"In the face of this crisis of global proportions that we are experiencing, these projects are intended to be a tangible sign of the Pope's charity, as well as an appeal to all Christians and people of good will to practice the virtue of charity and solidarity ever better, ensuring that during this pandemic 'no one is left behind,' as the Holy Father Pope Francis has asked," the press release said.
The Populorum Progressio Foundation for Latin America and the Caribbean was established by St. John Paul II in 1992 "to help the poor campesinos and to promote agrarian reform, social justice and peace in Latin America."
John Paul II founded the charitable institution during the fifth centenary of the beginning of the evangelization of the American continent.
In his founding letter, he said the charity "is to be a gesture of the loving solidarity of the Church towards the most abandoned and those most in need of protection, such as the indigenous peoples, peoples of mixed racial backgrounds, and Afro-Americans."
"The Foundation is aimed towards collaborating with all those who, conscious of the suffering condition of the Latin American peoples, wish to contribute to their integral development, according to a just and appropriate application of the social teaching of the Church," the pope wrote in 1992.
The Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development oversees the foundation. Its president is Cardinal Peter Turkson. It receives substantial support from the Italian bishops.