
Eswatini: Gina’s Story of Uncertain Survival
The ten-year-old is too thin from chronic nutrition and when he has time to play, he rarely has the energy for it.

The ten-year-old is too thin from chronic nutrition and when he has time to play, he rarely has the energy for it.

Every day, Rufo and his wife Fanny head out very early in the morning. The couple who recently migrated to Colombia from Venezuela collect materials for recycling and hauling in the city they now call home, which is how they earn money.

When the 7.2 magnitude earthquake hit Haiti, Dumont was outside his house with several of his children.

One of the most effective ways you can support ADRA is to join our monthly giving program, ADRA Angels!

Experts are reporting this is the first hunger crisis in modern history to be caused by climate change.

Every person on Earth is born with the right to a healthy life. So many factors have a direct effect on our health, and often the difference between a long life of good health and a life of chronic illness or early death comes down to access.

Food insecurity is one of the most pressing problems in the world today.

There’s nothing more important than healthy food, but millions of children around the world don’t have enough to eat

ADRA supporter Joseph Rollakanty shared a generous gift to support those in India who were recently hit by a devastating surge in COVID-19 cases.

We haven’t seen the last of COVID-19 yet, but we are already seeing the scars that it has begun to leave behind.

On the morning of February 7, Trinidad and Tobago’s fishermen set out under the usual azure skies, their boats slicing through the tranquil waters. But this day would mark a profound shift in the island’s serenity

Papy, an ADRA Water Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) technical assistant, wrote the song to inspire people to develop new sanitary habits.

Ingrid Flores is a single woman living with her mother and young son in the dry corridor of Honduras where more than half of the population is living in substandard conditions.

The Adventist Development and Relief Agency (ADRA) is honoring International Women’s Day (March 8) and National Women’s History Month by spotlighting the amazing stories of the mission’s female leaders.

“Bucaramanga?”, my friend Mike chuckles1, “nope, never heard of it – but I’m amused to learn that a place called Boo·kaa·ruh·maang·guh even exists!”

ADRA has been on the frontlines helping communities worldwide who are grappling with the aftermath of disasters and emergencies.

ADRA Connections volunteers are partnering with communities to fight this monster.

Standing in the middle of an endless field of vegetables, Maro Jeanine recalls how her village was years ago.

Located in the heart of Mugamba village, Madame Safyatu Mwamba Tchibola’s small bakery plays a vital role in supplying bread to local residents.

We didn’t have access to good seeds and didn’t know how to sow in order, so we sowed in disorder and production was very low; in a 0.5-hectare field of maize and cowpea seedlings after long and arduous work.