When Jarvis Provitt started the HateLess Foundation in 2016, resources were extremely limited.
He had no investors or grant funding, no network of volunteers or board members to lean on. HateLess was just himself and a handful of his friends walking around Montgomery on foot, looking for ways to help. These “missions” ranged from free yard work to cooking dinner for a hungry family, and in Provitt’s mind, each one was a small way to show love to a neighbor in need.
“I’m always saying that God, Jeremiah 29:11 is real: He has a plan, and that’s his plan,” Provitt said. “My plan was very small, but his plan was something that blew my mind.”
In the last eight years, the nonprofit has grown exponentially. HateLess established a headquarters in Atlanta, founded branches in seven other countries and expanded into investments like agriculture and a bottled water company.
With all the growth came some restructuring as well. This year, Provitt divided HateLess into two halves: the nonprofit HateLess Foundation and the for-profit HateLess Industries. Both work to support the mission of feeding, clothing and educating every community.

Expanding into Africa
The idea of spreading HateLess beyond Montgomery was one that Provitt kept in mind early on, but the challenge was that he couldn’t really identify the nuanced problems of any community other than his own.
He grew up here, so he knew what Montgomery needed. He could pinpoint who needed support because he was keenly attuned to his city’s pulse.
To replicate the service initiative in other communities, he needed to find the leaders who lived there — the ones who understood their towns the same way Provitt understood his.
He found nonprofits that he respected in a number of different countries, and he reached out to their directors and founders to see who wanted to work with him. That’s how he ended up with HateLess branches in Liberia, Sierra Leone, Nigeria, Ghana, Malawi, Zimbabwe and Zambia.
In each place, Provitt found local leaders, asked them what problems they wanted to fix and found the support to do just that.
Efforts in Africa began around 2019 with the launch of HateLess Liberia. There, the immediate focus was on providing food and clothes for children.
2020 brought on the headquarters move to Atlanta, and in 2021, HateLess expanded into Sierra Leone.
In 2022, two branches in separate parts of Zimbabwe sprung up. Area directors Believe Tasara and Nobetter Ndaira said they help pay for kids’ school fees, provide school supplies, advocate against child marriage and educate the community to prevent teenage pregnancies. They also work to make sure hunger doesn’t keep any kid away from receiving an education by offering meals to kids who need them.
“We thank God for HateLess,” Ndaira said. “We hope we can continue to shine this light.”

Investing in Malawi
Separate from the HateLess Foundation’s community service work in Malawi, Provitt also hopes to make some money there with HateLess Industries. Through a subsidiary named Promise Land Investors Group, he purchased a 16-acre farm and has employed two people to run it.
Not only does he expect the land to appreciate in value, but HateLess Industries is also selling crops Malawi is known for, like maize. The farm had its first harvest in April.
“Half of the harvest we designated to pay back some expenses which we incurred along the way, and some of the harvest was given to the villagers around where the farm is situated,” HateLess International Director Innocent Chando said. “We always plan to give back to the community.”
