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Centuries-old Jerusalem soup kitchen serves up ‘food with dignity’

Down an almost-hidden passageway in Jerusalem’s labyrinthine Old City is Tikiya Khaski al-Sultan, a soup kitchen that dates to the height of the Ottoman Empire. It is a lifeline for modern-day Jerusalemites facing rising costs and needing “support without judgment.”

Six days a week, 52 weeks a year, head chef Samir Jaber and his staff arrive at 5 a.m. to begin preparations. On a Monday morning, chickens are boiling in giant vats, delivery boys are stacking crates of vegetables in the high-vaulted stone room, and Mr. Jaber is frantically checking inventory.

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Much has changed since Jerusalem’s Tikiya soup kitchen was built in 1552. Certainly its menu. But for the local community, its mission is timeless. Says the assistant chef who grew up nearby: “This kitchen is a part of our charitable identity.”

Centuries ago, the soup kitchen served individuals a cracked wheat porridge known as tikiya soup; today, it serves full meals to be taken home for 300 families, some 1,500 to 1,800 people. “We want people to eat just as we eat at home,” Mr. Jaber says.

At 11:30 a.m., as recipients enter the kitchen, the head chef and his staff move as fast as possible, scooping whole chickens, rice, and potatoes into containers of all shapes and sizes.

“We don’t feel like beggars. We feel like respected individuals whose lives are being given added support,” says Rana, a mother of three. “This kitchen is a pillar on which we can stand. … Plus, the food is quite good.”

Rana steps off Al Wad Street onto a winding narrow stairway, following an almost-hidden passage in the labyrinthine Old City that has led to generosity for nearly 500 years.

Carrying two bucket pails and a shopping bag packed with empty Tupperware, she passes Mameluke-era architecture as part of her daily route – a journey to feed her family.

“This is where we get food with dignity,” says the mother of three. “This is where the Holy City’s generosity is always kept warm.”

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Much has changed since Jerusalem’s Tikiya soup kitchen was built in 1552. Certainly its menu. But for the local community, its mission is timeless. Says the assistant chef who grew up nearby: “This kitchen is a part of our charitable identity.”

Tikiya Khaski al-Sultan, a soup kitchen that has been serving up meals since the height of the Ottoman Empire, is a lifeline for modern-day Jerusalemites who face rising costs and unemployment and are in need of “support without judgment.”

Yet the centuries-old charity also serves up some “good cooking.”

“This isn’t canned food or handouts,” Rana says. “This is a meal for all.”

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