Fr. Cosmas Kinley, who is enlisted for monthly financial support from VPP, says that a bag of maize can feed a family of five people a week.
“This bag of maize can sustain them for a week, taking into account a household that has five people. So, this bag of maize will be used for porridge in the morning, lunch in the afternoon and supper in the evening. This entails that they will be having three meals in a day,” Fr. Cosmas says.
VPP has announced plans to bring “20 million hours of heat and millions of meals to the poorest communities in the world” in its “coal for Christmas” campaign launched on the feast of St. Nicholas on December 6.
The coal as a Christmas gift is an old tradition that was meant to warn misbehaving children that they would not receive Santa’s Christmas presents, but a hot lump of coal in their socks.
According to VPP, coal can be an important gift, especially to vulnerable communities around the world who would appreciate warm households especially during Christmas.
“Americans tend to think that Santa Claus delivers coal only to bad kids. But in vulnerable communities around the world, many families want nothing more for Christmas than coal to keep their homes warm through the winter. That’s why The Vulnerable People Project is launching its third annual Coal for Christmas campaign and beat Santa’s coal-delivery record,” the aid agency says in its report availed to ACI Africa.
In 2022, VPP “Coal for Christmas campaign” focused mainly on the poor in Afghanistan, seeking to provide coal, medicine, and food to former U.S. allies and their widows and orphans.
As one of the only Western NGOs to continue operating in Afghanistan since the disastrous withdrawal of U.S. troops in August 2021, over the last two years, VPP has delivered more than 5 million meals and 30 million hours of heat to Afghan people.
In 2023, in addition to Afghanistan, the Coal for Christmas campaign is expanding to serve vulnerable communities all around the world, including Nigeria, Malawi, Mongolia, Pakistan, Gaza, and Ukraine among others.
In Nigeria, Fr. Viktor has expressed gratitude to VPP for the monthly financial support that Priests in the country receive from the charity organization, saying, “The support that you have been giving us has gone a long way to helping our people.”