Save the Children recently launched its Freedom
from Poverty campaign to give a voice to the 16 million children bearing
the brunt of the U.S. poverty crisis. Artist ambassadors
Jennifer Garner, Julianne Moore and American Idol judge Randy Jackson have
already signed the Freedom
from Poverty pledge, whose aim is to have 15,000 signatures from supporters
by campaign’s end on August 14.
“Today,
one in four kids is living in poverty. But it doesn't have to stay that way,”
said Randy Jackson, who supported Save the Children’s post-Hurricane Katrina
relief efforts in New Orleans, La. “We
all have to do our part to help turn around the childhood poverty crisis and
make sure that every kid gets a fair start in life." The
goal of the Freedom from
Poverty campaign is to shine a light on this crisis impacting a quarter of children across the United
States who know all too well what it means to go
without.
“Living in poverty can mean having little or no food on the table,
no safe place to sleep at night, no electricity or running water,” said Carolyn
Miles, Save the Children’s President and CEO. “Poverty also means not having books to read and
falling 18 months behind one’s peers by age four, never catching up. It means
being trapped in the cycle of poverty for life.”
In addition to raising awareness of this hidden crisis, Save the Children works to break the cycle of poverty and improve the lives of children by ensuring they have the resources they need. Through initiatives like U.S child sponsorship, children gain access to a quality education, books, computers, after-school learning, physical activities and healthy snacks.
To learn more about Save the Children’s Freedom from Poverty campaign
and the U.S. Sponsorship program, visit: www.savethechildren.org/freedom. Text READ to 69866 to take the Freedom from
Poverty Pledge.
About Save the Children
Save
the Children works to break the cycle of poverty and improve the lives of
children by ensuring they have the resources they need—access to quality
education, healthy foods, and opportunities to grow and develop in a nurturing
environment. When disasters strike, like hurricanes and wildfires, Save the
Children is among the first on the ground, ensuring the needs of children are
being met.
In
the United States, Save the Children’s early childhood education, literacy,
physical activity and nutrition, and emergency response programs reached more
than 185,000 children last year alone.
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