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Will your seat change hunger?

“Survival is not sovereignty. Food security is not a privilege, it is justice.”

The table was set with intention. Chef Robert Rainford curated a multi‑course experience that operated like a mirror. Each dish carried the weight of a question: what does it mean to sit here, surrounded by abundance, when so many in our communities are negotiating scarcity every single day?

This was the Food Security Fund Campaign Cabinet Dinner, hosted by Support Black Charities. A private invitation‑only gathering of leaders across philanthropy, business, and community. Ten to twenty guests, carefully chosen, sat together to confront the reality that food insecurity is lived. It is urgent, and it is ours to solve.

The evening began with warmth; laughter, introductions, the aroma of Chef Rainford’s craft, but quickly, the conversation turned. Leaders asked: how do we reconcile the privilege of sitting here, plates full, with the knowledge that Black families across Ontario are opening empty fridges? How do we move from charity to justice, from temporary relief to systemic change?

Food insecurity is about inequity. Rising grocery costs add nearly $1,000 annually to family budgets already stretched thin. Food bank usage has doubled since the pandemic. One in five Black households in Ontario faces food insecurity. Behind every number is a mother skipping meals, a father working two jobs, a child distracted in class because hunger is louder than learning.

The villain is the system. Low wages, racialized unemployment, housing costs, food deserts, and stigma combine to make scarcity a daily negotiation. Policy promises relief, but reality is lived in cupboards that echo. The invisible barriers are everywhere: stores priced out of reach, neighborhoods without fresh produce, silence that hides need.

Yet, resilience is everywhere too. Families stretch meals, neighbours share, churches organize food drives, but resilience should not be mistaken for resolution. Survival is not sovereignty. That was the tension at the table: abundance versus scarcity, privilege versus inequity, policy versus lived truth.

Chef Rainford’s courses became metaphors. Dishes rich in flavour reminded guests of the richness denied to too many. A plate carefully balanced mirrored the balance families must strike between bills and meals. Each bite carried the weight of contrast; what we have versus what others lack.

The dinner was strategic. Leaders spoke of building a sustainable, equitable food ecosystem. They asked, how do we design systems where food security is not a privilege but a right? How do we ensure that Black communities are curators of solutions? How do we move from scarcity to sovereignty?

The Food Security Fund is the answer in motion. It is about shifting power, centering lived experience and ensuring that no child grows up believing hunger is normal. The dinner was the first of many curated gatherings: small, intentional, invite‑only, designed to spark conversations that ripple outward into action.

The call to action is clear:

  • Give back. Support the Food Security Fund.
  • Show up. Attend future curated dinners, lend your voice, share your expertise.
  • Donate, advocate, amplify. Connect directly with Support Black Charities.

Food insecurity is not someone else’s problem, and the transformation is possible. When access improves, families stop negotiating hunger. Children focus in school. Parents breathe easier. Communities thrive. Food becomes culture, joy, and connection.

The evening ended with dessert, and with resolve. Leaders left knowing that sitting at the table was not enough. The real work begins when we extend that table, when we ensure that every family has a seat, every child has a plate, every community has sovereignty.

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