Daniel Germain, (born 1964) is a Canadian philanthropist. He is president and founder of the Breakfast Club of Canada, a Canadian charity that promotes and assists the establishment and maintenance of school breakfast programs in Canada.[1] The Breakfast Club provides more than 48 million breakfasts every year to more than 250,000 students in over 1,900 schools across Canada.[2]
Born in Verdun, Quebec, his parents broke up when he was young and he spent much of his childhood in foster care.[1] Struggling in school, he dropped out and spent his late teens and early 20s as a smalltime drug dealer, before resolving to change his life after getting arrested and spending some time in jail in the late 1980s.[1]
He joined a Canadian International Development Agency relief program to Mexico,[3] and participated in 60 aid trips to Mexico and Haiti over the next five years. Daniel has 3 children and is married to Quebec author Melanie Fortin.[1]
In 1994, he launched a breakfast program at an elementary school in Longueuil, Quebec, which expanded into the Club des petits dejeuners du Québec.[4] The organization further expanded into the rest of Canada in 2005 as the Breakfast Club of Canada.[1]
In 2006, he created the Millennium Promise Summit, an annual conference of global leaders and activists on strategies to eliminate child poverty.[5]
In 2004, Germain was awarded the Meritorious Service Medal.[6] In 2007, he was made a Knight of the National Order of Quebec.[7]
In 2009, he was made a member of the Order of Canada[8] and in 2012 he was awarded the Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal.[9]
In 2011, Correlieu Secondary School in Quesnel, British Columbia, upon learning that Germain had never completed his high school education, granted him an honorary high school diploma.[10]