So in September 2020, the community set up three outdoor shelters.
“They provide covering, which is the main thing, which enables us to run the kitchen. Outside is the handing out of the food in the bags. Some people stay and eat the food under the shelter or any place they feel comfortable to sit down if it’s not raining,” he noted.
The soup kitchen is based in a former parish hall built after the First World War for St. Margaret’s, Canning Town, in the Diocese of Brentwood.
The Franciscan Friars of the Renewal, established in 1987 in the Archdiocese of New York, moved to the area in the year 2000, drawn by the opportunity to serve London’s poor.
The soup kitchen played a role in McBride’s own vocation story.
“It was the first friary that I ever visited when I was discerning the friars,” he said. “I came down to visit them and they were running the soup kitchen. At that time, we were also assisting with a homeless shelter.”
According to a profile in the newspaper of New York archdiocese, McBride, who was born in Nottingham, England, entered the Franciscan Friars of the Renewal in 2004, professing his final vows in 2009.
He spent two years training for the priesthood at Allen Hall in London, followed by four years at St. Joseph’s Seminary in Dunwoodie, Yonkers.
He was ordained to the priesthood in 2015, concelebrating his first Mass at St. Adalbert’s Church in the Bronx. (He later celebrated a thanksgiving Mass at his childhood parish in Ilkeston, Derbyshire.)
The soup kitchen is in the London borough of Newham, where 52% of children are deemed to be living in poverty, compared to the London average of 38%.
McBride said that before the pandemic, there were signs that the area was becoming slightly more affluent, but the pandemic changed that. He noted that the local parish had opened a food bank to support people during the coronavirus crisis.
“They’ve been having several hundred people coming by,” he said. “I think up to something like 400 in a week, which points to the fact that people are in need.”
“I know people that have lost jobs or are buying things on the credit,” he said. “I don’t think we’ve seen the fullness of what the pandemic is going to bring. It’s been in the papers that the U.K. could have its worst recession for 300 years. I’m no economist, but you wonder: how do you pay the furlough and everything else? It feels to my mind that we’re kind of in the middle of the COVID economic storm.”
Friar Benet’s Kitchen is reliant on donations. Some of the food comes from a charity called City Harvest London, which collects goods from restaurants and delivers them to the soup kitchen. Other items are provided by generous locals. People can also support the kitchen via the friars’ website.
McBride advises Catholics to make an extra effort to seek out the poor during the pandemic.
“It’s the call of every Christian to do anything we can for the least of our brothers, anybody who’s struggling,” he said.
“When you see somebody, always try to offer them some food. Or, if you’re in a city, know where are the food places they can go to. Especially for the homeless, just stop and greet them.”
At Friar Benet’s Kitchen, the friars welcome people of all faiths, as well as non-believers.
“Overall, the desire is, wherever people are at, to bless and encourage them and lead them closer to the truth of that encounter, that relationship with Jesus,” McBride reflected.
“That’s the same for all of us, whether you’re running it or you’re a volunteer. And I think that’s the beauty of the work.”
“We know that what we’re doing, we’re doing for Christ. And that’s what gives a sense of fulfillment and joy and coming closer to Christ. Whichever way you’re serving or receiving, we know it’s coming from and leading us to Christ. It’s a beautiful thing.”
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