Beijing Review

Comfort Food

An alley galley where people cook for their relatives struggling with cancer

- By Yuan Yuan

Cooking aromas hitting the nostrils and a cacophony of frying and chopping mixed with random chatter of those preparing the food… these are the ingredient­s of life in a narrow street right next to Jiangxi Cancer Hospital in Nanchang, Jiangxi Province. With dozens of small stoves lining either side, this alleyway is where patients’ relatives gather to prepare a bite of home for their loved ones.

People bring their desired ingredient­s—either bought at a nearby farmers market or delivered from their hometown, and for just 1 yuan ($0.16) they can get access to the “kitchen” stoves, utensils, oil and seasonings. Most of the “chefs” aren’t local, but have traveled to the hospital as their loved ones are undergoing cancer treatment there. At the alleyway’s entrance stands a white sign with bright red characters reading “Charity Kitchen.” Next to it, up on the wall, hangs a small board displaying the galley managers’ phone number.

In charge of this open-air kitchen are Wan Zuocheng and Xiong Gengxiang, a couple in their 60s. They actually live in the alley and used to run a breakfast stall selling fried dough sticks near the hospital. One day in 2003, a middle-aged couple stopped by the stall, asking if they could possibly use its cooking utensils to make a dish for their son who’d just had one leg amputated due to bone cancer. All he wanted, was a taste of mom’s cooking; the truest definition of “comfort food.” The couple couldn’t afford to rent an apartment with a kitchen, so they turned to Wan and offered to pay.

“I told the mother to use anything and everything they needed—for free,” Wan told Beijing Review. “Living next to the hospital, we have seen many cancer patients and their families succumb to utter despair. Each family dealing or having dealt with cancer knows all too well the physical and emotional hardships it entails. If there was even the tiniest thing we could do to lend a hand, we wanted to do just that,” Wan and his wife told the couple they were welcome to use their stall any time.

The couple in fact did come back the following day, bringing along a few more people with the same request. Wan and his wife then realized just how many patients in the hospital wanted to get a taste of home, but their relatives simply had nowhere to cook. “Some patients in the final stages of cancer had already entered the end-oflife phase, a bite of homemade food could help relieve the pain, both physically and emotionall­y,” Wan said.

Home away from home

Free of charge, Wan and Xiong generously offered everything they had to those seeking their help. They even acquired more stoves and utensils as the number of people kept rising. They would also cook rice and serve it for free. As many “customers” offered to pay, they started to charge 0.5 yuan ($0.08) for each dish cooked. In 2016, they increased this to 1 yuan due to rising consumer prices; it has remained unchanged ever since.

Yet the fee could hardly cover the kitchen’s basic expenses. They poured their breakfast stall earnings into the alley undertakin­g right up to 2020, when running both became too physically challengin­g for the aging couple. They decided to wholly focus on the 24-hour kitchen. Even at midnight, at a knock on the door, the couple would get up and help with meal prep. “Cancer patients can get very hungry at any given time, especially after surgery,” Wan added, “Getting in something warm and fresh might make them feel more comfortabl­e.”

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