Soup & Bread: Building Community One Pot at a Time
Saturday, March 2, 2013 @ 10:00am
Event Info
Admission
Venue
900 N. North Branch Street
Chicago,
IL
60622
Presenter
Culinary Historians of Chicago
847-432-8255
This event will be recorded for WBEZ’s Chicago Amplified.
Martha Bayne explores the social role of soup and its history as a tool for both building community and fostering social justice. She examines the classic model of a soup kitchen, national initiatives like Empty Bowls fundraisers and Sunday Soup dinners, as well as casual soup swaps and community soup cookoffs. Soup, she explains, means different things to different groups: For the activists of Food Not Bombs, the act of serving soup can be a political statement; to others it can be art practice, social service, or ministry. But though the context may change, the essential connection remains the same: In extending hospitality over the soup pot, a connection is formed and community ties are strengthened.









