The traditional meat and cabbage soup is ladled into big flasks
and driven by volunteers to places around the city where people
live rough or subsist on small state pensions.
It's then distributed free to enable people to eat and stock up
on supplies and it's particularly welcome in winter when city
temperatures can drop to -20 Celsius (-4 Fahrenheit).
"It's only because of this that I survive," said one man after
glugging down soup handed out from the back of a van on a frigid
evening last month.
Homelessness existed in the Soviet Union, even though the
government offered cradle-to-grave provisions, but since the
collapse of the system in 1991 and its replacement by a free
market the number of homeless people has risen.
Official statistics say there are almost 65,000 registered
homeless people in Russia but others say the true figure is far
higher.
The food supply van is run by the Nochlezhka charity and stops
at four locations in the city almost daily, serving up soup and
tea as well as contributions from partner restaurants like Holy
Ribs, where Redman works, and others like Italia.
Nochlezhka is a charity that helps the poor and homeless in
Moscow and Saint Petersburg. For Redman, cooking soup is the way
to make a difference for people who often receive little state
or community support.
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"The city lacks these kind of projects, there need to be more of
them," Redman said.
The people queuing up for food outside the van are not just
homeless, but also pensioners.
One of them, Sergei, said that half his 9,000 rouble monthly
state pension goes towards paying back a loan. "And it's
impossible to survive on 4,500 rubles ($68), right?" he said.
For another homeless man who identified himself simply as "the
duke", the hot soup and supplies help him get through the
winter.
"You can't cook anything in the street and Nochlezhka helps with
warm soup and tea," he said. "At least you can bring a bottle
with you into the basement and put it on a radiator, to warm the
tea up again."
(Writing by Tom Balmforth; Editing by Matthew Mpoke Bigg)
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