Tuesday, August 12, 2025

San Miguel NGO marks ‘Giving Tuesday’ with food hampers for needy

A San Miguel de Allende charity is taking transparency to the next level on Giving Tuesday December 1 by live-streaming its distribution of 500 care packages to needy rural communities.

Giving Tuesday is an annual event that encourages people to give to charities.

In San Miguel, the organization Feed the Hungry is inviting the public to a special “24 Hours of Gratitude” on its social media sites, encouraging supporters to post one thing they are grateful for.

The organization is also selling art donated by a San Miguel gallery and copies of a bilingual cookbook created for the charity. All the proceeds will go toward purchasing food for its beneficiary families. 

“Every day, we are helping thousands of families put food on their table, and on December 1 we want to give [the public] an opportunity to join us virtually …” said Feed the Hungry president Al Kocourek.

An organization whose model before the coronavirus pandemic was to deliver weekly food staples to school kitchens in needy neighborhoods and rural communities, Feed the Hungry had to adapt its delivery model once schools across Mexico shut down and students began to learn at home.  

Over the past eight months of the pandemic, the NGO has provided more than 60,000 food baskets directly to families.

• Readers interested in joining Feed the Hungry’s GivingTuesday initiative can find more information on the organization’s website.

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
flooding in Mexico City August 10

Intense rain floods Mexico City’s Zócalo, forces airport closure

0
All flights from Mexico City International Airport (AICM) had resumed by 6 a.m. on Monday after the city received half of the month's rain (84 mm) on Sunday evening.
a jaguar in a tree

After jaguar sightings in Arizona, concern grows about border wall’s impact on wildlife

1
The cat may be trapped on the U.S. side, and others in Sonora may be kept from moving the other way, as the border wall drastically reduces wildlife crossings.
sargassum being collected on the high seas

Gone fishing for sargassum: Mexico’s agriculture ministry declares the seaweed a national resource

4
The Ministry of Agriculture's reclassification of sargassum as a fishing resource allows equipped vessels to capture it before it reaches Mexico's shores.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity