Tag Archive for 'hunger'

Inspiration Information — Magnus & Fergus MacFarlane-Barrow

“”When I think of Mary’s Meals I think of it as a series of lots and lots of little acts of love.  I’ve learned that every small act of kindness does make a difference.” –Magnus Macfarlane-Barrow

Every week I sit down to write an Inspiration Information post and the strangest thing happens.  Sometimes I’ve received a tip from a fellow superforester or friend and the story just itches to pour itself onto the page.  Other times I have a backlog of inspiring stories which I have to sort through and determine the runway lineup of precedence… when really I just want to write about them all equally and simultaneously.

But for the most part, thursdays roll around and I wake up without the slightest hint as to who or what I will highlight.  And every time, without fail, the moment I sit down to write, a story finds me.  Whether it be through the morning news, the opening of a book I’ve been meaning to read but put off, a snatch of NPR while running an errand in my car… somehow I am never wanting for inspiration.

And usually, these random stories that find me are the most timely, perfect manifestations of the themes and feelings I wish most to express.  Such it is that today, after a long week of news fasting, I open CNN and find one of the most uplifting and empowering tales I’ve thus far encountered.

Meet Magnus and Fergus MacFarlane-Barrow — a pair of small-town Scottish salmon fishermen who one day decided to do a small act of charity and ended up creating one of the largest growing and most successful anti-hunger non-profits in the world.

The year was 1992.  Magnus (25) and Fergus (27) MacFarlane-Barrow were sitting in their local pub, nursing pints as was their usual routine, when news images flashed on the tv of refugees suffering in war-torn Bosnia.  As young teenagers, the brothers had made a life-changing spiritual trip to Bosnia, the supposed birth place of the Virgin Mary (both brothers are devout catholics), were theu fell in love with the beauty of the country and its people.  Now over a decade later, they sat  thunderstruck in their tiny town bar watching the devastation half-a-world away.  The idea hit them all at once, in the same way many a genius drunken thought is born (and as quickly forgotten).  Only this idea stayed and grew long after the night’s hangover burned away.

Taking a week off from work, the brother’s purchased an old Jeep Landrover and filled it to the brim with as much food, clothes, and medicine as they could gather.  Some was donated.  Most was purchased with their own meager salaries.  And the two young Scotsmen then drove all the way from their local village cross-country to Bosnia, where they hand-delivered the supplies to the desperately appreciative refugees.  Mission accomplished.

Only when they returned to Scotland, they found their family home overloaded with an avalanche of goods that the local community had donated while they were away.  The brothers were floored.  ”I was touched by the overwhelming generosity of others,” MacFarlane-Barrow remembers. “I saw all of those donations in our family home and thought, ‘Wow, people really are good,’ and it inspired me to be good too.”

What began as a humble mission to lend relief in whatever small way possible, turned into a lifelong calling.  The brothers loaded the Land Rover back up with the new supplies and drove right back to Bosnia, the second of over 22 such missions during the Bosnian War.  The donations never stopped coming, so neither did Magnus who went on to quit his fisherman job, sell his family home and dedicate himself full-on to serving others.  Over the last 18 years his missions expanded to over 80 in countries worldwide.

Today, his charity work has spawned Mary’s Meals — an international organization that provides free daily meals to over 400,000 children in 15 countries.  Like all of the MacFarlane-Barrow grand projects, it too began from a very basic idea.  In 2002, Magnus was working in Malawi — a country racked by famine and AIDS — when he met Edward, the eldest son of six children crouching around their dying mother on the mud floor of their feeble house.  Edward told Magnus that his twin ambitions in life were to have enough food to eat, and to attend school one day.

Mary’s meals works off the simple premise that by providing free meals in poverty-stricken countries, students are motivated to enroll in school.  But the outcome of the organization is much more profound.  Not only do more students attend school in a consistent basis, they focus and excel in their studies.  All it takes is as little as £6.15 (or $9.6)  to feed a single child for a year.  And this small amount, the elimination of hunger in children at school, has already transformed entire communities in Malawi, India, Liberia, Sudan, and Haiti.

Today there are over 500 schools serving Mary’s Meals and the organization is growing exponentially (nearly 40% every year).  “I see the children’s faces as they eat their meal, ” Magnus remarked. “Knowing I can transform their lives keeps me motivated.” People often ask Magnus if he finds his work depressing.   But to him it’s just the opposite: “I feel uplifted and encouraged. I am really humbled by what people in poor communities are doing each day to make life better; by their determination and optimism. If they are not despairing, why should I be?”

To top it all off, Mary’s Meals has branched into other high-profile projects like the Backpack Project, which encourages school children to donate their old school backpacks and fill them with school materials such as notebooks, pencils, flip-flops and T-shirts, to send to children in countries such as Liberia, Uganda and Malawi.

And it all started so small.  From buying a used, beat-up Land Rover.  To upgrading his trucker’s license so he could transport larger cargoes of aid.  To launching a global campaign combating chronic hunger in schoolchildren.  Funnily, along the way Magnus meet and fell in love with Julie — a young nurse who wanted to hitch a ride on one of his Missions so she could tend to war-victims… and who ended up being a much better truck driver than Magnus.  He had six children.  And yet through it all Magnus has remained the humble Scottish Highlander  who first decided over a pint of Lager that he wanted to do something positive in the world.   He’s never left his little village.  He still runs the entire 10,000 volunteer operation from his father’s corrugated tin shed on the family lot where he grew up.

To me this is a fairytale of the highest order.  An ordinary man of modest origins who traded all his earthly belongings for the magic bean promise of helping others in need.  Who then plants those seeds with love in the war torn soil of Bosnia and watches a giant beanstalk of kindness grow up into the clouds.  And who then climbs higher and higher until he discovers a golden egg of goodness, an idea for change so effective, which Magnus brings back to earth to help others live happily ever after.  It is a hero’s journey so beautiful and pure… I am left with a glowing sense of affirmation and inspiration that anyone who dreams big but starts small, can raise humanity inch by inch to higher ground.

Such is the fable of Magnus MacFarlane-Barrow — A simple fisherman who fed the world.

Thursday’s Inspiration Information — Narayanan Krishnan

“There is more hunger for love and appreciation in this world than for bread.” -Mother Teresa

Just over a year ago today, I posted a story (courtesy of CNN heroes), about Jorge Muñoz — “the Angel of Queens” — a school bus driver who spends all his free time and salary feeding the homeless and hungry.  It is a beautiful story, full of sacrifice and compassion.  It is also the very first Inspiration Information post I ever wrote for SuperForest.  In honor of that anniversary, I would like to briefly revisit Jorge’s story, as well as share a new (and surprisingly similar one)…

Jorge is a man who came to this country as a Colombian immigrant, seeking brighter opportunities.  A man who works long hours, who pays a mortgage, who provides for his family.  And then, when the day is done, he cooks.  He drives the city.  He hands out food to over 150 starving people, every single night without fail.  Of the $700 per week Jorge makes as a bus driver, he spends almost 70% on food and gas to feed the homeless.

On the exact opposite side of the Planet, a 29 year old Indian chef has also dedicated his life to the same selfless mission as Jorge.  Meet Narayan Krishnan:

At the age of 21, Narayan was a talented chef fresh out of culinary school with an already award-winning career at a five-star hotel and job offerings pouring in for elite positions in Switzerland.  Success and money were assured, not to mention a wealth of experience traveling the world cooking the food he so loves.  In other words, Narayan was on the path of dreams toward that Emerald City he’d worked so hard to reach.  And then something shocking and unexpected happened.  On his last quick visit home before jetting off to Europe and infinite possibility, Narayan glanced momentarily off the yellow brick road of his life.  And there, in plain sight he saw an old man, clearly homeless and mentally ill… eating his own feces for food.

I am reminded of the young Siddhartha Gautama, the perfect Brahmin prince, who spent the first 30 years of his life sheltered in the protective bubble of his palace.  Who wandered alone into the city, and for the first time saw a man who was hungry.  Then a man who was old. And finally a man who had died.   And in these startling experiences with human suffering, Siddhartha was struck with the overwhelming clarion cry of compassion… and he knew in an instant he must change his life.  (Siddhartha later became the spiritual icon we now know as the Buddha).

Likewise, this brutal image of human despair resounded in Narayanan Krishnan with all the sonic force of a hammer striking a bell.  He too knew he had to change his life.  Within minutes he was helping this poor man, providing him food.  Dignity.  Within a week he had quit his job, canceled his ticket to Switzerland and moved back home.

This was 2002.  Within a year, Krisnan founded a nonprofit — Akshaya Trust — after the Hindu myth of the Goddess Annapoorani’s “Akshaya bowl” which feeds the hungry endlessly, magically replenishing after every meal.  And every single day since that fateful one on the street, Krishnan has fed over 400 destitute people 3 fresh cooked meals, 365 days a year.  Without pause.  In spite of weather, sickness, limited resources.  Krishnan simply refuses to stop.  People rely on him.  And over the last 8 years he has provided over 1.2 million meals, all personally prepared and hand delivered by him and his small team.

His day begins at 4 am.  Picking out the freshest vegetables and ingredients at the local market, then cooking the hot meals which he often hand-feeds to the handicapped or incapacitated.  He covers over 125 miles of city in a donated van.  And beyond the food, he brings his trusty comb, scissors and razor to clean up and boost the esteem and pride of those he serves.  In his own words:

“The panic, suffering of the human hunger is the driving force of me and my team members of Akshaya.  They may be paranoid and hostile because of their conditions, but this only steadies my resolve to offer help.  I get this energy from the people. The food which I cook … the enjoyment which they get is the energy. I see the soul. I want to save my people.”

Krishnan and his team sleep on the kitchen floor of Akshaya’s modest headquarters.  He takes no salary, and sponsored donations to cover the $327 daily cost of operations usually covers only 22 days out of the month.  His parents support Krishnan and his team by providing them food — an beautiful karmic circle of kindness.  Without their support, the nonprofit would flounder.

And in spite of the difficulty, the constant and unending ocean of need, Narayanan is happy.  He doesn’t regret for a second the golden path he left behind.  As he says himself, “Now I am feeling so comfortable and so happy.  I have a passion, I enjoy my work. I want to live with my people.”

The simple, humble humanity of these two men never ceases to astound me.  Whenever I am flooded by the crashing tsunami of negativity and fear that often forms the tidal sweep of contemporary culture and politics, I need only look to people like Jorge and Narayan to remind me of the unwavering spark of inspiration and hope that I (and we as a race) are so readily capable.  It is these quite champions, these everyday heroes, who give me the positive perspective to make a difference in the world.  To stand tall against the oncoming waves of desperation and despair and offer a rock of strength and refuge.  An island of compassion.

The darkness is not lessened by one brilliant light, but rather a million tiny candles.

So hold yours high.  Burn them bright.

–aaron