bowls of hope feed kids’ bodies’, moms’ spirits

As Marisel Tompong makes her way through the skinny alleys of barangay [barrio] Parola, a mom with a one-year-old child in her arms and another child in tow stops her.

The mother, gesturing to her older daughter, asks about the after-school feeding program. "Can she join?" Pointing to the one-year-old in her arms, "How about this one?" Tompong asks a few questions and is on her way.

As Tompong passes kids going home during the lunch hour, she reminds them about the feeding program.

Arriving at Parola United Methodist Church, Tompong finds volunteers already prepping the afternoon meal – sopas – a common soup in the Philippines made of macaroni noodles, chicken stock and vegetables. She unwraps the donated vitamins the children will take later.

In the heart of one of Manila's most depressed areas – Tondo – is a pocket of hope. There, kids gather every school night for a warm meal, and moms gather for a community gathering that feeds both bodies and spirits.

Here you will find Marisel Tompong, a nurse from Mary Johnston Hospital and graduate of Mary Johnston College of Nursing.

Marisel Tompong. Photo courtesy of David Valera



Mary Johnston is the only United Methodist hospital in the Philippines. It has been serving the poorest patients in Tondo for 105 years. The majority of the patients live in Manila's slums and squatter areas and go there for care, says Edna Imperial, dean of the College of Nursing.

The children and their guardians gather around the tables in the classroom. As the children sit down, Tompong checks her attendance book, noting some who are perpetually absent. The mother she encountered earlier is there with her children.

After a prayer, Tompong begins ladling the sopas into bowls, directing the older children to help the younger ones, as the soup is hot.

The mothers take turns making the meals. Children who participate in the feeding program show noticeable weight gains, moving closer to the recommended weight for their age. The meals supplement whatever little they have to eat at home.

One mother, Net Net, talks about how her son has already gained two kilos [about 4.5 pounds] since he began participating in the program.

"The program has been here for a few years, and Marisel is hardworking and comes every day to make her rounds and check on everyone," said Mageline, another of the mothers. "She is our community nurse from Mary Johnston."

As a few kids line up for seconds, Tompong walks around the classroom giving spoonfuls of lemon-flavored vitamins to the kids.

Asked why she does this, Tompong responded, "When I was a college student, I was exposed to community immersions. I would see kids without slippers or clothes, malnourished. I would dream one day that when I was a nurse, I would have the type of work where I could serve these kids; that I would be some type of mission nurse.

"The feeling of being able to help someone else brings me joy."

The after-school feeding program is part of the Training and Assistance Program for Self-Reliance that Mary Johnston College began in the 1980s.

"I see God most in the ways the mothers are impacted," Tompong said. "The kids have started to go to church. We live in a dangerous community, and even with news of shootings and stabbings and killings, I see God moving."

This article was originally published for UMC Giving.

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