Food For The Poor Canada Celebrates 10-Year Anniversary with Construction of Hampden Infant School in Jamaica


TORONTO, April 13, 2018 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Food For The Poor Canada (FFPC) is proud to celebrate the 10th year of working with and for communities in the Caribbean, with the important support of Canadian donors and volunteers. To mark this milestone, a group of volunteers spent the past three days building Hampden Infant School in Trelawny, Jamaica.

Through the generosity and dedication of its volunteers and donors, FFPC has grown steadily over the past decade, building 28 schools in Jamaica, 80 homes in Haiti and Jamaica, shipping tens of millions of dollars worth of medicines, medical equipment, food and educational supplies, supporting numerous livestock projects, and providing emergency relief after natural disasters.  

“Canadians are so generous and passionate, they have taken to heart Food For The Poor’s holistic system of sharing: It takes a village to build a village. By building a school this week, we are building both the structure and the opportunity for this village in Trelawny, and next month we will celebrate the opening of the village of Bezin in Haiti – with 30 new homes, a chicken farm, and community water and light,”  shared Samantha Mahfood, Executive Director of Food For The Poor Canada

Hampden Infant School will provide free, quality education to the youngest in the community. Demonstrating their commitment to changing lives through learning, volunteers raised the funds to cover the construction of a school that includes three classrooms, a playground, a water catchment system and a kitchen. Along with the team and contractors of sister charity Food For The Poor Jamaica, Canadian volunteers took leave from their busy schedules to hammer and paint under the hot sun. Energy was high as the building went up, students and teachers watching while expressing excitement about this new space.

Hampden Primary School is finally getting a building for our Infant department, something we have wanted for many years now. I am so excited and I know it will make a big difference in the lives of the children and the community ... Many thanks to the Canadian donors and Food For The Poor.”  Remarks from the Principal, Mr. Richard McLaughlin and Senior Teacher, Mrs. Dawn Gordon Pinnock.

The opening ceremony had strong Canadian representation, as the previous High Commissioner of Canada to Jamaica and FFPC’s current Board Chair, Robert Ready, spoke of work done by Canadians over the last 10 years. The current High Commissioner of Canada to Jamaica, Laurie Peters, followed, aptly touching on the centuries-old relationship between the two countries.  The celebrations ended with a ribbon cutting to officially open Hampden Infant School.

About Food For The Poor Canada
Food For The Poor Canada (FFPC) empowers communities in Haiti and Jamaica through five areas of programming: food, housing, education, health and livelihood. Through basic aid and sustainable development, FFPC responds to urgent needs while building community and social infrastructure. FFPC utilizes the pre-existing infrastructure of local affiliated organizations, so as to better sustain and grow the communities they serve. FFPC is part of the Food For The Poor family of charities; the founding organization in the USA is Food For The Poor, an interdenominational Christian organization that works in 17 countries in the Caribbean and Latin America.

For More Information Contact:
Samantha Mahfood, Executive Director
Food For The Poor Canada
647.350.7269
SamanthaM@FoodForThePoor.com
www.foodforthepoor.ca


Photos accompanying this announcement are available at

http://resource.globenewswire.com/Resource/Download/e7041bc3-c5d8-4936-92ce-c6e0937a6f8e

http://resource.globenewswire.com/Resource/Download/7c131224-b0dc-4e91-b1fa-f4ba069cf3b0

http://resource.globenewswire.com/Resource/Download/ccb383d2-7a3b-4d74-9754-494b9a59e5a2

Canadian High Commissioners Past and Present with Principal of Hampden Infant School Canadian Volunteers of Food For The Poor Canada working in Jamaica to build a school. Stacey McKenzie, Jamaican-Canadian model has fun at Hampden Infant School