Musician and singer Jónsi from band Sigur Rós contributes his song Tornedo to the new brilliant awarness campaign by United Nations' World Food Programme. When Swedish footballer Zlatan Ibrahimović scored last Saturday evening for his French team PSG he celebrated by taking of his shirt and revealing 50 new tattoos on his previously heavily inked body. The 50 new temporary tattoos were names of people he’d never met, but still wanted to keep close as he later explained. They were the names of real people who suffer from starvation in the world.
The moving gesture is part of a campaign from UN's World Food Programme, the world's largest humanitarian agency fighting hunger worldwide. On average, WFP reaches more than 80 million people with food assistance in 75 countries each year. About 11,500 people work for the organisation, most of them in remote areas, serving the hungry.
WFP is voluntarily funded. You can join the fight against hunger here
Musician and singer Jónsi from band Sigur Rós contributes his song Tornedo to the new brilliant awarness campaign by United Nations' World Food Programme. When Swedish footballer Zlatan Ibrahimović scored last Saturday evening for his French team PSG he celebrated by taking of his shirt and revealing 50 new tattoos on his previously heavily inked body. The 50 new temporary tattoos were names of people he’d never met, but still wanted to keep close as he later explained. They were the names of real people who suffer from starvation in the world.
The moving gesture is part of a campaign from UN's World Food Programme, the world's largest humanitarian agency fighting hunger worldwide. On average, WFP reaches more than 80 million people with food assistance in 75 countries each year. About 11,500 people work for the organisation, most of them in remote areas, serving the hungry.
WFP is voluntarily funded. You can join the fight against hunger here