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In the News...
The Harvest of Hope Foundation is a very unique and grassroots organization, the only one of its kind in the nation set up exclusively to provide financial aid to migrant farm workers and their families who harvest and produce a large share of this country’s fruits, vegetables and other foods. The following news articles and press releases contain interesting information about the special work of Harvest of Hope Foundation. |
Where do your donation go?
The Harvest of Hope Foundation offers an updated listing of all Financial Funds and Monthly Expenditures every month.
If you would like to know more about all 44 of the Foundation's Finacial Funds, visit our Finacial Funds page.
If you would like to know how your donations are used, visit our Current Monthly Expenditure & Charitable givings page
2009 Harvest of Hope Fest | Photo Album
To preview the 2009 Harvest of Hope Fest Photo Album, please visit www.harvestofhopefest.com.
The Harvest of Hope Foundation and the A Antique Mall south of Gainesville, Florida have joined together to raise funds to help migrant farmworkers.
The Harvest of Hope Foundation and the A Antique Mall south of Gainesville, Florida have joined together to raise funds to help migrant farmworkers. If you have antiques, collectibles or other memorabilia to donate, The A Antique Mall (Marion County’s largest) will be glad to consider accepting your items and selling them. Proceeds will go to benefit the Harvest of Hope Foundation.
Prior to donating, please contact either me or Warren or Pat at the A Antique Mall at 352-591-0588. The A Antique Mall is located at 17990 NW 77th Avenue in Reddick, Florida 32686.
From immigrant farmworker to brain surgeon!
María Hinojosa speaks to Alfredo Quiñones-Hinojosa about his life's journey from illegal migrant worker to neurosurgeon at John Hopkins.
Watch Video Here
Maria Hinojosa is the Senior Correspondent for the Emmy Award-winning broadcast news magazine NOW on PBS. Hinojosa is also the anchor and managing editor of NPR's "Latino USA," and the anchor of her own Emmy Award-winning talk show "One on One" with Maria Hinojosa from WGBH/La Plaza. Hinojosa has won top honors in American journalism including two Emmy Awards, the Robert F. Kennedy Award for Reporting on the Disadvantaged, and the Overseas Press Club's Edward R. Murrow Award for best documentary for her groundbreaking NOW on PBS special "Child Brides: Stolen Lives."
Welcome to Mi Pueblito: The Small-Town, Family-Farm Lifestyle That We Cherish Is Being Preserved Thanks to Mexican Immigrants
Welcome to Mi Pueblito: The Small-Town, Family-Farm Lifestyle That We Cherish Is Being Preserved Thanks to Mexican Immigrants.
Read the fascinating true story of Sergio Marquez, who at age 17, left his hometown in the Mexican state of Michoacán and traveled to the small U.S. town of Wapato, amid the fertile farmlands of Washington's Yakima Valley. Even in Mexico, he had heard about the valley's famed apple trees — and the work that could be found picking, pruning, and thinning them.
Read Sergio's full story here.
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