“We can end hunger and starvation together by our unbridled acts of kindness” says Paris Keswani
Rather than getting angry at the truth, we should summon the courage of kindness, do charitable works and strive to become a cheerful global humanitarian. We can end hunger and starvation together by our unbridled acts of kindness.



WHY THE WORLD MUST CARE NOW?
“Poverty Our Collective Shame in the Age of Abundance” By PARIS KESWANI, Ambassador of Goodwill, Humanitarian Emeritus.
Each time I peruse the pages of such esteemed online finance publications as BLOOMBERG, FORBES, LONDON FINANCIAL TIMES AND WALL STREET JOURNAL, I always run into a magnanimous outline of how many billionaires were added to the runaway computational matrix used to keep the data by these organizations. However, I hardly see the data on the number of newly made homeless, hapless, impoverished BY INHUMANE POLICIES and laws in the localities where the said billionaires were counted. As a humble student of history and one with a natural love for origin of words and other such phenomena that may remain inexplicable if we didn’t forage through those dark tunnels of the past ages, I decided to look up the origin of the word poor.
From the Webster’s English Dictionary poor (adj.) c. 1200, "lacking money or resources, destitute of wealth; needy, indigent;" also "small, scanty," also
voluntarily and deliberately, "devoid of possessions in conformity with Christian virtues," from Old French povre "poor, wretched, dispossessed; inadequate; weak, thin" (Modern French pauvre), from Latin pauper "poor, not wealthy," from pre-
Latin *pau-paros "producing little; getting little," a compound from the roots of paucus "little" (from PIE root *pau- (1) "few, little") and parare "to produce, bring forth” from PIE root *pere- (1) "to produce, procure".




































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