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Drew Barrymore donates $1m to feed Kenyan kids
Showbiz Desk
NEW YORK—Actress Drew Barrymore donated $1 million of her own money on
Monday to the World Food Programme that the U.N. agency said would be
used to feed thousands of schoolchildren in Kenya. Barrymore, 33, a WFP
ambassador against hunger, announced her pledge on The Oprah Winfrey
Show to kick off the agency’s $3 billion “Fill the Cup” campaign that
aims to feed 59 million hungry school children in developing countries
for a year.
WFP hopes the United States will be able to donate enough money to feed
10 million of those children. “I have seen with my own eyes what a
difference a simple cup of nutritious porridge can make in a child’s
life,” said the “Charlie’s Angels” star, who has travelled to Kenya
twice in the past two years for WFP.
“It helps them learn, stay healthy and sets them on track for a bright
future. I urge everyone — everywhere — to help WFP ‘Fill the Cup’ for
hungry children, and make hunger history,” she said in a statement
released by the agency. Barrymore, who gained fame as a child star in
the film “ET: The Extra-Terrestrial,” is the eighth-highest-paid actress
in Hollywood, according to The Hollywood Reporter, earning more than $10
million a movie.
The WFP is facing a $500 million gap in funding this year due to the
rising cost of food — up 40 percent since June, WFP officials said. That
prompted the actress to visit the world’s largest grain trading floor in
the Chicago Board of Trade building on Monday where corn, wheat, soybean
and rice futures trade.
Josette Sheeran, WFP’s executive director, said $50 “fills a child’s cup
for a year” and called on people to donate through the Web site
www.wfp.org.
“They feed their families with it ... they get an education so therefore
you’re changing the future,” Barrymore said after touring the floor,
including a trip into the corn futures pit.
The organization said last year it provided more than 20 million school
children with a daily cup of porridge, rice or beans and also gave many
girls a monthly ration to take home to their families. It said up to 70
percent of its food used for school meals is bought from farmers in
developing countries.
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