Today is World Hunger Day, May 28

May 28, 2026 Today is World Hunger day, inspiring many to take action to reduce malnutrition. The overarching theme for this year’s global campaign is “The End of Hunger is in Our Hands”.
The World Hunger Day initiative was founded in 2011 by The Hunger Project, a global non-profit organization established in 1977.
While many global awareness days focus heavily on immediate crisis relief and the distribution of emergency food aid, the original intent behind establishing World Hunger Day was to shift the global narrative toward sustainability and self-reliance. Organizations like Islamic Relief have utilized today to issue a formal warning that the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goal of “Zero Hunger by 2030” is rapidly slipping out of reach due to localized aid funding cuts and war-related supply chain disruptions, particularly noting that humanitarian aid is currently meeting only a tiny fraction of the acute need in places like Somalia.
In South Africa, the day serves as the climax of a national week of mobilization organized by the Union Against Hunger (UAH), which declared May 25–30 as Food Justice Week. International service networks, such as local Lions Clubs, are executing targeted community supply runs today, routing fresh fruits and vegetables directly to underfunded early-childhood crèches and community kitchens to combat localized child wasting and stunting.
The worst levels are concentrated in three bands:
- * The Horn of Africa and East Africa – Somalia, South Sudan, Burundi, Ethiopia, and Sudan
- * Central and West Africa – Democratic Republic of Congo, Chad, Niger, Central African Republic, Nigeria, and Madagascar
- * Conflict hotspots outside Africa – Yemen, Afghanistan, Syria, Haiti, and North Korea.

In Haiti: nearly 277,000 children aged 6 to 59 months are facing or expected to face acute malnutrition. In Kenya, the number of children aged 6 to 59 months requiring treatment for malnutrition between April 2025 and March 2026 is estimated to be 741,883. In Ethiopia,~900,000 severely wasted children under 5 are estimated, nationally.
In the United States, food banks are feeling an intense squeeze. Daily living costs are so high that even families with full-time jobs are showing up at pantries just to make it to the end of the month.
The United Nations (UN) often sees significant legislative and health policy momentum occur in tandem with the day. For instance, the UN’s World Health Assembly (the decision-making body of the World Health Organization) regularly approves key nutrition-focused resolutions regarding persistent global stunting, wasting, and anemia around late May, intentionally capitalizing on the heightened public awareness surrounding World Hunger Day.
The UN’s 2025 Hunger Hotspots report flags the same places, naming Sudan, Yemen, Afghanistan, and South Sudan as the world’s most vulnerable, with 24.6 million Sudanese facing crisis-phase food insecurity.
Global hunger actually fell to 8.2% in 2024, but Africa and western Asia saw hunger rise.
World Vision cites 673 million people in the world facing hunger.
-
Action Against Hunger focuses heavily on treating and preventing acute malnutrition, often launching corporate and public partnerships on this day to fund nutritional programs.
-
World Vision & Compassion International utilize the day to run child-focused sponsorship campaigns, highlighting the specific impacts of food scarcity on early childhood development and maternal health.
- Student resources for learning about world hunger can be found on this site, for instance: https://www.worldhunger.org/lesson-plans-on-hunger-and-food-insecurity/
- and https://www.worldhunger.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/Understanding-Global-Hunger-Fact-Sheet-3-1.pdf






