Casablanca Children's Soup Kitchen
The Casablanca Children's Soup Kitchen was a children's soup kitchen in the Mellah of Casablanca, Morocco. Founded in 1941 by local architect Elias Suraqui, the organization operated until 1964. The institution was financed and supported from the year 1948 by the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, the Alliance Israélite Universelle, l'Œuvre de secours aux enfants, and private donors as well.
During its years of operation, approximately 6,000 children were supported and educated within the SP's framework. The staff consisted of a director and a dozen teachers, cooks, nurses and part-time or full-time educators.
Context
In 1941, with 40,000 inhabitants, the Mellah of Casablanca was the most populated in Morocco. Poverty was deep; families lived huddled together in a single room, with children in rags and often without shoes. Chronic malnutrition and epidemics were rampant especially among children who suffered from ringworm, trachoma and tuberculosis due to crowded living conditions. The French authorities under the Vichy rule were not inclined to finance a partial transfer of this Jewish population to salubrious dwellings in the European neighborhood. Even after the war, they focused primarily on the construction of cheap housing in the European city with the aim of accommodating Moroccan workers from the countryside, whom the city badly needed for its development. As for Jewish organizations, until 1945, they concentrated their efforts on Holocaust survivors. It was only in the late 1940s that they started addressing the issue. From 1940 to 1960 internal immigration to Morocco occurred. The Jewish population in the countryside moved to large cities, mainly Casablanca, thus contributing to an increase in the urban population. In 1960, the census of the Jewish population in Morocco was as follows:| Population Juive Marocaine | 160,032 |
| Jewish Population Casablanca | 71,175 |
| Jews of foreign nationality | 20,000 |
| Total Jewish population in Morocco | 180,032 |
The Casablanca agglomeration comprised about 45% of the Jewish population among them 40,000 Jews living in the Mellah.
The Hedarim (Children's Study Classes)
In 1941, the only structures in the Mellah that dealt with children were the hedarim, also known as Cheder. These were closed rooms, with no ventilation, no furniture, often without windows. The young children were huddled together under the guidance of an adult instructor who taught them the Hebrew alphabet and prayers. Every Mellah in Morocco has his Cheder, even in the most remote corners of the Atlas Mountains where the Jewish communities had none or very few contact with the outside. The hedarim existence is a Jewish specificity that has endured throughout history. This singularity meant that for centuries, illiteracy, at least as far as men were concerned, did not exist among the Jews. From the end of the 1940s, Jewish organizations, led by the JOINT, fought hard against the hedarim institution, as the hedarim contributed to the spread of contagious diseases that ravaged the Mellah. In 1948, an internal Joint report stated, “The eventual plan is to remove about 2,000 children from the Hedarim of the Mellah and to give them decent nursery care during the day” The JOINT thus supported alternative structures which would be able to compete with the hedarim. In 1952, the JOINT expressly asked these organizations to integrate children from the hedarim as an absolute priority. This policy finally paid off. At the end of 1952, there were no more hedarim in the Mellah of Casablanca.Historical
1941–1947
The initiative for the SP creation started in 1941, when population growth in the Casablanca Mellah was raising concerns over poor hygiene and undernutrition conditions. Few documents remain of the SP first period; the number of children benefiting from the canteen at this time is unknown. Its goal was to provide hot meals as well as to educate underprivileged young Jewish children between the ages of 6 and 8. The SP received 300 children per year. At the very beginning, only one teacher was hired and only a single class of thirty children was in operation There are few press articles, about fifty photographic shots, photos of charity balls in which money collections took place as well as some shots of benefactors. They were wealthy Jewish donors from Casablanca. Armand Tordjman was the first director and Mr. Elbaz was the accountant. Some assistants and cooks were also hired. Merchants of the central food market in Casablanca donated surpluses and sold food at reduced prices. The Civil Region provided coupons for fabrics, which were cut free of charge by Jewish tailoring companies and volunteers distributed the clothes. Millers provided flour at low cost, with which a baker made bread for free. In 1941, when the SP was established, Jewish structures capable of integrating the children of the Mellah were not equipped to meet the needs. These structures: the JOINT, ORT, Alliance Israélite Universelle, OSE, and others were more active in the following years. After Morocco's independence in 1956, the Jewish population of the Mellah gradually left the ghetto, which became depopulated.The SP was located in a dead end of the Mellah of Casablanca at 113 boulevard du 2e tirailleurs. The premises were cramped, two classrooms which alternately served as a refectory for the canteen, an office, a playground and the dead end itself where outdoor activities were carried out. In the following two decades, there were some expansions, but the layout of the premises changed little. Throughout its history, the SP has suffered from overcrowded premises.
1948–1964
From 1948 on, there was some immigration to Israel, but its magnitude was less than the natural population increase. In addition, a number of Jews immigrated from the Mellahs located in the periphery to the Casablanca Mellah, which exacerbated the latter's demographic problem. In the immediate post-World War II period, Jewish philanthropic organizations focused on Europe to provide support and aid to Holocaust survivors. However, from the early 1950s onwards, international Jewish organizations began to direct their efforts towards the Jewish populations in Moslem countries. The main Jewish organization, JOINT, devoted considerable financial resources, set up administrative structures capable of supporting a policy of aid and employed hundreds of experts as advisors in health, nutrition, education, financial organization and in monitoring investments. With regards to Morocco, the JOINT realized that the task was too large and that the organization would have to set some specific goals. In the late 1940s, the strategic decision to focus on childhood was implemented. In 1948, the JOINT agreed to collaborate and support the SP because these projects were in line with its overall strategy. This collaboration only increased over the years. The JOINT supported many children's institutions in Casablanca, mainly:| Talmud Torah | 1400 enfants |
| Lubavitcher | 780 enfants |
| Ozar Hatorah | 630 enfants |
| Em Habanim | 350 enfants |
| La Maternelle | 350 enfants |
| Soup Kitchen | 300 enfants |
| Finzi day care center | 185 enfants |
Statutes and Nomenclature
A director appointed by the president and the committee headed SP. His role was to monitor accounting as well as the proper functioning of kitchens and classrooms, ensure the supply of products used in catering, manage stocks, negotiate with suppliers, place orders, and to receive goods. The JOINT controlled his activities, directed its criticisms and suggestions to the President who was ultimately responsible for the SP functioning and who in turn gave instructions to the director. In the 50s and 60s the directors were Mr. Cohen and Mr. Teboul. In 1959, three years after Moroccan independence, the SP changed its statutes to adapt to the new legislation on humanitarian organizations.The Joint (JDC)
From 1948, the JOINT contribution was decisive The JOINT fully financed the food provided by the SP, which represented the bulk of the total budget. In addition to the running costs of the canteen, the Joint regularly provided foodstuffs, mainly: milk, butter, cheese, oil, dried beans, flour, rice, sugar and jam It sponsored teams of nutritional, generalist and specialist doctors. Medical visits occurred at least three times a year. The JOINT delegated many experts responsible for verifying the smooth running of the SP management, and the use of the allocated funds. Its administrators constantly sent reports whose conclusions and recommendations were reported to the SP management. From time to time, the JOINT was pleased with the progress made. For example, in the 1958 annual report, one could read:‘In the Soupe Populaire d'Enfants, many constructive changes were brought about. A new infirmary has been established, and what previously served that purpose was made available for preparing and cleaning vegetables, thus ensuring a greater degree of cleanliness and facilitating the work of the kitchen staff. New equipment of a work-saving nature, and at the same time conducive to cleanliness, has been purchased. One of the classes was transformed into a dining room, which makes it possible to serve meals more efficiently.’
In 1956, the daily cost of the JOINT food contribution was 8938 francs. This sum does not include the costs of experts, travel, etc., it corresponds to approximately $200, i.e$. 6000 per month. In 1957, the annual cost of the canteen was 2,234,750 francs or about 48,000 current $. In 1962, the monthly cost of the canteen was 8981.97 francs and the operating costs 4750 francs, that is to say, a monthly total of $30,400. The JOINT also carried out a distribution of clothes at least once a year. In 1958, the clothing budget for the SP was 957,050 francs. Every year, the office of the JOINT in Morocco produced an annual report on all its activities. This report was a synthesis of thousands of documents. The aim of the report was to provide some insights from the past year's activities and recommendations for the following years. These reports showed that the number of SP children fluctuated between 300 and 315, except in 1964 for the last year of operation when the number of children was 210.
Two other Jewish organizations under the aegis and in close collaboration with the JOINT played a leading role in the maintenance and operation of the SP, these are: