Heroes Against Hunger
Every 3.6 seconds, one person dies of hunger. Most of the time this hunger is not caused by famine, but by disaster, war or the ravages of extreme poverty. Hunger is insidious; not only does it destroy healthy bodies, but it starves communities of able-bodied workers and drives families deeper into poverty.
You can help Mercy Corps fight malnourishment by becoming one of our Heroes Against Hunger. Your monthly support goes to programs that not only speed critical food to families in need, but also teach vital agricultural skills and give nutritional advice to help those families ensure their food needs for years to come.
Some of the activities that Heroes Against Hunger help support include:
- Replanting of rice paddy for cyclone-devastated families in Myanmar
- Helping long-displaced Ugandan families start new farms after years of war
- Ensuring proper nutrition for Niger's children during chronic food shortages
- Funding school lunch programs in some of Colombia's poorest urban neighborhoods
As a Hero Against Hunger, you can plant seeds of hope in poor communities around the world.
Saltanat's Story

Saltanat used Mercy Corps trainings and tools to harvest 1,100 pounds of cucumbers in a small greenhouse. She's already purchased another third of an acre to accommodate more greenhouses, and is working on a plan to heat them using biogas. Photo: Svetlana Shegai/Mercy Corps
Nooken District, Jalal-Abad Province, Kyrgyzstan — Tour 56-year-old Saltanat Sultanova's rural compound and you'll see living space for chickens and geese, a goat and stocks of brushwood next to the clay oven. But you're most likely to find Saltanat in her greenhouse, which is swelling with plump cucumbers.
Today the greenhouse is swelling with plump cucumbers — a testament to the work she's invested since enrolling in a Mercy Corps program to boost rural incomes.
Between the 1960s and 1970s, the Soviet Union essentially turned Central Asia into a huge cotton plantation. As a result, the region became one of the worlds biggest cotton producers.
These days, farmers in Kyrgyzstan's Nooken District continue to grow cotton, but the price falls every year. And those who shift to more lucrative crops such as cucumbers, tomatoes and herbs find it difficult to compete with imports from neighboring Uzbekistan.
"We have flat and fertile land to cultivate cucumbers and tomatoes," Saltanat explains, "but we lacked technical skills."
Enter Mercy Corps' Demonstration Field and Greenhouse project, an effort to help farmers from seven communities diversify their crops and improve the quality and quantity of their yields.

Photo: Svetlana Shegai/Mercy Corps
Saltanat learned how to cultivate greenhouse vegetables, maintain a hothouse, protect her crops and perform basic accounting. Mercy Corps also provided the frames to erect a 1,000-square-foot greenhouse.
The payoff was immediate: In one month, Saltanat harvested more than 1,100 pounds of cucumbers in that small greenhouse. She expects double the amount next season — and says there is consumer demand for all of it. She's already purchased another third of an acre to accommodate more greenhouses, and is working on a plan to heat them using biogas.
"Our cucumbers have no chemicals, they taste better, and they're fresher than the ones from Uzbekistan," she says. "But what really makes our products better is the care we tend the greenhouse with. You enter the greenhouse, see bushes and rejoice at the fruit of your labor."
Heroes Against Hunger:
Suggested Donation Levels
Choose one of these donation levels, or any amount you prefer
$10 a month supplies a family in southern Sudan with seeds for a family garden.$35 a month provides a month's worth of staple foods for two Iraqi refugees in Jordan.
$60 a month trains 30 apple farmers in southern Kyrgyzstan to improve crop yields.

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