fbpx
Wikipedia

Soup kitchen

A soup kitchen, food kitchen, or meal center, is a place where food is offered to the hungry usually for free or sometimes at a below-market price (such as via coin donations upon visiting). Frequently located in lower-income neighborhoods, soup kitchens are often staffed by volunteer organizations, such as church or community groups. Soup kitchens sometimes obtain food from a food bank for free or at a low price, because they are considered a charity, which makes it easier for them to feed the many people who require their services.

A soup kitchen in Montreal, Quebec, Canada in 1931

Many historical and modern soup kitchens serve only soup, or just soup with bread. But other establishments which refer to themselves as a "soup kitchen" also serve a wider range of food, so social scientists sometimes discuss them together with similar hunger relief agencies that provide more varied hot meals, like food kitchens and meal centers.

While societies have been using various methods to share food with the hungry for millennia, the first soup kitchens in the modern sense may have emerged in the late 18th century. By the late 19th century, they were located in several American and European cities. In the United States and elsewhere, they became more prominent in the 20th century, especially during the Great Depression. With the much improved economic conditions that immediately followed World War II, soup kitchens became less widely used, at least in the advanced economies. In the United States, there was a resurgence in the use of soup kitchens following the cutbacks in welfare that were implemented in the early 1980s.

In the 21st century, the use of soup kitchens expanded in both the United States and Europe, following lasting global increases in the price of food which began in late 2006. Demand for their services grew as the Great Recession began to worsen economic conditions for those with lower incomes. In much of the UK and Europe, demand further increased after the introduction of austerity-based economic policies from 2010. For instance, Emma Middleton, a poverty caseworker in the UK stated in 2017 that the situation and need for emergency food aid in the UK had changed significantly over the last 15 years, as the cost of living increased and the existing safety nets disappeared, adding "In the first few years [of this work], food poverty was not an issue. The soup kitchens and churches could deal with it, and it was mainly homelessness. You never saw families like that. What we see now is a constant stream of food poverty."[1]

History

The earliest occurrences of soup kitchens are difficult to identify. Throughout history, societies have invariably recognized a moral obligation to feed the hungry. The philosopher Simone Weil wrote that feeding the hungry when one has resources to do so is the most obvious obligation of all. She also said that as far back as Ancient Egypt, it was believed that people needed to show they had helped the hungry in order to justify themselves in the afterlife.[2] Soup has long been one of the most economical and simple ways to supply nutritious food to large numbers of people.[3][4]

The Christian church had been providing food to the hungry since St Paul's day, and since at least the early middle ages such nourishment was sometimes provided in the form of soup.[5] From the 14th to the 19th centuries, Islamic soup kitchens, called Imarets, were built throughout the Ottoman Empire. Soup and bread were often the main food served, though sometimes also rice, meat, fruit and sweet puddings.[6]

Social historian Karl Polanyi wrote that before markets became the world's dominant form of economic organisation in the 19th century, most human societies would generally either starve all together or not at all; because, communities would naturally share their food. As markets began to replace the older forms of resource allocation such as redistribution, reciprocity, and autarky, society's overall level of food security would typically rise. But food insecurity could become worse for the poorest section of society, and the need arose for more formal methods for providing them with food.[7]

Emergence of the modern soup kitchen

 
Count Rumford, painted by Thomas Gainsborough, 1783

The earliest modern soup kitchens were established by the inventor Sir Benjamin Thompson, who was employed as an aide-de-camp to the Elector of Bavaria in the 1790s. Thompson was an American loyalist refugee from New England and an inventor who was ennobled by Bavaria as Count Rumford. The Count was a prominent advocate of hunger relief, writing pamphlets that were widely read across Europe.[5][8][9]

Count Rumford's message was especially well received in Great Britain, where he had previously held a senior government position for several years and was known as "the Colonel". An urgent need had recently arisen in Britain for hunger relief, due to her leading role in driving the Industrial Revolution. While technological development and economic reforms were rapidly increasingly overall prosperity, conditions for the poorest were often made worse, as traditional ways of life were disrupted. In the closing years of the 18th century, soup kitchens run on the principles pioneered by Rumford were to be found throughout England, Wales, and Scotland, with about 60,000 people being fed by them daily in London alone.[5][8]

While soup kitchens were initially well regarded, they attracted criticism from some, for encouraging dependency, and sometimes on a local level for attracting vagrants to an area. In Britain, they were made illegal, along with other forms of aid apart from workhouses, by the Poor Law Amendment Act 1834.[a]

During the Irish famine of the 19th century, in which one million people may have died, the British government passed the Temporary Relief Act (also known as the Soup Kitchen Act) in February 1847. The Act amended the restrictions on the provision of aid outside the workhouses for the duration of the famine and expressly allowed the establishment of soup kitchens in Ireland to relieve pressure from the overstretched Poor Law system, which was proving to be totally inadequate in coping with the disaster.[10]

Prohibition against soup kitchens was soon relaxed on mainland Britain too, though they never again became as prevalent as they had been in the early 19th century, partly as from the 1850s onwards, economic conditions generally began to improve even for the poorest. For the first few decades after the return of soup kitchens to mainland Britain, they were at first heavily regulated, run by groups like the Charity Organization Society. Even in the early 20th century, campaigning journalists like Bart Kennedy would criticize them for their long queues, and for the degrading questions staff would ask the hungry before giving out any soup.[5]

Spread to the United States

 
Unemployed men outside a soup kitchen opened by Al Capone in Depression-era Chicago, Illinois, the US, 1931

The concept of soup kitchens spread to the United States from Ireland after the Great famine and the concomitant wave of Irish emigration to the New World.[10] The earliest ones were established in the 1870s. A sharp rise in the number of hungry people resulting from an industrial recession coincided with the success of the AICP, and the American branch of the Charity Organization Society, in getting various forms of "outdoor relief"[b] banned. This resulted in civil society establishing soup kitchens, to help feed those of the poor who did not wish to subject themselves to the regimented organisation of the Almshouses favored by the charitable societies.[11]

 
Chilean women preparing soup kitchen meals in 1932

It is believed the term “breadline” entered the popular lexicon in the 1880s. It was during those years that a noteworthy bakery in New York City’s Greenwich Village, “Fleischmann Model Viennese Bakery,” instituted a policy of distributing unsold baked goods to the poor at the end of their business day.[12] By the late 19th century soup kitchens were to be found in several US cities.[8][13] The concept of soup kitchens hit the mainstream of United States consciousness during the Great Depression. One soup kitchen in Chicago was even sponsored by American mobster Al Capone in an effort to clean up his image.[14]

With the improved economic conditions that followed the Second World War, there was less need for soup kitchens in advanced economies.[15] However, with the scaling back of welfare provision in the 1980s under Ronald Reagan's administration, there was a rapid rise in activity from grass roots hunger relief agencies such as soup kitchens. According to a comprehensive government survey completed in 2002, over 90% of food banks, about 80% of emergency kitchens, and all known food rescue organisations, were established in the US after 1981.[15][16] Presently, Catholic Charities USA of Colorado Springs, Colorado, founded by The Sisters of Loretto, provides food to upwards of 600-700 persons or more per day, and has been doing so since 1985.[17]

In the 21st century

Use of soup kitchens has grown rapidly across the world, following the lasting global inflation in the cost of food that began in late 2006. The financial crisis of 2007–2008 further increased the demand for soup kitchens, as did the introduction of austerity policies that have become common in Europe since 2010. Modern soup kitchens are generally well regarded, though like their historical counterparts they are sometimes disliked by local residents for lowering the tone of a neighborhood.[16][18][19][20]

Sikh temple soup kitchens

Every Sikh Gurdwara has a religiously sanctioned moral and humanitarian obligation to serve and provide hospitality, provisions, nourishments and meals to any person, regardless of race, creed, gender, caste, religious profession, identification, or affiliation. At the Langar (the Gurdwara's community run free kitchen), food is served to all visitors regardless of faith, religion, or background. Only lacto-vegetarian food is served and people eat together as equals. The institution of the Sikh langar was started by the first Sikh Guru, Guru Nanak. It was designed to uphold the principle of equality between all people regardless of religion, caste, colour, creed, age, gender, or social status. In addition to the ideals of equality, the tradition of langar expresses the ethics of sharing, community, inclusiveness, and oneness of humankind.

 
The Harmandir Sahib at night

The world's largest and longest running soup kitchen is run at the Sikhs' holiest shrine, Golden Temple in Punjab, India, which in 2013 was serving free food for up to 300,000 people every day.[21] It was started in circa 1481 A.D by Guru Nanak and has continued ever since, except for two brief breaks.

Comparison with front line food banks and pantries

 
Members of the United States Navy serve the homeless at Dorothy's Soup Kitchen, Salinas, California in 2009

In some countries such as the United Kingdom, increased demand from hungry people has largely been met by food banks, operating on the "front line" model, where they give food out directly to the hungry. In the USA, such establishments are called "food pantries"; Americans generally reserve the term "food bank" for entities which perform a warehouse-like function, distributing food to front line agencies, but not directly to the hungry themselves. Instead of providing hot meals, front line food banks and pantries hand out packages of groceries so that recipients can cook themselves several meals at home. This is often more convenient for the end user. They can receive food for up to a dozen or so meals at once, whereas with a soup kitchen, they typically only receive a single meal with each visit.[c]

Food banks typically have procedures needed to prevent unscrupulous people taking advantage of them, unlike soup kitchens which will usually give a meal to whoever turns up with no questions asked. The soup kitchen's greater accessibility can make it more suitable for assisting people with long-term dependence on food aid. Soup kitchens can also provide warmth, companionship, and the shared communal experience of dining with others, which can be especially valued by people such as disabled, pensioners, widowers, homeless and ex-homeless. In some countries such as Greece, soup kitchens have become the most widely used form of food aid, with The Guardian reporting in 2012, that an estimated 400,000 Greeks visit a soup kitchen each day.[10][16][22][23][24]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Note that criticism of soup kitchens was only a minor driver of the 1834 law - the move was driven more by free market ideology and discontent with other forms of "outdoor" aid like the much more widely disliked Speemhanland system, see Hunger in the United Kingdom.
  2. ^ In the main, this meant ending the practice where municipal officials would give out small sums of cash to the poor. Unlike in Britain a few decades earlier, the US did not pass nationwide laws restricting private individuals from giving food to the hungry.
  3. ^ Although some soup kitchens also like to give visitors a second "carry out" meal.

References

  1. ^ Nothing Left in the Cupboards "Austerity, Welfare Cuts, and the Right to Food in the UK", Human Rights Watch, 2017. [1]
  2. ^ Simone Weil (2002) [1942]. The Need for Roots. Routledge. p. 6. ISBN 0-415-27102-9.
  3. ^ Victoria R. Rumble (2009). "Chpt 29, Soup Kitchens". Soup Through the Ages. McFarland. ISBN 9780786439614.
  4. ^ Pat Thane (30 April 2011). "There Has Always Been a 'Big Society'". historyworkshop.org.u. Retrieved 9 February 2013.
  5. ^ a b c d Victoria R. Rumble (2009). "Chpt 29, Soup Kitchens". Soup Through the Ages. McFarland. ISBN 9780786439614.
  6. ^ Amy Singer (historian) (2005). "Serving Up Charity: The Ottoman Public Kitchen". Journal of Interdisciplinary History. 35 (3): 481–500. doi:10.1162/0022195052564252. S2CID 145715799.
  7. ^ Karl Polanyi (2002) [1942]. "chpt. 1-5". The Great Transformation. Beacon Press. ISBN 978-0-8070-5643-1.
  8. ^ a b c Lisa Bramen (29 December 2010). "Count Rumford and the History of the Soup Kitchen". Smithsonian. Retrieved 9 February 2013.
  9. ^ "The Shadow Behind Our Founding Fathers: A traitor, a scientist, a womanizer and an enigma" review of Nicholas Delbanco's The Count of Concord Book World p. 9, June 22, 2008, The Washington Post.
  10. ^ a b c Gwendolyn Mink and Alice O'Connor (2004). Poverty in the United States. ABC-CLIO. pp. 321–323. ISBN 1-57607-597-4.
  11. ^ Todd DePastino (2005). Citizen Hobo: How a Century of Homelessness Shaped America. University of Chicago Press. p. 22. ISBN 0226143791.
  12. ^ Wetsteon, Ross (2003). Republic of Dreams: Greenwich Village, the American Bohemia, 1910–1960. Simon & Schuster. preface. ISBN 0-684-86996-9.
  13. ^ James Vernon (2007). "Chpts. 1-3". Hunger: A Modern History. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0674026780.
  14. ^ "Soup Kitchens" Social Security Online History Page.
  15. ^ a b Janet Poppendieck (1999). "Introduction, Chpt 1". Sweet Charity?: Emergency Food and the End of Entitlement. Penguin. ISBN 0140245561.
  16. ^ a b c Andrew Walter (2012). William A Dando (ed.). Food and Famine in the 21st Century. ABC-CLIO. pp. 171–181. ISBN 978-1-59884-730-7.
  17. ^ "Marian House Soup Kitchen". ccharitiescc.org. Retrieved 3 April 2018.
  18. ^ Claire Bessette (14 February 2013). "Norwich soup kitchen hearing postponed". TheDay.com.
  19. ^ (PDF). Warwick University. 6 July 2012. Archived from the original (PDF) on 12 January 2013. Retrieved 28 August 2012.
  20. ^ Nick Squires (5 February 2013). "Knights of Malta to open soup kitchens in Britain". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 3 March 2013.
  21. ^ "SCOFF THAT - Free Food Daily For 300,000 at Worlds largest Soup Kitchen". croationtimes.com. 12 April 2013. Retrieved 17 September 2013.
  22. ^ John Henley (14 March 2012). "Greece on the breadline: how leftovers became a meal". The Guardian. Retrieved 9 February 2013.
  23. ^ Mat Clinch (8 February 2013). "Food bank visits surge, not just for the poor". GlobalPost. Retrieved 9 February 2013.
  24. ^ Clare Lissaman (25 January 2013). "'Community spirit' fuels Wolverhampton soup kitchen". BBC. Retrieved 15 February 2013.

Further reading

External links

  •   Media related to Soup kitchens at Wikimedia Commons

soup, kitchen, former, restaurant, soup, kitchen, international, soup, kitchen, food, kitchen, meal, center, place, where, food, offered, hungry, usually, free, sometimes, below, market, price, such, coin, donations, upon, visiting, frequently, located, lower,. For the former restaurant see Soup Kitchen International A soup kitchen food kitchen or meal center is a place where food is offered to the hungry usually for free or sometimes at a below market price such as via coin donations upon visiting Frequently located in lower income neighborhoods soup kitchens are often staffed by volunteer organizations such as church or community groups Soup kitchens sometimes obtain food from a food bank for free or at a low price because they are considered a charity which makes it easier for them to feed the many people who require their services A soup kitchen in Montreal Quebec Canada in 1931 Many historical and modern soup kitchens serve only soup or just soup with bread But other establishments which refer to themselves as a soup kitchen also serve a wider range of food so social scientists sometimes discuss them together with similar hunger relief agencies that provide more varied hot meals like food kitchens and meal centers While societies have been using various methods to share food with the hungry for millennia the first soup kitchens in the modern sense may have emerged in the late 18th century By the late 19th century they were located in several American and European cities In the United States and elsewhere they became more prominent in the 20th century especially during the Great Depression With the much improved economic conditions that immediately followed World War II soup kitchens became less widely used at least in the advanced economies In the United States there was a resurgence in the use of soup kitchens following the cutbacks in welfare that were implemented in the early 1980s In the 21st century the use of soup kitchens expanded in both the United States and Europe following lasting global increases in the price of food which began in late 2006 Demand for their services grew as the Great Recession began to worsen economic conditions for those with lower incomes In much of the UK and Europe demand further increased after the introduction of austerity based economic policies from 2010 For instance Emma Middleton a poverty caseworker in the UK stated in 2017 that the situation and need for emergency food aid in the UK had changed significantly over the last 15 years as the cost of living increased and the existing safety nets disappeared adding In the first few years of this work food poverty was not an issue The soup kitchens and churches could deal with it and it was mainly homelessness You never saw families like that What we see now is a constant stream of food poverty 1 Contents 1 History 1 1 Emergence of the modern soup kitchen 1 2 Spread to the United States 2 In the 21st century 2 1 Sikh temple soup kitchens 2 2 Comparison with front line food banks and pantries 3 See also 4 Notes 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksHistory EditThe earliest occurrences of soup kitchens are difficult to identify Throughout history societies have invariably recognized a moral obligation to feed the hungry The philosopher Simone Weil wrote that feeding the hungry when one has resources to do so is the most obvious obligation of all She also said that as far back as Ancient Egypt it was believed that people needed to show they had helped the hungry in order to justify themselves in the afterlife 2 Soup has long been one of the most economical and simple ways to supply nutritious food to large numbers of people 3 4 The Christian church had been providing food to the hungry since St Paul s day and since at least the early middle ages such nourishment was sometimes provided in the form of soup 5 From the 14th to the 19th centuries Islamic soup kitchens called Imarets were built throughout the Ottoman Empire Soup and bread were often the main food served though sometimes also rice meat fruit and sweet puddings 6 Social historian Karl Polanyi wrote that before markets became the world s dominant form of economic organisation in the 19th century most human societies would generally either starve all together or not at all because communities would naturally share their food As markets began to replace the older forms of resource allocation such as redistribution reciprocity and autarky society s overall level of food security would typically rise But food insecurity could become worse for the poorest section of society and the need arose for more formal methods for providing them with food 7 Emergence of the modern soup kitchen Edit Count Rumford painted by Thomas Gainsborough 1783The earliest modern soup kitchens were established by the inventor Sir Benjamin Thompson who was employed as an aide de camp to the Elector of Bavaria in the 1790s Thompson was an American loyalist refugee from New England and an inventor who was ennobled by Bavaria as Count Rumford The Count was a prominent advocate of hunger relief writing pamphlets that were widely read across Europe 5 8 9 Count Rumford s message was especially well received in Great Britain where he had previously held a senior government position for several years and was known as the Colonel An urgent need had recently arisen in Britain for hunger relief due to her leading role in driving the Industrial Revolution While technological development and economic reforms were rapidly increasingly overall prosperity conditions for the poorest were often made worse as traditional ways of life were disrupted In the closing years of the 18th century soup kitchens run on the principles pioneered by Rumford were to be found throughout England Wales and Scotland with about 60 000 people being fed by them daily in London alone 5 8 While soup kitchens were initially well regarded they attracted criticism from some for encouraging dependency and sometimes on a local level for attracting vagrants to an area In Britain they were made illegal along with other forms of aid apart from workhouses by the Poor Law Amendment Act 1834 a During the Irish famine of the 19th century in which one million people may have died the British government passed the Temporary Relief Act also known as the Soup Kitchen Act in February 1847 The Act amended the restrictions on the provision of aid outside the workhouses for the duration of the famine and expressly allowed the establishment of soup kitchens in Ireland to relieve pressure from the overstretched Poor Law system which was proving to be totally inadequate in coping with the disaster 10 Prohibition against soup kitchens was soon relaxed on mainland Britain too though they never again became as prevalent as they had been in the early 19th century partly as from the 1850s onwards economic conditions generally began to improve even for the poorest For the first few decades after the return of soup kitchens to mainland Britain they were at first heavily regulated run by groups like the Charity Organization Society Even in the early 20th century campaigning journalists like Bart Kennedy would criticize them for their long queues and for the degrading questions staff would ask the hungry before giving out any soup 5 Spread to the United States Edit Unemployed men outside a soup kitchen opened by Al Capone in Depression era Chicago Illinois the US 1931 The concept of soup kitchens spread to the United States from Ireland after the Great famine and the concomitant wave of Irish emigration to the New World 10 The earliest ones were established in the 1870s A sharp rise in the number of hungry people resulting from an industrial recession coincided with the success of the AICP and the American branch of the Charity Organization Society in getting various forms of outdoor relief b banned This resulted in civil society establishing soup kitchens to help feed those of the poor who did not wish to subject themselves to the regimented organisation of the Almshouses favored by the charitable societies 11 Chilean women preparing soup kitchen meals in 1932 It is believed the term breadline entered the popular lexicon in the 1880s It was during those years that a noteworthy bakery in New York City s Greenwich Village Fleischmann Model Viennese Bakery instituted a policy of distributing unsold baked goods to the poor at the end of their business day 12 By the late 19th century soup kitchens were to be found in several US cities 8 13 The concept of soup kitchens hit the mainstream of United States consciousness during the Great Depression One soup kitchen in Chicago was even sponsored by American mobster Al Capone in an effort to clean up his image 14 With the improved economic conditions that followed the Second World War there was less need for soup kitchens in advanced economies 15 However with the scaling back of welfare provision in the 1980s under Ronald Reagan s administration there was a rapid rise in activity from grass roots hunger relief agencies such as soup kitchens According to a comprehensive government survey completed in 2002 over 90 of food banks about 80 of emergency kitchens and all known food rescue organisations were established in the US after 1981 15 16 Presently Catholic Charities USA of Colorado Springs Colorado founded by The Sisters of Loretto provides food to upwards of 600 700 persons or more per day and has been doing so since 1985 17 In the 21st century EditUse of soup kitchens has grown rapidly across the world following the lasting global inflation in the cost of food that began in late 2006 The financial crisis of 2007 2008 further increased the demand for soup kitchens as did the introduction of austerity policies that have become common in Europe since 2010 Modern soup kitchens are generally well regarded though like their historical counterparts they are sometimes disliked by local residents for lowering the tone of a neighborhood 16 18 19 20 Sikh temple soup kitchens Edit Every Sikh Gurdwara has a religiously sanctioned moral and humanitarian obligation to serve and provide hospitality provisions nourishments and meals to any person regardless of race creed gender caste religious profession identification or affiliation At the Langar the Gurdwara s community run free kitchen food is served to all visitors regardless of faith religion or background Only lacto vegetarian food is served and people eat together as equals The institution of the Sikh langar was started by the first Sikh Guru Guru Nanak It was designed to uphold the principle of equality between all people regardless of religion caste colour creed age gender or social status In addition to the ideals of equality the tradition of langar expresses the ethics of sharing community inclusiveness and oneness of humankind The Harmandir Sahib at night The world s largest and longest running soup kitchen is run at the Sikhs holiest shrine Golden Temple in Punjab India which in 2013 was serving free food for up to 300 000 people every day 21 It was started in circa 1481 A D by Guru Nanak and has continued ever since except for two brief breaks Comparison with front line food banks and pantries Edit Members of the United States Navy serve the homeless at Dorothy s Soup Kitchen Salinas California in 2009 In some countries such as the United Kingdom increased demand from hungry people has largely been met by food banks operating on the front line model where they give food out directly to the hungry In the USA such establishments are called food pantries Americans generally reserve the term food bank for entities which perform a warehouse like function distributing food to front line agencies but not directly to the hungry themselves Instead of providing hot meals front line food banks and pantries hand out packages of groceries so that recipients can cook themselves several meals at home This is often more convenient for the end user They can receive food for up to a dozen or so meals at once whereas with a soup kitchen they typically only receive a single meal with each visit c Food banks typically have procedures needed to prevent unscrupulous people taking advantage of them unlike soup kitchens which will usually give a meal to whoever turns up with no questions asked The soup kitchen s greater accessibility can make it more suitable for assisting people with long term dependence on food aid Soup kitchens can also provide warmth companionship and the shared communal experience of dining with others which can be especially valued by people such as disabled pensioners widowers homeless and ex homeless In some countries such as Greece soup kitchens have become the most widely used form of food aid with The Guardian reporting in 2012 that an estimated 400 000 Greeks visit a soup kitchen each day 10 16 22 23 24 See also Edit Food portalHunger Homelessness Income inequality Basic income Social programs Human rights Mole people Tent city National Welfare Rights Organization Gini coefficient Curry Without Worry Thrift store Homeless ministry Freeganism Food Not Bombs Food bank Rumford s Soup Refugee Refugee camp Refugee children Refugee crisis Refugee women Langar a centuries old tradition where vegetarian meals are supplied free of charge to the hungry at Sikh temples worldwide Langar Sufism an Islamic tradition where free food is provided Masbia a humanitarian organization in Brooklyn Pathways out of Poverty POP People s commune The Susso welfare in Australia originating in the Great Depression Volxkuche a type of food kitchen with a secular alternative culture character Notes Edit Note that criticism of soup kitchens was only a minor driver of the 1834 law the move was driven more by free market ideology and discontent with other forms of outdoor aid like the much more widely disliked Speemhanland system see Hunger in the United Kingdom In the main this meant ending the practice where municipal officials would give out small sums of cash to the poor Unlike in Britain a few decades earlier the US did not pass nationwide laws restricting private individuals from giving food to the hungry Although some soup kitchens also like to give visitors a second carry out meal References Edit Nothing Left in the Cupboards Austerity Welfare Cuts and the Right to Food in the UK Human Rights Watch 2017 1 Simone Weil 2002 1942 The Need for Roots Routledge p 6 ISBN 0 415 27102 9 Victoria R Rumble 2009 Chpt 29 Soup Kitchens Soup Through the Ages McFarland ISBN 9780786439614 Pat Thane 30 April 2011 There Has Always Been a Big Society historyworkshop org u Retrieved 9 February 2013 a b c d Victoria R Rumble 2009 Chpt 29 Soup Kitchens Soup Through the Ages McFarland ISBN 9780786439614 Amy Singer historian 2005 Serving Up Charity The Ottoman Public Kitchen Journal of Interdisciplinary History 35 3 481 500 doi 10 1162 0022195052564252 S2CID 145715799 Karl Polanyi 2002 1942 chpt 1 5 The Great Transformation Beacon Press ISBN 978 0 8070 5643 1 a b c Lisa Bramen 29 December 2010 Count Rumford and the History of the Soup Kitchen Smithsonian Retrieved 9 February 2013 The Shadow Behind Our Founding Fathers A traitor a scientist a womanizer and an enigma review of Nicholas Delbanco s The Count of Concord Book World p 9 June 22 2008 The Washington Post a b c Gwendolyn Mink and Alice O Connor 2004 Poverty in the United States ABC CLIO pp 321 323 ISBN 1 57607 597 4 Todd DePastino 2005 Citizen Hobo How a Century of Homelessness Shaped America University of Chicago Press p 22 ISBN 0226143791 Wetsteon Ross 2003 Republic of Dreams Greenwich Village the American Bohemia 1910 1960 Simon amp Schuster preface ISBN 0 684 86996 9 James Vernon 2007 Chpts 1 3 Hunger A Modern History Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0674026780 Soup Kitchens Social Security Online History Page a b Janet Poppendieck 1999 Introduction Chpt 1 Sweet Charity Emergency Food and the End of Entitlement Penguin ISBN 0140245561 a b c Andrew Walter 2012 William A Dando ed Food and Famine in the 21st Century ABC CLIO pp 171 181 ISBN 978 1 59884 730 7 Marian House Soup Kitchen ccharitiescc org Retrieved 3 April 2018 Claire Bessette 14 February 2013 Norwich soup kitchen hearing postponed TheDay com HOUSEHOLD FOOD SECURITY IN THE GLOBAL NORTH CHALLENGES AND RESPONSIBILITIES REPORT OF WARWICK CONFERENCE PDF Warwick University 6 July 2012 Archived from the original PDF on 12 January 2013 Retrieved 28 August 2012 Nick Squires 5 February 2013 Knights of Malta to open soup kitchens in Britain The Daily Telegraph Retrieved 3 March 2013 SCOFF THAT Free Food Daily For 300 000 at Worlds largest Soup Kitchen croationtimes com 12 April 2013 Retrieved 17 September 2013 John Henley 14 March 2012 Greece on the breadline how leftovers became a meal The Guardian Retrieved 9 February 2013 Mat Clinch 8 February 2013 Food bank visits surge not just for the poor GlobalPost Retrieved 9 February 2013 Clare Lissaman 25 January 2013 Community spirit fuels Wolverhampton soup kitchen BBC Retrieved 15 February 2013 Further reading EditGlasser Irene 2004 Soup kitchens In David Levinson ed Encyclopedia of Homelessness SAGE Publications pp 525 7 ISBN 0 7619 2751 4 External links Edit Media related to Soup kitchens at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Soup kitchen amp oldid 1146137105, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.