Official Site of the U.S. Air Force   Right Corner Banner
Join the Air Force

News > Airmen fight hunger through 'Food for Kidz'
 
Photos 
Airmen fight hunger through ‘Food for Kidz’
Luke Air Force Base volunteers worked April 13, 2013, to package meals to send to Afghanistan to feed hungry children. The food is provided by Food for Kidz and the packages are a mixture of rice, soy flour, dehydrated vegetables, vegan protein powder and spices which are sealed in industrial-grade plastic bags and have a shelf life of seven years. (U.S. Air Force photo/Tech. Sgt. Louis Vega Jr.)
Download HiRes
Airmen fight hunger through 'Food for Kidz'

Posted 4/16/2013 Email story   Print story

    


by Tech. Sgt. Louis Vega, Jr.
944th Fighter Wing Public Affairs


4/16/2013 - LUKE AIR FORCE BASE, Ariz. (AFNS) -- Global hunger took another hit today by Luke Air Force Base service members and their families April 13 as they worked alongside community organizations to build "Food for Kidz" boxes.

Approximately 165 volunteers from Luke AFB spent about six hours packaging 105,000 meals, which will be sent to Afghanistan to feed hungry children. The event was headed by Grace Bible Fellowship Church in Sun City and fueled by service members and their families.

Retired Lt. Gen. John Bradley, former Air Force Reserve Command commander, requested the church to donate time, resources and efforts to the Lamia Afghan Foundation. The nonprofit foundation was founded by Bradley and his wife and was inspired by an experience he had in Afghanistan when a little 9-year old girl named Lamia begged him for his boots.

"This food packing event is going to be a lot of help to a lot of families," Bradley said. "We've sent food from "Food for Kidz" many times in the past, and they have always been very generous. I also want to thank the Airmen and their families for coming here today to help with this food packing event. It shows each has a good heart for people in need, and there are people in need all over the world, especially in Afghanistan."

The meals will be distributed to refugee camps and orphanages in Afghanistan by the Lamia foundation, whose mission it is to help the children and disadvantaged people of Afghanistan by providing humanitarian aid, educational opportunities and vocational training that will provide the next generation of Afghans with opportunities unavailable to their parents.

Capt. Kenya Gray, 56th Fighter Wing Chapel, was the project officer who directed and coordinated this year's event. "The Air Force is great, the best people to ever work for because they will step up and have your back, and that's what all I'm about, people having each other's back," Gray said.

Mary Baumgartem, "Food for Kidz" of Minnesota vice chairman, along with her grandson, donated their time and provided insight into what the meals should consist of and the cost.

"Food for Kidz" mission is to provide the opportunity to anyone to package a specially designed, fully nutritious meal, and to distribute this packet of food to hungry children and their families wherever crisis has struck and there is an immediate need, she said.

The boxes contain rice, soy flour, dehydrated vegetables, vegan protein powder and spices which are sealed in industrial-grade plastic bags and have a shelf life of seven years. The cost per meal is 15 cents and there are 36 bags in a box. Each bag is able to feed six people, therefore one box costing $32.40 can feed a child for seven months.

"I volunteer because I wanted to find something that I could do to help other people," said Baumgartem, who's been with "Food for Kidz" 10 years. I thought I'd be busy one night a week, within a 50-mile radius, and it has turned into a wonderful fulltime job."

Karl Main, who has coordinated the event the last two years, is a military missionary with Cadence International and a member of Grace Bible Fellowship Church. He's been serving the Luke community for nearly 14 years.

"We do this to help Airmen. Men and women have expressed a desire to give of themselves and their time to help needy people around the world," he said.

The humanitarian project was a base-wide event bringing Airmen together from every group and affiliation of the 944th Fighter Wing as well as the 56th FW, according to organizers.

"I decided to volunteer for this event because I have a soft spot for children and hungry babies make me want to help," said Senior Airman Leslie Eccles, 56th Operations Support Squadron. "It's good to see how we are trying to help over there."



tabComments
4/21/2013 8:18:20 PM ET
I truly do not understand why you people choose to shed a negative light on a positive story. Be it home or abroad the message is the same...selfless acts of kindness should unite us all.
Livin@theWolf, ROK
 
4/19/2013 1:49:01 PM ET
Would like to see those 105000 meals help feed those fighting hunger on our own soil. There are plenty of orphaned children in America who would benefit from those meals. Maybe even the veterans who are struggling to receive benefits or find jobs. just something to ponder on.
American, USA
 
4/17/2013 8:49:22 AM ET
While feeding hungry children is commendable was this effort being coordinated through official government channels with USAID's input Will this shipment of donations from the retired general's charity have to go through Denton Amendment process for airlift to Afghanistan like all other charities have to Maybe. Maybe not. Guess the writer of this story should have asked the general those questions huh
Shady Lane, Smalltown USA
 
Add a comment

 Inside AF.mil

ima cornerSearch

tabSubscribe AF.MIL
tabMore HeadlinesRSS feed 
Timbouktu and back: ANG med unit conducts 'irregular' operations

Through Airmen's Eyes: Thunderbirds crew chief takes to new heights

Academy cadets win NSA 'cyber defense' 2nd straight year

Air Force Week in Photos

Senior leaders testify on health of personnel programs

Through Airmen's Eyes: The walk toward flight  3

Affordability priority for F-35 program  4

Reservists ready for wildland fire season  1

Indonesian, U.S. forces practice humanitarian evacuation

Former Ellsworth wing commander honored

U.S.-Australia agreement promotes space situational awareness

Edwards completes tests to extend KC-135  8

VA launches hotline for health care, women veteran questions

Ramstein Airmen train with Romanian counterparts  2

tabCommentaryRSS feed 
Leadership not defined by shapes, sizes  1

The difficult discussion   1


Site Map      Contact Us     Questions     USA.gov     Security & Policy     No Fear Act     E-publishing