NEWSHospitality

Community fridge to feed the poor

Millions of people in India die of chronic hunger and hunger-related diseases every year. In an attempt to contribute to the society and feed the needy,  Dr Issa Fathima Jasmine, an orthodontist has installed a ‘community refrigerator’ near Chennai’s Elliot’s Beach which is changing the way the hungry are fed. Those who are hungry can just take away whatever is available from the fridge without asking anyone.

People can leave surplus food in the fridge — either home-made or bought from a restaurant. Anyone who is hungry is free to open the fridge and take something they want. No questions asked. No identity card required.

Tired and hungry, 72-year-old rag picker J Kumar energized himself with bananas and fruit juice he collected from this cool machine. “For an abandoned person like me this is a boon. If I don’t get food for lunch, I’d normally lie down hungry,” he said.

On Saturday, around lunch time, a group of children stacked the fridge with sandwiches, juice and other goodies. An employee from a local restaurant also left a box full of biryani. The fridge contained, among other foods, bananas, oranges and pomegranates.

“There are hungry children collecting  food from garbage. We should think a hundred times before we waste even a single grain. There are many who don’t get even that,” said Kamakshi, a 12-year-old student who left a food packet in the fridge.

Priyanka Seth, another student, said, “Think once about all those people who starve.” Other students said they keep replenishing the fridge regularly.

People can also donate books, clothes, toys and footwear. A shelf adjoining the refrigerator has them all.

Antony, a Class 9 student who has lost his parents, took home a pair of his dream denim trousers. Jaishree, daughter of an auto rickshaw driver, has picked up a coloring book. Her brothers got a pair of footwear and a Barbie doll, while her mother got a salwar.

“Though these are available in the market, we can’t afford them. I’m so happy,” the girl’s mother M Meenakshi said.

T Amudha, a software professional who brought surplus food, said it would be  good idea to have a community fridge at every residential block. “We can feed the poor with our surplus. They don’t have to depend on the government.”

The idea of community refrigerators were first tested in Mumbai, the trend traveled south to Kochi and it looks like it is here to stay.

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