Here's how a Melbourne soup shop gives free soup to the homeless every day

 
Related

You have to watch the reaction when a puppy meets firefighter who saved her

Amazing histories
362 points

Squirrel knocks on family window every day: years later they realize what she s trying to show them

Amazing histories
492 points



Most recent

¿Cuándo empezamos a vivir? (Yo mismo)

El diario de Enrique
14 points

Todo sobre las bondades del té verde

NOTICIAS-ETF
10 points

¿Qué es el Pig Butchering y cómo evitar ser víctima de esta ciberestafa?

Ciberseguridad
14 points

Usos de Home Assistant que te facilitarán tu vida

MaríaGeek
14 points

Mujer maltratada, sola, olvidada ... pero los hilos de la maternidad hacen milagros

El diario de Enrique
8 points

¡Datos sin miedo al frío ni al calor! Kingston presenta SSD todoterreno para ambientes extremos

Prensa
14 points

Documento y momento

Juan Cantalatabla
10 points

Vive una experiencia gastronómica inolvidable en Grand Sirenis San Andrés

Comunicaciones
12 points

Smile.CX PRO revolucionará el mercado del Customer Experience en Colombia

Tecnologia
12 points

Son cuatro días

El diario de Enrique
12 points
SHARE
TWEET
This is the story of a little soup shop in Melbourne, Australia, that makes a lot of lives better everyday. But you've probably never heard of it sunnyskyz.com explain de info for us.

Here's how a Melbourne soup shop gives free soup to the homeless every day

The Soup Place is a Melbourne shop where customers can choose to buy a bowl of soup to feed the homeless at a reduced price. People pay $7.50 for a full-priced bowl, and can choose to pay an extra $3.50 to buy one for someone less fortunate.

From 'keep warm' and 'stay strong' to 'you are important'; they often leave a heart-warming message which is served with the soup.

The store's co-owner, George Paraskevopoulos, says the idea came after he saw a place in New York that gave customers the chance to buy homeless people a slice of pizza.


The shop has served more than 6,000 meals to the homeless. Today, its walls are almost completely covered with prepaid post-it notes.

Paraskevopoulos says they have enough tickets to feed their regular homeless customers for six months.

"We're really just a platform, the generosity comes from the public," he says


Some people have questioned how they will stop people taking advantage of the system. But Paraskevopoulos says they aren't going to ask people to prove that they are in need.

"We didn't want do any screening," he says. "It's a trust system."

"They get to eat like we do, when they're hungry, from 7 in the morning until 7 in the evening."


The Facebook page Humans in Melbourne asked a man digging into his soup how it felt to know that people care.

He replied, "You have no idea mate. It means the world."


¿What do you mean about this new? Please comment and share!


Fuente: www.sunnyskyz.com
SHARE
TWEET
To comment you must log in with your account or sign up!
Featured content