Imagine a world where nobody goes hungry.
Grow Hope connects urban and rural communities to end global hunger
Grow Hope Saskatchewan started with a collaboration between Canadian Foodgrains Bank, Mennonite Central Committee Saskatchewan, and the Roman Catholic Diocese of Saskatoon in the winter of 2017 to find creative ways to engage more people in the effort to help end global hunger.
Two farmers agreed to help kickstart the project with a total of 160 acres designated for the project. By 2022, five farm families agreed to designate farmland to the project, bringing the total to 300 acres among five farm families. The project continues to grow. In 2026, seven farm families have collectively committed over 500 acres and many donors are helping to sponsor those acres.
For over 40 years, many people have donated funds to the Foodgrains Bank through one of 15 member agencies to support emergency food distribution to those affected by disaster or conflict in developing regions, to help vulnerable communities grow more and better food to feed themselves and their families in sustainable ways, and to provide nutritional support to malnourished people.
The Grow Hope model is a creative way for rural and urban dwellers to share in the risk and reward of growing a crop, and work together to raise funds for the Foodgrains Bank through a growing project. The input costs to grow a crop are shared between farmers and donors, and the satisfaction of growing a bountiful crop is a shared reward.
Over the project’s nine year history, other Christian agencies joined the partnership. There are now six agencies (or synods that represent an agency) that make up Grow Hope Saskatchewan. The members of this unique project are:
Mennonite Central Committee Saskatchewan
Development and Peace - Caritas Canada
Canadian Baptist Ministries
Synod of Saskatchewan of the Presbyterian Church in Canada,
Alongside Hope
Canadian Lutheran World Relief
The project takes inspiration from God’s invitation to participate in the work of restoring relationship with God, each other, and creation. We believe that sharing of our abundance with those whose lives are vulnerable due to food shortages is a vital part of that restoration.
In the Bible, the prophet Isaiah encouraged people to “Feed the hungry and help those in trouble. Then your light will shine out from the darkness, and the darkness around you will be bright as noon.” (Isaiah 58:10).
Jesus of Nazareth taught, exemplified, and fulfilled that same vision through his life, death, and resurrection (see Luke 4:18). We see Grow Hope Saskatchewan as a practical way to respond to God’s invitation, and we do so in the name of Christ.
Representatives from CFGB, MCCS, RCDOS and D&P pose together at the 2019 Grow Hope Saskatchewan Field Day in Rosthern, SK.
Coming together to help feed people around the world.
When you support Grow Hope Saskatchewan, you are supporting Canadian Foodgrains Bank projects around the world. Funds raised support projects like this agriculture and livelihood program in India. MCC is working with partner Disha (Hindi word for “finding the right path or direction”) to build opportunities for women and families who suffer from poverty and hunger. Because of this project, women in 12 villages in Odisha India were able to learn about water and soil conservation, mushroom cultivation, goat and poultry raising and more. Their new skills are boosting their nutrition and income and helping them make the most of their land.
Basanti Toppo tends to the compost outside of her home in the village of Tangrani. While organic matter from this compost increases the yield of her crops, CFGB matched funds from the Canadian government multiply the effects of your donation.