Salesian Missions Helps Feed Venezuelan Students
(ANS – Barinas, Venezuela – October 30, 2025) – Students and educators at Salesian San Jose Agricultural Technical School, located in Barinas, Venezuela, received nutritional support through a project funded by Salesian Missions of New Rochelle. During the 9 months of the project, 64,584 meals were served, providing 3 meals a day to 96 boarding students who are training to become agricultural technicians. In addition, 50 educators at the school received lunches as an incentive for their work.
The
project has been fundamental in helping the school increase its enrollment from
82 to 95 students. Most of these students come from families with low incomes.
Education provides a way for students to improve their future and offers them a
better quality of life. For many students, this education also gives them the
opportunity to revive their families’ agricultural production activities.
The
school grounds cover 4,700 acres with a solid infrastructure, numerous pastures,
and 12 production units. These areas cover crops, nurseries, vegetable gardens,
fruit trees, dairy farming, and cheese production, as well as
the production of poultry, pigs, sheep, goats, cattle, and rabbits. As a
result of efforts and alliances made through cooperation agreements, project
initiatives, and coordination with the private sector, some production units
are in the process of reactivating production after years of being shut down
due to the chronic crisis in Venezuela.
Fr.
William Jimenez, administrator of the Salesian community and agricultural
school, noted, “Youths have said that the project has had an impact on their
psychological well-being. There have been significant advances in nutritional
indicators for the students as a result of the feeding project. The project has
even made it possible to identify 15% of students who were underweight or
overweight, enabling comprehensive follow-up with their families to improve
their health. It has also been an opportunity for students to learn about the
value of maintaining good nutrition.”
Salesians have been living and working in Venezuela since
1894, more than a century before the country’s current political and economic
crisis began. They operate schools, youth centers, and other programs that
support youths in need and their families. An estimated 87% of the population
is currently living in poverty, and essential goods such as food and medicine
are scarce.
Source: Salesian
Missions

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