$22,000 granted for Alaska hunger relief
MAZON: A Jewish Response to Hunger funds Alaska nonprofits
Los Angeles, CA. . . November 8, 2007 -- MAZON: A Jewish Response to Hunger today announced a total of $22,000 in grants to two Alaska hunger relief organizations.
A $15,000 grant awarded to the Food Bank of Alaska will support the distribution of more than six million pounds of food through the food bank’s statewide network of 300 agencies; and a $7,000 grant to the Juneau Cooperative Christian Ministry-the Glory Hole will help the soup kitchen and shelter to provide emergency meals and transitional housing.
Alaska ranks 19th in the nation in the percentage of people living in food insecure households, meaning that they have insufficient financial resources to meet basic nutritional needs. According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, over 35 million Americans, including more than 12 million children, are hungry or on the edge of hunger.
In 1985, MAZON was founded as a national nonprofit organization that raises funds from the Jewish community and allocates them to organizations that alleviate and prevent hunger among people of all faiths and backgrounds.
MAZON granted a total of $2,050,000 to 157 hunger relief organizations in the United States, Israel and other countries this fall.
“For too many Americans, hunger is a debilitating daily struggle,” Dr. H. Eric Schockman, president of MAZON, said. “MAZON is honored to partner with anti-hunger leaders across the country as they stand up and make a difference for millions of hungry families.”
Since 1986, MAZON has granted over $47 million in support of anti-hunger programs and advocacy working to end hunger and supply aid to needy families throughout the United States, Israel and other countries.
For further information on MAZON: A Jewish Response to Hunger, please visit www.mazon.org.
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