How changing the way we think about food can help end hunger
When I was eight years old, a severe drought devastated my
small village in Zimbabwe. A blistering heatwave dried up
our river; it destroyed our crops, killed our livestock
and left us starving. One day I was so weak from hunger
that I collapsed onto the ground. In fact, in my young
mind, I thought I was going to die. Fortunately, a fellow
African who worked for the United Nations found me. She
gave me a bowl of porridge and saved my life.
Several decades later, it is unfathomable that
hunger, the very same issue that almost took my life,
remains rampant. Even as we grow enough food to feed
everyone as a society, one in nine people still goes to
bed hungry every night, and malnutrition remains the
leading cause of death and illness globally. So, how else
might we solve global hunger? Beyond addressing conflict
and other structural and systemic root causes, we need to
change the way we think of food – not as a commodity, but
as a fundamental human right – and, as a consequence,
change the way we produce and consume it.
During my childhood in the early eighties, famine was primarily perceived as an 'African problem'. Today, hunger and malnutrition continue to disproportionately impact the African continent as well as developing countries that bear the brunt of the effects of climate change. Droughts – like the one that hit my own community – and other extreme weather events such as floods, storms and heatwaves, increasingly threaten lives and livelihoods. But the countries most affected by these phenomena are the ones that contribute the least towards the greenhouse emissions at that cause them.

Then there is food waste. One third of the food produced for human consumption is either lost due to poor storage or wasted at the consumer end in rich countries — when food goes uneaten or is left to spoil in fridges and kitchen cabinets. Food wastage is the third-largest producer of carbon dioxide in the world after the USA and China, further compounding the effects of climate change on communities in the developing world.
Today, the United Nations is convening the first ever Food Systems Summit in New York City as part of the Decade of Action to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). The Summit will launch bold new actions to deliver progress on all 17 SDGs, each of which relies to some degree on healthier, more sustainable and equitable food systems. This is particularly relevant for SDG2, which aims to reach a zero-hunger world and put an end to malnutrition. To get there, we need collective action to transform our food systems, that is the complex set of actors and processes that ensure food reaches our tables.
To end hunger, we need to stop considering it someone
else’s problem: this is a shared responsibility requiring
global solidarity in both developed and developing
nations. The equation is simple, if we are all part of
creating the problem in the first place, then we must all
be part of the solution.
Now more than ever, we are seeing that our individual
actions and behaviors can indeed impact the lives of
others in different parts of the world. This understanding
shaped my upbringing and lies at the heart of the ancient
African wisdom of Ubuntu – 'I am because we are.' Ubuntu
recognizes that we are all part of a greater whole,
connected to each other by our shared humanity – the very
same shared humanity that helped to save my own life. This
wisdom acknowledges that our happiness and suffering are
closely linked to the happiness and suffering of others -
thus, what impacts one of us will eventually impact all of
us in various ways. And most notably, that our ability to
overcome any challenge requires all of us to work together
as a global community.