Believing in Food Security for All, New Jersey Volunteer Provides Allergy-friendly Food to Communities in Need – Points of Light Foundation

Posted: July 6, 2022 at 1:53 am


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Shreya buys healthy food to donate to local food banks with the money she fundraised through Nourish America./Courtesy Shreya Shivakumar

Meet Daily Point of Light Award honoree Shreya Shivakumar. Read her story, and nominate an outstanding volunteer or family as a Daily Point of Light.

Like many immigrant families who must build a completely new life in a completely new land, Shreya Shivakumars family often faced financial instability and food insecurity as they worked hard to adjust from their life in India to their new American life in the Washington Heights neighborhood of New York.

As Shreya saw her parents and neighbors struggle to keep food on the table, she didnt feel defeated. Rather, a fire for food equality was lit inside of her. After moving to Edison, New Jersey, in 2012, Shreya started volunteering at food banks, and after quickly realizing that she wanted to do more, she started her own nonprofit organization called Nourish America at age 15.

An estimated 2 million Americans live in poverty with food allergies or Celiac disease, according to Allergic Living. Federal assistance programs such as SNAP do not provide enough financial resources for families to afford gluten-free or allergy-friendly foods, which are often higher in price. Shreya, now a 19-year-old second-year college student, is working to solve this problem by hosting fundraising events and food drives for allergy-friendly foods through Nourish America and donating them to food pantries so people in need can easily access them.

Nourish America is a nonprofit organization dedicated to providing allergy-friendly and organic food to communities in need. It was really born out of the idea that giving back and fighting hunger needs to focus more on nourishing the people who need it the most rather than simply feeding. We focus on donating to under-resourced communities all across the U.S., and our donations typically consist of nonperishable, organic, nutrient-dense, healthy foods appropriate for multiple cultures, appropriate for children, for people with other food-related conditions such as diabetes, so that everyone who needs food assistance can receive it.

One of the great privileges of this work is directly interacting with the families that we help and talking to them. They show their gratitude, surprise and happiness once they realize the new options that are available to them. Theyll tell me stories about how their child who is allergic to peanuts can now have sunflower butter or how their elderly parent who cannot have that much sugar now has this lower sugar alternative, so these individual stories of how Nourish America is giving these families a little less to worry about. Im really proud of that.

We typically did food drives partnering with community organizations, but with COVID-19, it became kind of a safety hazard to directly collect food, so we transitioned to online fundraisers. Our biggest fundraising event is a youth-led benefit concert called Notes for Nourish. We had an in-person concert in 2019 that had a great turnout. Many youth musicians volunteered their talents, and we had a great attendance. In the years since COVID-19, 2020 and 2021, we continued to do that same event in a virtual format on YouTube and getting donations from that.

With a combination of fundraising and grants, weve raised about $12,800 so far and donated 4,500 pounds of organic and allergy-friendly foods.

Before Covid, I was volunteering with a refugee assistance nonprofit in New Jersey, mainly tutoring refugee children English and Math on Sundays. When COVID hit, their families suffered financial troubles due to layoffs and just economic turmoil because of the pandemic, so the president of the organization reached out to me to see if our organizations could partner up to provide food assistance to these refugee families. We conducted our first online benefit concert with other youth organizations in our area and raised enough money to provide 400 refugees with weekly donations over a couple of months in the spring of 2020.

Our efforts are typically focused in New York and New Jersey, but recently, weve expanded to Michigan, and this coming year, were going to partner with food banks in Atlanta, Georgia.

I would like people to learn how to give back in a way that stays true to yourself, your roots and your authentic experiences. No one can represent that as accurately as yourself, so I hope that everyone realizes that they have a unique power in their own experience, their background, their lives to make a change in a way that they can only do themselves.

Do you want to make a difference in your community like Shreya? Find local volunteer opportunities.

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Believing in Food Security for All, New Jersey Volunteer Provides Allergy-friendly Food to Communities in Need - Points of Light Foundation

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