Skip navigation
CWS Newsroom Back to CWS home
Hotline | Newsroom | Resources | Search
Programs | About | How to Help | Donate

Back to most recent news releasesBrowse archive: 20052006 20072008Email this story Email

Humanitarian agency Church World Service kicks off fall CROP Hunger Walks

Rev. John L. McCullough and others take part in a CROP Walk
Rev. John L. McCullough (left), CWS headquarters staff, and others take part in their local CROP Hunger Walk. Photo: CWS
September 4, 2007

NEW YORK -- Global humanitarian agency Church World Service today announced that it expects some 2,000 communities to join in hunger walks in the coming year under the banner of CROP: Communities Responding to Overcome Poverty.

August marked the 60th anniversary of CROP--the community hunger appeal of Church World Service--and the beginning of the fall CROP Hunger Walks season, in which tens of thousands of people in communities across the U.S. will sacrifice a few hours (and a blister or two) to raise money and show solidarity with impoverished people struggling to become self-sufficient. The CROP Walkers' motto: We walk because they walk!

CROP Hunger Walks are unique in that proceeds benefit both domestic and international poverty-reducing efforts.

"It still surprises some Americans that there are people here in the richest nation in the world who go to bed hungry because they cannot afford to buy food," says Rev. John L. McCullough, executive director and CEO of Church World Service. "These local CROP Hunger Walks, organized by individuals and faith communities in cities and towns all across the U.S., raise awareness about hunger and give people a way to help both in their own communities and around the world."

According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture report "Household Food Security in the United States, 2005," 11 percent of U.S. homes did not have access "to enough food for an active, healthy life for all household members" at least some time during the year.

In what has become an annual tradition in the thousands of communities that participate, an interfaith, multi-cultural collection of CROP walkers encourage friends, neighbors, colleagues, merchants and places of worship to donate dollars to support their participation in walks of up to 10 km. Participants, many with readily identifiable red and white signs, range in age from babies in strollers to seniors--and even the occasional jogger.

The first-ever CROP Walks took place in the late 1960s. Over the decades since, more than 5 million walkers have raised millions to fight hunger.

Up to a quarter of the money donated to CROP Hunger Walk is returned to the community where it was raised to help local soup kitchens and food pantries.

"These walkers and the food pantries and soup kitchens they help support are a blessing. Together, they represent the caring hands of a community reaching out to help neighbors-and often strangers--who are in crisis or whose way is hard," says McCullough.

Globally, Church World Service supports a broad range of poverty fighting projects in some 80 countries. They include the digging of wells in villages in Africa and the building of cisterns in Palestine to improve local access to water; programs in several Latin America countries to help children living in extreme poverty who are vulnerable to violence and sexual exploitation; income producing programs for impoverished Roma families, in Serbia; and community development projects with poor women in rural Bangladesh.

CROP Hunger Walks link the lives of people in the U.S. with impoverished people around the world.

As one Walker, Peter Boddie of Foothills, CO, notes, "There's genius in CROP Hunger Walks. People come together at the community level to walk and the funds are put to work by local agencies on the ground in various countries and in the USA. It's grassroots at both ends, and we’re all connected through Church World Service!"

To find out about a CROP Hunger Walk near you or to help organize a CROP Hunger Walk in your community, go to the CWS Regional Offices page or call your CWS Regional Office at 888-CWS-CROP (888-297-2767).

Church World Service, celebrating more than 60 years of service to people in need, is the relief, development, and refugee assistance agency supported by 35 Protestant, Orthodox, and Anglican denominations in the United States.

Media Contact:
Lesley Crosson, CWS/New York, 212-870-2676;
Jan Dragin, 781-925-1526;

Back to most recent news releases Browse archive: 2005200620072008 Email this story Email

Back to top