Free Breakfast for School Children

According to a report by the Southern Christian Leadership Conference Research committee, an estimated one-third to half of the nation’s poorest experienced hunger that resulted in psychological damage.1
The BPP’s Free Breakfast for School Children bypassed all of the roadblocks and limitations of the federal programs by relying on volunteers, donations, and community spaces. At the time, federal programs such as the National School Lunch Program and the School Breakfast Program faced many bureaucratic issues and were largely unsuccessful in addressing hunger among the nation’s poorest.
July 25, 1969: Black Panthers serve breakfast to children at Christ of King Catholic Church in San Diego.

Creating safe spaces.

More than free food.
The Panthers believed that by keeping young children fed every morning, they would be provided ample nutrition to feed their minds at school. By ensuring that children did not go to school hungry, they could establish key fundamental skills in math and writing for both socioeconomic mobility and political mobilization. Their work sought interrupt generational patterns of hunger that have long kept poor communities stunted intellectually and physically, thus keeping them marginalized in society.1
References:
1. Potorti, M. (2017). “Feeding the Revolution”: the Black Panther Party, Hunger, and Community Survival. Journal of African American Studies, 21(1), 85–110. https://ntserver1.wsulibs.wsu.edu:2137/10.1007/s12111-017-9345-9
2. Ducho, D. (2010) Panthers serving children free breakfast. [Photograph]. Blackpast.org. https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/black-panther-partys-free-breakfast-program-1969-1980/
3. (1971). Children at the Black Panthers’ free breakfast program, 1971. [Photograph]. Oregon Encyclopedia. https://www.oregonencyclopedia.org/articles/black_panthers_in_portland/