In crisis-hit parts of Africa, WFP school meals offer a
vital lifeline to kids - and their families
As African governments mark a decade of progress on school
feeding, the push is on to get more children on board
,
Sylvain Barral, Eulalia Berlanga, Amadou Dansalaou, Alaa
Aboughrara, Clara Prip, Jerry Lemogo, Shelley Thakral and Lena
von Zabern
WFP school meals have helped nurture a friendship
between Jumayi Mahamat Djebure (above) and Sudanese
refugee Mariam. WFP/Lena von Zabern
A hot Sahelian wind blows dust through the open classroom
windows of Kerfi village’s primary school in eastern Chad,
where 17-year-old Jumayi Mahamat Djebure studies units of
measurement scrawled on a blackboard.
When the school bell rings, students shoot out of packed
classrooms, youngest ones first, heading for steaming
plates of rice and split peas – meals that are supported
by the World Food Programme (WFP). For Jumayi, who hails
from this remote village, there is an extra bonus:
mealtimes are a chance to see her best friend Mariam, a
refugee from Sudan’s brutal war, raging across the border.
“Even though we see each other every day, I often visit
Mariam in the camp, and she visits me in the village after
school,” says Jumayi, clad in a bright pink headscarf and
matching dress.
In Chad and other hungry places, WFP school meals can be
the only ones children eat all day. WFP/Lena von Zabern
The school’s 3,000 Chadian and Sudanese refugee students
have one thing in common: the hearty meals served up are
sometimes their only ones all day. And like elsewhere in
Africa where people are reeling from the aftershocks of
conflicts, soaring hunger, extreme weather and other
emergencies, WFP-supported meals are vital: they draw
children to school, reversing often soaring dropout rates,
and help to
ease the financial strain
on families already struggling with food insecurity.
Those lessons, among others, are being showcased this
week, as the continent marks the 10th African Day of
School Feeding on 1 March, aimed to underscore the
importance of school meals in boosting educational
outcomes, food security and local economies. The past two
years alone have seen school meal coverage in Africa
increase by 30 percent - from from 66 million children in
2022 to 87 million in 2024—driven largely by funding from
African governments. WFP works alongside many of them to
strengthen
national school meals programmes.
Yet in the hardest-hit areas, children are still being
left behind as funding gaps, supply chain disruptions and
conflict continue to put school meals and education out of
reach. Indeed, of the 21 million children in crisis-hit
countries worldwide projected to receive WFP-supported
school meals this year, many live in Africa.
Young students wash their hands before a WFP meal in
northeastern DRC. In Africa and elsewhere, school
feeding offers high-impact returns. WFP/Benjamin
Anguandia
Where school meals operate—in places like Niger, Libya,
the Democratic Republic of the Congo and South Sudan,
which are weathering or recovering from crises - they
offer high-impact returns: from protecting children and
their parents against hunger and allowing them to recover
from a raft of shocks, to laying the groundwork for
sustainable, nationally-led school meals programmes that
can give Africa’s next generation a better chance to
thrive.
“Children who are not hungry can focus on what the teacher
says, and this keeps them in school,” says Mahamat Adam
Idriss, a Sudanese Arabic teacher at Kerfi primary. Like
refugee Mariam, he also fled his war-torn homeland. “Being
here together creates strong relationships.”
War destroys, food rebuilds
In Niger’s southeastern village of Awaridi, 13-year-old
Salamatou Mahamadou clutches a pink piece of chalk as she
carefully writes “war destroys the world,” on the
blackboard at her local primary school. Salamatou should
know. A dozen years ago, armed fighters forced her family
to flee their home in northern Nigeria.
They eventually settled in Awaridi, in Niger’s Diffa
region, counting among thousands of people in the area who
have escaped unrest — not only gripping northern Nigeria
but also swathes of Niger. Last year alone, armed fighting
in Niger forced hundreds of schools to temporarily
shutter, depriving some 74,000 children of an education.
Salamatou Mahamadou (L) eats a WFP-supported school meal
with friends. The food has greatly boosted attendance,
her school's headmaster says. WFP/Amadou Dansalaou
But Salamatou goes to Arawidi Primary School - which set
up a WFP-supported school canteen after an influx of
conflict-displaced children arrived in town. It serves up
two meals a day to its students, which has
“greatly boosted attendance,”
says headmaster Alagi Fanamani.
“This school canteen will help me stay focused and achieve
my goals,” says Salamatou, who is now in grade 4, and
dreams of becoming a nurse “to help care for my
community.”
“Many do not get breakfast in the morning - and worse,
some come to school having not had dinner the previous
night.” Headteacher in DRC
“Enrolling her was the right choice - it's her path
forward, and she's thriving,” says Salamatou’s mother,
Zeinab Oumar, describing the school canteen as “a
blessing.”
Making a difference in crises
WFP school meals are making a difference where crises hit
hardest. When massive floods hit the Libyan port city of
Derna in 2023, killing thousands and causing widespread
destruction, we worked with Libyan authorities and local
partners to open school kitchens across the city. Today,
they serve up nourishing meals to hundreds of young
students, supporting both their recovery and continued
education.
WFP has been supporting flood affected children in
Derna, Libya, like these young pupils. WFP/Yasmin
Alfretis
“There was an immediate positive response from the
parents, who really supported and contributed to the
project. Students started coming every day, looking
forward to the meals,” says one school principal in Derna.
“I could focus on earning money for other needs without
worrying if they would go to bed hungry." South Sudanese
farmer Tieng Malong, of her school-going daughters
In the Democratic Republic of Congo, where fighting rages
in the east, schools have been closed and children
uprooted and living in makeshift camps. In other regions
across the country, recovering from years of insecurity,
WFP school meals and take-home rations reach almost
200,000 children. The programmes often encourage area
farmers, schools and families to grow their own vegetables
to supplement their diets.
Students harvest cabbage in restive North Kivu, DRC,
where many WFP-supported school meals programmes also
encourage communities to grow vegetables to supplement
their diets. WFP/Benjamin Anguandia
“Students are excited to come to school and play very well
after having their lunch at school,” says Dieudonné Nakuru
Misati, head of Mudja Primary School in northeastern North
Kivu province, where violence has deepened already serious
hunger. “Many do not get breakfast in the morning,” Misati
adds, “and worse, some come to school having not had
dinner the previous night.”
In South Sudan’s Northern Bahr el Ghazal state, coping
with the aftermath of devastating 2024 floods and an
influx of war refugees from neighbouring Sudan,
mother-of-seven Tieng Malong, 30,
is relieved
her daughters get at least one nutritious meal at school.
“I could focus on earning money for other needs without
worrying if they would go to bed hungry,” Malong says.
Young pupils at class in Bahr el Ghazal state, South
Sudan, which has welcomed hundreds of thousands of
Sudanese refugees. Thanks to the WFP-supported food,
parents know their kids will no longer go hungry at
night. WFP/Eulalia Berlanga
Like South Sudan, Chad has welcomed hundreds of thousands
of Sudanese war survivors, along with refugees from other
countries, shaping the world’s fastest-growing refugee
crisis.
Severe droughts and floods, along with the influx of
conflict-displaced people, have fuelled tensions among
communities. School meals, bringing together children of
different backgrounds - like Jumayi and Mariam at Kerfi’s
primary school— help to ease them.
“We drink the same water, we eat the same food,” says
Kerfi’s headmaster Adef Hassan. “We are in this together.”
Belgium, Canada, France, the European Union, Germany
(KfW), Japan, the Netherlands, Sweden, Switzerland, the
United States and The Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints count among those donors who have been
supporting WFP’s school meals programmes in Africa.
Now is the time to act
WFP relies entirely on voluntary
contributions, so every donation counts.