School Meals, Brighter Futures:
How WFP Helps Educate Through Nutrition

Focuses on WFP’s school feeding programs in remote or food-insecure areas — especially for girls — and how this encourages education and long-term growth.

 School Meals, Brighter Futures:
How WFP Helps Educate Through Nutrition in Pakistan

 Introduction: Hunger Shouldn’t Stand Between a Child and a Classroom

In Pakistan’s remote villages, deserts, and flood-affected zones, many children face a daily choice: go to school hungry — or not at all.

The World Food Programme (WFP) understands that a full stomach is just as important as a full backpack. For years, it has worked with the Government of Pakistan to provide school meals that not only feed hungry children, but also nourish dreams.

“The promise of a meal brought my daughter to school. Now, she dreams of becoming a teacher.”

— Mother in Tharparkar

 Why School Feeding Matters

In food-insecure areas, school meals can:

In some parts of Pakistan, one school meal a day is the only reliable source of nutrition for a child.

 What WFP Provides in Pakistan’s Schools

WFP supports a combination of in-school feeding and take-home rations, depending on the region.

 In-School Meals:

 Take-Home Rations:

 Where These Programs Run

WFP focuses its school feeding efforts in some of Pakistan’s most vulnerable districts:

These areas are often left out of mainstream development, making WFP’s role critical.

 A Focus on Girls’ Education

WFP places a special emphasis on increasing girls’ attendance, especially in conservative or underserved areas.

Impact:

“Before the food program, only two girls attended school. Now, there are forty.”

— Teacher, WFP-supported school in Balochistan

 Impact Snapshot

Between 2020–2023:

 Local Solutions, Local Ownership

WFP emphasizes community involvement:

This approach creates jobs, ownership, and sustainability — not dependency.

 Partnership with the Government of Pakistan

WFP works closely with:

The long-term goal? To transition school feeding into a nationally owned system, integrated into government-run education.

“This is not charity. It’s an investment in Pakistan’s future.”

— WFP Country Director


 Community Voices

“I used to skip school when I was hungry. Now I come every day for the food — and I stay for the books.”

— Ali, Grade 4, Tharparkar

“With food at school, my parents don’t need me to work anymore. I get to be a student.”

— Ayesha, 12, Khyber District


 Final Thoughts: Nourishing Minds, One Meal at a Time

In the fight against poverty, education is the most powerful weapon — and food is the first step toward learning. WFP’s school feeding programs prove that small investments can yield lifelong returns.

Every snack, every ration, every meal delivered in a dusty classroom is a statement of hope — that even in the poorest corners of Pakistan, a better future is possible.

“No child should have to choose between hunger and homework.”

— WFP Pakistan

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