The soaring price of food in 2007-08
has dramatically increased hunger throughout
the world. Roshni is an Indian child who lives in
Madhya Pradesh state. Roshni weighs 6.3 lbs.-- her weight should be more like 10 lbs.
About 60 percent of children in Madhya Pradesh state are malnourished.
Photo: BBC
You
Can!...
take a hunger quiz and
make a free contribution to help hungry people
This part of the Hunger Notes website
enables you to learn more about hunger by reading
essential information on an important aspect of world hunger and answering several questions. When you answer this quiz, Hunger Notes
will make a donation to assist hungry people--for details
see below.
Hunger quiz: What does long-term
hunger feel like?
We have all felt the pangs of hunger. Going for a few hours or most of
a day without food, we are aware of the keen signal that our body gives our mind
that we are hungry--a sharp ache or pang that can drive out most other thoughts.
But what is severe hunger like over a longer period? This is really
unknown to us. Detailed information about people that have to go
without food for long periods due to causes such as conflict and drought is
not readily available. Yet it is important to get some idea of what long term
hunger is like to help us
understand people whose hunger is more acute and gone on much longer than that which we
have experienced.
To help us understand hunger existing not for a day, but many weeks, we
present, in abridged form, a description provided by Tony Hall (formerly a Congressman from Dayton,
Ohio and ambassador to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization) in
his 2006 book, Changing the Face of Hunger (pp. 74--89). He undertook
this
fast to protest an action of Congress. He fasted from April 4 to April 26,
1993--three weeks and one day.
Being hungry for three weeks, in Hall's words:
Physically and psychologically, the first week of the fast was
the hardest. I was horribly hungry--I could say 'in agony' --and getting weaker
by the day. I thought constantly about what I would like to eat--that last meal
of fried chicken, mashed potatoes, and Caesar salad; some future meals with some
of my favorite foods, such as steak, roast beef, and key lime pie....
Family mealtimes were the worst. I couldn't go to the table
because the food would be too tempting, and not being able to eat it would be
agonizing. Janet, Matt, and Jyl would try to hide from me when they snacked
between meals..... I followed Dick Gregory's advice to fill up on water. I
really poured it down. Since it was the only thing I was consuming, I paid a
great deal more attention to it than I ever had before. I really noticed the
difference in taste when drunk from the tap at home, the office, or someplace
else. My sense of smell also heightened throughout the fast. I could tell what
people had eaten because their bodies gave off aromas that I had never noticed
before....
The hardest day of the fast came on Easter, which was my
seventh day without eating. Janet and I had gone on a retreat in Maryland with
some friends, and our friends prepared a typical big American holiday
dinner--turkey, potatoes, dressing, pie, cake. It drove me nuts. I had to
leave them, go outside and take a walk, to get away from those wonderful
aromas. I decided that if I could get through this day, I would be over the
hump. I did, and I was.
Just as Dick Gregory said, the sensation of hunger faded in
about a week. It's as if the body gives up on getting food and stops demanding
it. From then on, I could join my family at mealtimes and not be bothered a bit
. It was a revelation about the poor and the hungry, to whom I came to feel
exceptionally close as the fast went on. I now fully understood, in a way I
never had before, a strange phenomenon I had witnessed during famines: starving
children who refused to eat when food was finally offered to them.
The absence of hunger pangs did not mean I wasn't feeling the
physical effects of the fast, however. I'd wake up in the morning feeling fine.
My head would be clear. I would think I had lots of energy. But after noon, I
would fade. The energy would desert me and weakness would take over. I'd need
to nap. Then, when I woke from the nap, I'd feel like I couldn't get up because
I was so tired. Lacking the fuel of food, my body temperature apparently
dropped, and I felt cold all the time. It also seemed my brain slowed down in
the afternoon; I felt "dull." I thought of poor children who don't do well in
school, who fall asleep in the afternoon, who become poor students because of
poor nutrition. Remarkably, some of my vital signs--blood pressure, the results
of blood tests--actually improved.
[On April 26, Hall ended his fast.] Because the fast had been
a very public endeavor, I thought the breaking of it should be as well. I
invited some reporters to my office...and had a V-8. I hadn't eaten for
twenty-two days, and that thick, salty vegetable juice tasted exceptionally
good...Unfortunately I could only sip a little bit. Because my stomach had
essentially been shut down for three weeks, I would have to coax it gradually
back to use, maybe not being able to enjoy a full meal till the end of the
week. I had lost twenty-three pounds--dropping from a robust 180 to a gaunt
157....
Donations to support our hunger
quiz gratefully accepted. Your donations are made
through PayPal's secure site. All donations will be used 100
percent to support hungry people.
Donate online. Your donations are made through
PayPal's secure site.
Donate by check. Please sent your check to World Hunger Education Service
P.O. Box 29056
Washington, D.C. 20017
Hunger Notes will make one contribution
per person per site visit. (Repeated clicking on
'click here' during your visit to the Hunger Notes website
will not increase Hunger Notes contribution.) However, we
will make a contribution every time you return to the
website and this page. It is our hope that you will use this
page and the Hunger Notes website to learn more about hunger
and take action yourself to reduce hunger.