Food Not Bombs - Feeding the Unhoused in the TriCities

Image Credit
None
Translate video
To translate this video to French or another language:
  1. Start playing the video
  2. Click CC at bottom right
  3. Click the gear icon to its right
  4. Click Subtitles/CC
  5. Click Auto-translate
  6. Select language you want

Food Not Bombs - Feeding the Unhoused in the TriCities

A tent encampment exists at 3020 Gordon Avenue in Coquitlam, adjacent to a shelter facility at 3030 Gordon. Recently, a Food Not Bombs group, led by local activist Ben Perry, began providing meals to the unhoused population at the encampment. Food Not Bombs is an international movement that rescues surplus food and shares vegan and vegetarian meals with the hungry while advocating for peaceful social change.

Ben founded the local Food Not Bombs chapter after connecting with a representative from the Vancouver group at a climate action event and collaborating with the ‘TriCities for Palestine’ organization, which also feeds people while promoting social justice. At the same time, Ben observed polarized social media discussions about homelessness. “People are saying we need to take care of the homeless, versus we need to move them along and not have them here,” he noted.

Ben has spoken with residents at 3020 Gordon Avenue, some of whom attended the same high school he did. He shared that many unhoused locals cannot access the overcrowded shelter at 3030 Gordon. Residents have opened up to him about their struggles with trauma, abuse, family issues, illiteracy, and joblessness. He believes facilities like 3030 Gordon address only a portion of the larger problem.

While Trinity United Church’s cold weather shelter program starts on December 1st, Ben says many people will still be left out in the cold. “When we’re feeding people, some of them don’t even want to leave their tents to walk 20 yards to get a sandwich because they don’t want to leave their possessions unattended,” he explained.

Food Not Bombs sources food that would otherwise go to waste from retail and wholesale suppliers. Their meals focus on plant-based options like hummus and roasted vegetable wraps and homemade soups. “We get a lot of gratitude and appreciation. People want healthy food,” Ben shared.

With more volunteers and leadership, Ben hopes the group can expand its efforts and provide meals weekly.

Comments

We encourage comments which further the dialogue about the stories we post. Comments will be moderated and posted if they follow these guidelines:

  • be respectful
  • substantiate your opinion
  • do not violate Canadian laws including but not limited to libel and slander, copyright
  • do not post hateful and abusive commentary or any comment which demeans or disrespects others.

The Community Media Portal reserves the right to reject any comments which do not adhere to these minimum standards.

Add new comment

CAPTCHA
Enter the characters shown in the image.
Video Upload Date: December 17, 2024

The Tri-Cities Community Television Society is a Not-For-Profit organization in Coquitlam, Port Coquitlam and Port Moody, BC, offering training in media production skills and provides an opportunity for community voices to be heard.

BC
-
Coquitlam, Port Coquitlam and Port Moody

Recent Media

00:10:50

Keeping the Community in Community TV

After the closure of Community TV offices volunteers form the Van East office struggle to keep community TV alive.
BC
- Coquitlam, Port Coquitlam and Port Moody