Skip to content

At The Jewish Soup Kitchen

March 7, 2024
by the gentle author

Click here to book your spring walk through Spitalfields

Click here to book your walk through the City of London

.

Originally established in 1854 in Leman St, the Jewish Soup Kitchen opened in Brune St in 1902 and, even though it closed in 1992, the building in Spitalfields still proclaims its purpose to the world in bold ceramic lettering across the fascia. These days few remember when it was supplying groceries to fifteen hundred people weekly, which makes Photographer Stuart Freedman’s pictures especially interesting as a glimpse of one of the last vestiges of the Jewish East End.

“After I finished studying Politics at university, I decided I wanted to be a photographer but I didn’t know how to do it,” Stuart recalled, contemplating these pictures taken in 1990 at the very beginning of his career. “Although I was brought up in Dalston, my father had grown up in Stepney in the thirties and, invariably, when we used to go walking together we always ended up in Petticoat Lane, which seemed to have a talismanic quality for him. So I think I was following in his footsteps.”

“I used to wander with my camera and, one day, I was just walking around taking pictures, when I moseyed in to the Soup Kitchen and said ‘Can I take photographs?’ and they said, ‘Yes.’ “I didn’t realise what I was doing because now they seem to be the only pictures of this place in existence. You could smell that area then – the smell of damp in old men’s coats and the poverty.”

For the past twenty-five years Stuart Freedman has worked internationally as a photojournalist, yet he was surprised to come upon new soup kitchens recently while on assignment in the north of England. “The poverty is back,” he revealed to me in regret,“which makes these pictures relevant all over again.”

Groceries awaiting collection

A volunteer offers a second hand coat to an old lady

An old woman collects her grocery allowance

A volunteer distributes donated groceries

View from behind the hatch

A couple await their food parcel

An ex-boxer arrives to collect his weekly rations

An old boxer’s portrait, taken while waiting to collect his groceries

An elderly man leaves the soup kitchen with his supplies

Photographs copyright © Stuart Freedman

You can read more about the Soup Kitchen here

Harry Landis, Actor

Linda Carney, Machinist

You may also like to take a look at

Stuart Freedman’s Pie & Mash & Eels

2 Responses leave one →
  1. March 7, 2024

    Poverty, yes, but also dignity and community captured in these photographs. It is fortuitous that Stuart captured them but depressingly, they could have been taken last week in any food bank across the land.
    However, it is not in my nature to be depressive and, like Wilkins Micawber, I always believe that: “Something will turn up”. Thank you Stuart and the GA for highlighting this historic community utility and the good work that they did.

  2. Andy permalink
    March 7, 2024

    The tears cried from the inside as I recall the times when we had to go and get help by asking strangers, neighbours , and organisations.
    There is no dignity in doing that and certainly some lead you on the merry go round , some kind , some haughty and degrade you .
    As indeed noted in the play “Inspector Calls”.

Leave a Reply

Note: Comments may be edited. Your email address will never be published.

Subscribe to this comment feed via RSS