NewsLocal NewsMichigan

Actions

Michigan nonprofit THRIVE provides thousands of daily meals to school children in need across the globe

Michigan based non-profit helps feed kids across the world
Posted

DETROIT (WXYZ) — A Michigan-based nonprofit that started by giving bananas to school children in Bangladesh is now providing thousands of daily meals to kids halfway across the globe.

Watch Jeffrey Lindblom's video report:

Michigan based non-profit helps feed kids across the world

THRIVE, co-founded by Gina Gabel in 2012, serves more than 3,000 daily meals to children in need across 17 different schools in Bangladesh and the Philippines.

"These kids are not eating regular food on a daily basis. There are endless hungry children in the world. We knew we had to do something about it," Gabel said.

Screenshot 2026-03-25 at 6.39.19 PM.jpg

Gabel, who was recently featured on Inc.’s Female Founder 500 list, said her mission to feed the hungry began nearly 15 years ago.

"We started with a promise of one banana to a school of 250 kids," Gabel said.

Screenshot 2026-03-25 at 1.47.47 PM.png

The food is directly impacting school attendance and enrollment rates.

Screenshot 2026-03-25 at 1.48.21 PM.png

"A lot of families will keep their kids home from school to work and make money for the family. But when a school meal is provided or promised, kids show up to school," Gabel said. "When we started, we were just acting out of a gut reaction as moms."

Screenshot 2026-03-25 at 1.46.55 PM.png

The nonprofit goes beyond helping the hungry by purchasing locally sourced food from farmers and employing 19 mothers to cook the school meals.

Image (1).jpeg

"But, employing moms — for many, this is their first ever stable work and with the advent of that… we’re really changing communities," Gabel said.

Image (2).jpeg

The impact is clear to Gabel, who holds the joy of the children and mothers near and dear.

Image.jpeg

"I’ve learned what resilience, gratitude, and joy look like. All they really want is their child to be healthy and be educated, and a school meal can make a huge dent in that," Gabel said.

Image (3).jpeg

While feeding 3,000 children is good progress, Gabel said it is still not enough. She hopes to reach 10,000 children by the end of 2028.

———

This story was reported on-air by a journalist and has been converted to this platform with the assistance of AI. Our editorial team verifies all reporting on all platforms for fairness and accuracy.