‘We don’t know how it will end’: Hunger stalks amid virus

Allison, 5, eats a lunch of refried beans, scrambled egg, and a handmade tortilla, at home, Wednesday, April 15, 2020, in Washington. It is the one meal a day that her mother can cook for their family, outside of cereal from a food bank that is quickly running out. With both of her parents out of work due to the coronavirus pandemic they will look each day for donated food to share. Most days it is a question of whether to pay for food or bills with the dwindling funds they have remaining. Job loss, ineligibility for federal programs, language barriers, unfamiliarity with the charity network, and a lack of access to technology can keep some immigrants from accessing available food aid. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

Janeth is handed a bag of donated food from a Methodist church, Tuesday, April 21, 2020, in Washington. She was pleased that the bag contained a bit of chicken and rice to cook. When she went home she cooked the chicken immediately. Most food giveaways have been of fresh produce, which they are grateful for, but doesn't keep them full for long. The couple finds most food banks by word of mouth, or driving and looking for lines of people. Language barriers, unfamiliarity with the charity network, and a lack of access to technology can keep some immigrants from accessing food aid. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

After cooking their one meal for the day of beans, egg, and handmade tortillas, Janeth worries while standing in her kitchen, Wednesday, April 15, 2020, in Washington. "Where can we get enough food? How can we pay our bills? We have never had to ask for help before," says Janeth, with tears winding their way down her cheeks. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

Allison, 5, holds two bananas next to her mother Janeth, left, as a volunteer at the food bank Martha's Table waits to help the next guest, Tuesday, April 21, 2020, in Washington. Allison hopefully asked the volunteers for cereal but there was none available at the food bank that day, and she was handed a pair of bananas instead. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

WASHINGTON — When all this started — when the coronavirus began stalking humanity like an animal hunting prey, when she and her husband lost their restaurant jobs overnight as the world shut down to hide, when she feared not being able to feed her family — Janeth went outside with a red kitchen towel.