Strabbioni, a trendy restaurant in the city center, makes six meals three times a week for the homeless who sleep near Termini Railway Station.
Tiro a Volo, the restaurant of an exclusive sports club, gives away leftovers from its lavish Sunday buffets every Monday to a soup kitchen at San Bellarmino.
“Sometimes it’s not enough, so I have asked them to prepare two special plates of biscuits,” club director Michele Anastasio Pugliese said.
At Volpetti, employees set aside leftovers in white cardboard boxes every night for pick-up in the morning by a van from Caritas.
Volunteers say former middle-class Italians who have been hit hard by the government’s austerity measures are among the “new poor” coming to soup kitchens, while immigrants who used to attend have left the country.
At the San Benedetto soup kitchen, 58-year-old Donato — one of the “new poor” — is grateful.
“I used to be a jeweler, but I was badly in debt. Now I’ve lost everything,” he said. “For the past two years, I’ve been sleeping in my car. I come and eat here for lunch and in the evenings, I go to the supermarket and steal bread.”
Charities complain that initiatives like Pasto Buono are limited because of the red tape that potential donors have to deal with.
“There is a bureaucracy,” Pasto Buono director Gregorio Fogliano said in an interview, calling for new laws to simplify the process.
“The eateries that have joined are top quality. These are people who apart from wanting to do some good, also want to get rid of unsold food,” he said.
His aim is to provide 110,000 meals a year in Rome.
The initiative began in Genoa in 2007 and is now up and running in Florence as well. It plans to extend to Palermo, Sicily, in the future.