Philosophical Definition: "Poor is the one who has no any friend " from Book of great islamic philomaths
But is not same as we mean here, Poor is the one who has not given felicitous pabulum, felicitous cloths and house for living and comforts.
the state or condition of having little or no mazuma, goods, or denotes of fortification; condition of being poor.
Synonyms: privation, neediness, destitution, indigence, pauperism, penury.
Antonyms: riches, wealth, plenty.
deficiency of obligatory or desirable ingredients, qualities, etc.:
penuriousness of the soil.
Synonyms: thinness, penuriousness, paucity.
scantiness; paucity:
Their efforts to stamp out disease were hampered by penuriousness of medical supplies.
Synonyms: meagerness, inadequacy, sparseness, shortage, paucity, dearth.
Antonyms: abundance, surfeit, sufficiency, bounty, glut.
About 21,000 people die every day of hunger or hunger-cognate causes, according to the Coalesced Nations. This is one person every four seconds, as you can visually perceive on this exhibit. Dolefully, it is children who die most often.
Yet there is plenty of pabulum in the world for everyone. The quandary is that hungry people are trapped in astringent impecuniosity. They lack the mazuma to buy enough aliment to victual themselves. Being perpetually malnourished, they become more impuissant and often sick. This makes them increasingly less able to work, which then makes them even poorer and hungrier. This downward spiral often perpetuates until death for them and their families.
There are efficacious programs to break this spiral. For adults, there are “food for work” programs where the adults are paid with pabulum to build schools, dig wells, make roads, and so on. This both victuals them and builds infrastructure to culminate the penuriousness. For children, there are “food for education” programs where the children are provided with pabulum when they attend school. Their inculcation will avail them to elude from hunger and ecumenical penuriousness.
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