolescents face a lot of stigma relating to HIV, and we need to hear their stories, and help them get access to education, with all that this means by way of affording the books, uniforms, meals, etc. But ultimately, education is not only vital in itself, but can help young people living with HIV make healthier life choices, for example by adhering to treatment, and it can also offer opportunities to improve their livelihoods, and strengthen their health-seeking behaviour. But if we all do a little, together we can achieve a lot,” McCullough said. Through an interactive workshop, children and adolescents were invited to contribute by producing awork of art of their own. The art was sold, to gather money for school and lunch fees for children living with HIV in Kenya.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20171201_AHP_012...jpg
  • 1 December 2017, Geneva, Switzerland: On World AIDS Day 2017, the World Council of Churches – Ecumenical Advocacy Alliance (WCC-EAA) brought together representatives of faith-based organizations as well as public sector and inter-governmental organizations at the Ecumenical Centre in Geneva on 1 December. The event saw a commemorative prayer service, an interactive art exhibition, and a round table discussion on how to improve access to testing and treatment for children and adolescents living with HIV, particularly by means of education. "Painting for an Education" brought to the event an interactive exhibition, "Kisumu - Nairobi - Geneva - art from them to us", featuring paintings and artwork from HIV positive children and adolescents in Kenya. ”Through works of art, we are able to strengthen the confidence of young people living with HIV, and encourage them to find ways to share their stories,” explained Gelise McCullough, the initiator of the exhibition. “Children and adolescents face a lot of stigma relating to HIV, and we need to hear their stories, and help them get access to education, with all that this means by way of affording the books, uniforms, meals, etc. But ultimately, education is not only vital in itself, but can help young people living with HIV make healthier life choices, for example by adhering to treatment, and it can also offer opportunities to improve their livelihoods, and strengthen their health-seeking behaviour. But if we all do a little, together we can achieve a lot,” McCullough said. Through an interactive workshop, children and adolescents were invited to contribute by producing awork of art of their own. The art was sold, to gather money for school and lunch fees for children living with HIV in Kenya.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20171201_AHP_009...jpg
  • 22 September 2016, Gorbals, Glasgow, Scotland: Mary Malone sells fruit for non-profit, here at the Bridging the Gap project, an initiative to offer free lunch and a meeting place for those in need, in the area of Gorbals, Glasgow. She has been selling fruit at low prices to support those in need for some 15 years.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20160922_AHP_142...jpg
  • 22 September 2016, Gorbals, Glasgow, Scotland: On the way to visiting the Bridging the Gap project, an initiative to offer free lunch and a meeting place for those in need, in the area of Gorbals, Glasgow, are participants in the World Council of Churches consultation on spirituality, worship and mission - Searching for ecumenical spirituality of the Pilgrimage of Justice and Peace. The consultation was convened by the World Council of Chuches, at the Conforti Institute in Coatbridge, Scotland..
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20160922_AHP_141...jpg
  • 22 September 2016, Gorbals, Glasgow, Scotland: Mary Malone sells fruit for non-profit, here at the Bridging the Gap project, an initiative to offer free lunch and a meeting place for those in need, in the area of Gorbals, Glasgow. She has been selling fruit at low prices to support those in need for some 15 years.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20160922_AHP_142...jpg
  • 17 September 2018, Biruwa, Kavre district, Nepal: What may appear an ordinary lunch is in fact quite special. As Dalits find themselves among the most marginalized in Nepal society, members of other castes will often not receive food from them even if offered. Today, however, a range of visitors, including local authority officials sit and eat with them, to affirm the equality and dignity of all people, no matter their ethnic group, economic situation, or caste. The Lutheran World Federation World Service programme runs a Post-Earthquake Rehabilitation and Livelihood Recovery Project, in which Biruwa is one of the supported communities.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20180917_AH1_153...jpg
  • 17 September 2018, Biruwa, Kavre district, Nepal: Rev. Joseph Soren from Nepal Evangelical Lutheran Church blesses the food before the meal starts. What may appear an ordinary lunch is in fact quite special. As Dalits find themselves among the most marginalized in Nepal society, members of other castes will often not receive food from them even if offered. Today, however, a range of visitors, including local authority officials sit and eat with them, to affirm the equality and dignity of all people, no matter their ethnic group, economic situation, or caste. The Lutheran World Federation World Service programme runs a Post-Earthquake Rehabilitation and Livelihood Recovery Project, in which Biruwa is one of the supported communities.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20180917_AH1_152...jpg
  • 4 January 2018, Atlas Mountains, Morocco: Lunch break in the Atlas Mountains. In rural areas, Mules are maintained by local Berbers as a practical means of transport and support.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20180104_AH1_462...jpg
  • A boy eating lunch at the "House for the Dying", a hospice for AIDS patients and other seriously ill patients run by the Sisters of Charity in Port au Prince, Haiti.
    haiti-2009-jeffrey-284.jpg
  • 1 December 2017, Geneva, Switzerland: On World AIDS Day 2017, the World Council of Churches – Ecumenical Advocacy Alliance (WCC-EAA) brought together representatives of faith-based organizations as well as public sector and inter-governmental organizations at the Ecumenical Centre in Geneva on 1 December. The event saw a commemorative prayer service, an interactive art exhibition, and a round table discussion on how to improve access to testing and treatment for children and adolescents living with HIV, particularly by means of education. "Painting for an Education" brought to the event an interactive exhibition, "Kisumu - Nairobi - Geneva - art from them to us", featuring paintings and artwork from HIV positive children and adolescents in Kenya. ”Through works of art, we are able to strengthen the confidence of young people living with HIV, and encourage them to find ways to share their stories,” explained Gelise McCullough, the initiator of the exhibition. “Children and adolescents face a lot of stigma relating to HIV, and we need to hear their stories, and help them get access to education, with all that this means by way of affording the books, uniforms, meals, etc. But ultimately, education is not only vital in itself, but can help young people living with HIV make healthier life choices, for example by adhering to treatment, and it can also offer opportunities to improve their livelihoods, and strengthen their health-seeking behaviour. But if we all do a little, together we can achieve a lot,” McCullough said. Through an interactive workshop, children and adolescents were invited to contribute by producing awork of art of their own. The art was sold, to gather money for school and lunch fees for children living with HIV in Kenya. Participants in the event were further invited to become Paediatric HIV Champions, committing to speak about HIV and AIDS among their piers, to raise awareness and help move towards an AIDS-free world. The children and adole
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20171201_AHP_019...jpg
  • Students in the Catholic-sponsored St. Dominic Savio Primary School in Riimenze, South Sudan, weed a school garden that grows food for the school's lunch program.
    south-sudan-2021-jeffrey-riimenze-A0...jpg
  • A student in the Catholic-sponsored St. Dominic Savio Primary School in Riimenze, South Sudan, poses while weeding a school garden that grows food for the school's lunch program.
    south-sudan-2021-jeffrey-riimenze-A0...jpg
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