Rachel Sumekh

b. November 7, 1991

by JWA Staff
Our work to expand the Encyclopedia is ongoing. We are providing this brief biography for Rachel Sumekh until we are able to commission a full entry.

Rachel Sumekh in a UCLA dining hall. Photograph courtesy of UCLA Magazine.

Turning dining hall dollars into food for the hungry, Rachel Sumekh has empowered college students to address food insecurity in their communities and has shined a light on hunger on university campuses. Born to parents who had emigrated from Iran, Rachel Sumekh grew up in the Iranian Jewish community of Los Angeles. As a student at the University of California-Los Angeles, Sumekh wanted to use the extra money on her meal plan at the end of the semester to help the hungry in her community. The first drive she organized, in the fall of 2009, provided about 350 meals to people near her campus. Since then, the organization she founded, Swipe Out Hunger, has provided more than 12.3 million meals across the United States, supported by students at over 750 universities. Sumekh has turned her focus to hunger on campuses, working to address the food insecurity experienced by one in ten university students. For this work, she was recognized as a “Champion of Change” by the White House in 2012 and was included on Forbes Magazine’s list of “30 Under 30 for Social Entrepreneurship” in 2017. Sumekh lives in Los Angeles, where she is a leader in the Iranian Jewish community and continues to expand the impact of her organization nationwide. As of 2024, she works as an advisor, strategist, and speaker for RNS Impact, which helps today’s leaders create impact intentionally and sustainably and serves on the board for the Foundation for the Los Angeles Community Colleges.  

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How to cite this page

Jewish Women's Archive. "Rachel Sumekh." (Viewed on April 24, 2024) <http://jwa.org/encyclopedia/article/sumekh-rachel>.