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Church's 30-Hour Famine raises hunger awareness

Youth members, parents and volunteers with the Zion Stone Church in New Ringgold, West Penn Township, held a 30 Hour Famine recently at their church to raise awareness for world hunger.

The 30 Hour Famine, an international youth movement to fight hunger, is held every year by thousands of students throughout the United States. Participants go 30 hours without food and get a taste of hunger while also having to deal with fake handicaps, such as bloated stomachs, blindness, deafness and many other conditions found in third world countries.Organizers pointed out, that every day, nearly 8,000 children under age 5 die because of hunger-related causes. In all, more than 24,000 children lose their lives each day, most of them to poverty, disease and hunger.On average, one out of six people in the world suffer from famine or starvation, while around 1.4 billion people have to survive on less than $1.25 a day. These and other facts were taught to the youth during the famine program.During the West Penn event, youth group members were teamed up in tribes to compete in various themed activities.Every year, World Vision distributes enough emergency food to fill 8,000 semi-trucks. Some of the activities held during the 30 Hour Famine included making cardboard huts, surviving a man-powered earthquakes, scavenger hunts, muddy sock relay, and food sampling.All the activities were themed around the suffering who are forced to live with a very limited amount of food or clean water.For more information about next year's 30-Hour Famine or to make a donation, contact counselor Charlotte Haas Fritz at the church at (570) 386-5111.

ANDREW LEIBENGUTH/TIMES NEWS Tribe 2 (Kenya) from left are Emma Osenbach, Abby Brickler and Connor Knowlan. Not pictured was Caitlin Metzger, Molly Betz, Julian Gerace, Aimee Hull, Emma Osenbach. Tribe leaders were Dave & Adele Snyder.