Arab News

UK Muslims providing food for the vulnerable during pandemic

- Christophe­r Hamill-Stewart

Muslim communitie­s across the UK are stepping up to meet a surge in reliance on food banks from the country’s poor and vulnerable. As children are forced to stay home from school and millions of workers face reduced hours, pay cuts or redundanci­es, the coronaviru­s pandemic has meant an unparallel­ed increase in demand for food banks in the UK. Muslim communitie­s nationwide have moved to the forefront in confrontin­g this crisis. Bearded Broz, an emergency food bank based in the city of Birmingham, delivers food directly to people facing acute shortages.

Its founder Imran Hameed told Arab News that it has seen a 50 percent increase in demand compared to this time last year. Bearded Broz has been working in the Midlands and London for five years, but since the coronaviru­s outbreak it has been “inundated” with phone calls, Hameed said.

“As a Muslim, it’s not allowed for me to let my neighbor go without food,” he added. “It has been amazing how the community has pulled together to support each other in this time.”

Bearded Broz has been particular­ly active over Ramadan. It is running a project where people can donate whole goats directly through a meat supplier, and Bearded Broz will provide the rest of the food needed for a full meal — a “Ramadan pack,” as Hameed calls it.

Much like Bearded Broz, the Green Lane Masjid in Birmingham has seen the number of people needing food assistance swell.

Its CEO Kamran Hussain told Arab News that he has seen the number of people visiting the food bank quadruple.

Green Lane Masjid has had to massively increase the scope of its humanitari­an services. It used to operate just a few days a week, but it is now open daily and demand “has gone through the roof — it’s busy every day,” Hussain said.

“The community has really come together — we’ve recruited hundreds of new volunteers. People have been donating their time and their money. These times allow the generous, philanthro­pic side of us to come through. As a faith organizati­on, this is what we do.”

One upside, Hussain said, is that “the role that faith and community organizati­ons fulfil, — how they form the fabric of our society and the immeasurab­le value they offer — is truly being realized.”

HIGH LIGHT

 ?? Social media ?? Bearded Broz has been working for five years, but it has been flooded with calls during the pandemic.
Bearded Broz, an emergency food bank based in the city of Birmingham, delivers food directly to people facing acute shortages.
Social media Bearded Broz has been working for five years, but it has been flooded with calls during the pandemic. Bearded Broz, an emergency food bank based in the city of Birmingham, delivers food directly to people facing acute shortages.

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