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Global Poverty, Natural Disaster

Gift of the Givers: How Disaster Relief Can Reduce Global Poverty

Gift of the GiversAfter declaring the torrential rains and severe flooding as a national disaster on January 18, 2026, South Africa’s National Disaster Management Center initiated a coordinated response to provide aid, evacuate civilians and rebuild destroyed infrastructure. Numerous humanitarian organizations supported the government’s work. Among them, Gift of the Givers played a key role in coordinating relief efforts with the government.

Gift of the Givers

Founded by Dr Imtiax Sooliman on August 6, 1992, Gift of the Givers focuses on reliable disaster response, hunger alleviation, water provision and human development through education. Guided by the philosophy that the “best among people are those who benefit mankind”, the organization provides food, shelter and medical care to vulnerable populations and maintains large donation reserves to enable rapid emergency responses.

The work of organizations like Gift of the Givers is critical because disasters, even when they do not affect everyone directly, can have long-lasting economic and social effects. These effects can hinder both national development and affect vulnerable communities. According to the World Bank, in 2024 alone, global economic losses from disasters reached record levels, hitting poorest countries hardest. Between 2019 and 2023, natural disasters caused economic losses of more than 5% of GDP and, in some cases, exceeded 30-50%.

These economic losses not only disrupt livelihoods but also erode infrastructure and strain public services, further worsening poor living conditions. This emphasizes why effective disaster risk management works close with growth, fiscal stability and job creation. By providing immediate relief and ensuring access to essential resources, including clean water, the work of Gift of the Givers demonstrates how disaster relief can reduce global poverty and save lives.

Water Provision

One of the most direct ways disaster relief reduces poverty is through ensuring access to essential resources, including clean water, which is a key focus of Gift of the Givers. Water is vital, serving as a foundation for growth and development. However, Dr Sooliman notes how it is dwindling in many areas of the world. During disaster relief efforts, Gift of the Givers secures access to clean drinking water and hygienic sanitation facilities through borehole drilling and rainwater harvesting systems. Access to clean water after disasters could improve public health, prevent disease outbreaks and support economic stability and growth in affected communities.

Education and Health Developments

Besides water provision, disaster relief can reduce global poverty by investing in education and health. Education is a major catalyst for poverty reduction through increased job opportunities and skill development, according to the World Bank. It also promotes health due to improved socioeconomic status, healthier lifestyles, higher cognitive abilities and better access to health care. As such, efficient investments in education, research, development and infrastructure projects could lead to long-term economic development that builds human capital and maximizes growth across the globe.

Humanitarian organizations tackle disruptions to essential educational and medical institutions in different ways. Some bring search and rescue teams, tools for agricultural self-sustainability, money, water, food and medical equipment. Others focus on the reconstruction of educational and medical facilities, Dr Imtiaz Sooliman said in a 2025 podcast.

Gift of the Givers had previous projects, including bursaries, entrepreneurship, job creation and the establishment of primary healthcare clinics that can act during crises. Disaster relief could reduce global poverty through investments for transport, energy, housing, health, education and urban development.

Regarding many crises, especially the hunger crisis in South Africa, they alleviate short-term suffering while providing long-term solutions that empower communities, improve food security and strengthen social cohesion.

Importance of Dignity

In January 2026, Dr Sooliman spoke in an interview about his plans moving forward. His biggest concern is friction among individuals. He believes that by bringing people together and focusing on shared needs and values, they can fix their country, their continent and the world together.

In 2025 alone, Gift of the Givers responded to 130 fires and floods, finding tens of thousands of people who had been starving even before disaster struck, he said. Impoverished individuals have less support and, thus, struggle even more to recover. Dr Sooliman acknowledges that no one can control the weather patterns. He then emphasizes the importance of dignity and preserving it through discretion, allowing them to recover without shame: “We got transport, we bought the books, and in the classes, we collapsed because we didn’t have food. We don’t go to collect food. We’re afraid of our dignity.”

If an entire community becomes more resilient, then they have established solidarity. With greater unity and collaboration, as Dr Sooliman emphasizes, societies could address inequality and global poverty more effectively.

Moving Forward

Effective disaster relief can reduce global poverty by acting as a social safety net, allowing vulnerable communities to build healthier, more resilient lives. Gift of the Givers demonstrates that with dignity, solidarity and support for human development, aid can empower survivors and create solutions.

– Cindy Nguyen

Cindy is based in Albuquerque, NM, USA and focuses on Good News and Global Health for The Borgen Project.

Photo: Flickr

March 24, 2026
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https://borgenproject.org/wp-content/uploads/borgen-project-logo.svg 0 0 Naida Jahic https://borgenproject.org/wp-content/uploads/borgen-project-logo.svg Naida Jahic2026-03-24 01:30:262026-03-24 01:36:24Gift of the Givers: How Disaster Relief Can Reduce Global Poverty

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