Image of members standing in front of food and other supplies.
SOY Meal
June 5, 2022

FNB YEG served a meal to the community at Herb Jamieson facility today through the Street Outreach YEG program. We served about 25 people meals of rajma (bean curry), cauliflower and onions, and bread. We also handed out clothes, face masks, condoms, and menstrual products.

FNB Poster with the following text: Tis the season to be jolly. Happy Holidays. Let's make the holidays a nice time for the unhoused community, too! Help the Food Not Bombs Winter Campaign by: Volunteering at meals; Donating Clothes; Donating funds that could go towards coffee or hot food; Donating hand warmers or anything else that would keep people warm. As we said last year, put your Community on your gift list! Warm Greetings from Food Not Bombs YEG. P.S. May you have a full heart and tummy!.

Tis the season to be jolly

Happy Holidays

Let's make the holidays a nice time for the unhoused community, too!

    Help the Food Not Bombs Winter Campaign by:
  • Volunteering at meals
  • Donating Clothes
  • Donating funds that could go towards coffee or hot food
  • Donating hand warmers or anything else that would keep people warm

As we said last year, put your Community on your gift list!

Warm Greetings from Food Not Bombs YEG

P.S. May you have a full heart and tummy!

Cop sitting in his cop car, downtown, in an empty parking lot.
Impromptu Donuts
October 8, 2021

Today, we got word that the cops were evicting homeless people downtown, so, a few comrades went down to investigate, see how we could help, and hold the cops accountable.

When we arrived a few folks were packing up their stuff. We asked what was happening and were told that the tents were in an emergency/service route and the garbage trucks could not get through, so folks would have to move their tents down a block. We stayed down there to keep an eye on the cops. A few of us went to get coffee and donuts, and we handed them out to the people there while keeping an eye on the cops to make sure they didn't start misbehaving. After about an hour, the cops drove away.

The contrast between the workers, high above, cleaning the windows of a giant office tower, and the unhoused folk below them, was stark. An unspoken threat to the workers above hangs in the air. The threat of being unhoused is not just an idle threat, either. It motivates ordinary workers to endure the indignities and dangers of their workplace. As long as there are some people who live without housing, the price of rent and real estate can be raised. Just as, as long as some people live without jobs, wages can be depressed and benefits can be held back.

Those crushed within the margins of the market are subject to every indignity and cruelty to keep them there. Basic sanitation, hot food, clean water, shelter, rest and comfort have been set aside as the privileges of the employed. These can be taken away if workers can't - or won't - endure the smaller indignities and cruelties of the workplace.

banner with text 'survivors still live here' hanging from 'living bridge' over 97 street and 105 ave.
Prairie Sage Protectors
Thursday, September 30, 2021

Prairie Sage Protectors deploy banner to highlight the performativeness of colonial institutions "honouring" truth and reconciliation day.

Members went down to hold space, keep EPS accountable, and show support for those who made it home from residential school and are still fighting to survive against colonial violence.

For more information on the event, to read the Prairie Sage Protectors official statement, or to learn more about the Prairie Sage Protectors, visit their Facebook page.