The Star Malaysia - Star2

No waste at wedding

Blessing To Share feeds the poor.

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IN the slums of Jakarta, Indonesia’s poor are getting a taste of how the other half live thanks to a new programme that aims to take a bite out of its mammoth food-waste problem.

Called Blessing To Share, the service supplies leftover wedding dishes to some of the poorest members of society in the sprawling capital.

Even as it struggles with poverty and malnutriti­on, the SouthEast Asian nation bins more edible food per person than any other country except Saudi Arabia, according to an Economist Intelligen­ce Unit survey last year.

Indonesia’s 260 million citizens each throw out an average of almost 300kg of food annually, ahead of the United States in third spot, the survey said.

The country’s food waste problem can be partly chalked up to local hospitalit­y, which calls for ample helpings at all celebratio­ns.

Hosts often err on the side of abundance, and many hungry revellers’ eyes are bigger than their stomachs – meaning lots of uneaten food.

Globally, about 30% of food produced every year is tossed out or spoiled – about 1.3 billion tonnes – which translates into some US$1tril (RM4tril) in economic costs, according to the UN’s Food and Agricultur­e Associatio­n.

That’s where a Blessing To Share comes in.

“There are lots of weddings in Indonesia and lots of extra food,” said programme founder Astrid Paramita.

“And there are lots of hungry people unfortunat­ely, so this programme is trying to close that gap between the rich and needy.”

So far the programme is fairly limited, but Parmita has big plans and hopes to expand to other cities and also start sourcing edibles from company meetings and conference­s.

Since starting in November, about 50 weddings have participat­ed in the programme with about 1.45 tonnes of food collected for distributi­on through a local food bank.

For 60-year-old scavenger Efendi, getting a meal from one couple’s lavish nuptials across town was a welcome surprise. “I didn’t expect this – suddenly I’m getting free food,” he said. — AFP

 ??  ?? Since starting in November, about 50 weddings have participat­ed in Blessing To Share, with about 1.45 tonnes of food collected.
Since starting in November, about 50 weddings have participat­ed in Blessing To Share, with about 1.45 tonnes of food collected.
 ?? Photos: AFP ?? A waiter packing up leftover food from a wedding to feed the poor in the slums of Jakarta under the Blessing To Share programme. —
Photos: AFP A waiter packing up leftover food from a wedding to feed the poor in the slums of Jakarta under the Blessing To Share programme. —

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