Global Impact is part of Global Impact Ventures

Now Announcing Global Impact Ventures

Meet Global Impact Ventures, our newly unified family of brands. Together, we serve all of philanthropy to inspire greater giving for a better world. 

Celebrate International Women’s Day with Us

Join us on Friday, March 8 for an inspiring celebration of International Women’s Day with speakers from three incredible charities – CARE, UNICEF, and Plan International USA.

Donate to End Hunger

Children at Eglise Tabernacle du Rocher receive a nutritious meal.
Photo Credit: Food For The Poor
Wheat

End Hunger Fund

There are more than 828 million hungry people in the world, which is increasing for the first time in years. Support multiple charities in one pledge working to end hunger.
Through this fund, you will help create food security for underserved communities worldwide.

Contributions to this fund include delivering emergency food supplies in times of crisis, treating the malnourished, training farmers with sustainable agriculture practices and more.

Be a Global Champion

$25

provides tomato seeds to smallholder farmers in Malawi to help families grow nutritious and diverse food in their home gardens.

$44

supplies 100 pounds of rice and beans to help children.

$106

feeds a child a daily meal for a year.

Success Stories

Sarah holding a MannaPack Rice bag
By the time the doors open each morning at this malnutrition clinic in southern Angola, hundreds of children and parents are already in line. The clinic, run by FMSC food distribution partner ForAfrika (formerly JAM International), sees 500–700 starving children each day. And the waiting rooms stay full — all day long.
Yaritza, a young mother living in Chinandega, Nicaragua, is focused on finishing her degree to ensure she can provide the best for her child. And adequate nutrition ensures she is able to focus on her studies as she works to achieve this goal.
Night and her husband in a field in South Sudan
Along the Imatong Mountains in South Sudan’s Eastern Equatoria state, 46-year-old Night lives with her husband and two of their children. Night is a farmer, and she used to buy whatever seeds she could afford from the local market. The seeds she could afford were typically low quality, leading to low crop yields and food shortages for her and her family.