Gleaning the Shuk: Fugee Fridays Feeds Refugees With Produce Donations

The carmel market shuk floor on a regular Friday in early August

The shuk floor on a regular Friday in early August (photo: Daniella Cheslow)

One of the best things about most major Israeli cities is the shuk, the giant outdoor food market where bright vegetables sit in precarious piles and entire alleyways are devoted to freshly butchered meat and refrigerated cases full of fish, sometimes even still squirming.

But one of the worst things about these shuks is the terrible waste at the end of each day, especially on Friday afternoons before the Sabbath comes in and the shuks are closed for the day. Lettuce covers entire meters of asphalt, chicken offal sits in piles surrounded by squashed tomatoes, and soggy cardboard boxes soak up the rotting vegetable mash.

In Tel Aviv, there are plenty of people who could use those discarded vegetables and fruit, and ‘Fugee Fridays – an initiative of Green Prophet Jesse Fox, his brother Steven, and their friend Gilli Cherrin – started up in February to collect excess produce from the shuk vendors and bring it to refugee shelters in southern Tel Aviv. Fugee Fridays meets at the bottom of Shuk Hacarmel each Friday at about 6 pm.

Fox said a friend of his told him about refugees lingering around Park Levinsky, a green patch near the Central Bus Station. He and the other founders took a carload of donated vegetables to the park, and were instantly swarmed.

“As soon as people realized we were taking out food, a bunch of guys just jumped toward the car. Dozens,” Fox said. “We saw they have their own way of distributing it and making sure everyone got some.”

helping hand coalition

Green Prophet Jesse Fox at the Shapira shelter in June (photo: Luke Gasiorowski of the Helping Hand Coalition)

After the first few trips to the park, Fox said, the Fugee Fridays team realized their work would be easier at the refugee shelters scattered around southern Tel Aviv, in the area of the bus station. They now deliver to three shelters in the city – one for Darfurians, and two for Eritreans.

At first, Fox said, the refugees from warmer African climates didn’t know what to do with some of the food, liked broccoli, cauliflower or most winter vegetables. No one touched a box of fresh avocados until one woman peeled one and bit into it. “Maybe they thought it was a turtle,” Fox said.

Two weeks ago, I went along on a Fugee Fridays run. I got to the shuk at 5:40 pm, but took about twenty minutes to buy some heavily discounted passion fruit and pita bread before getting to the end of the market, where a Fugee Fridays volunteer was watching over backpacks and the growing pile of boxes of vegetables, fruit and bread.

Then I found an empty cardboard box and went from vendor to vendor, asking for tomatoes, sweet potatoes, carrots, ciabatta bread and whatever else they had for refugees. It was a great feeling to fill up a box with bagged lettuce and herbs, and to know that it would probably have otherwise joined the giant green carpet spreading across the wet shuk street.

green vegetables shuk Tel Aviv

Discarded greens (photo: Daniella Cheslow)

At about 7 pm, we had enough boxes to fill up three cars, which drove to a shelter on Har Zion street. Everyone who couldn’t fit in the cars followed them by bike or cab, and we unloaded the produce in front of a group of apartments where mostly Eritrean refugees lived. The women picked over the vegetables and divided them between themselves. The kids snatched grapes and then jumped all over us, grabbing our arms and demanding that we play with them. Some of the refugee children have been in Israel long enough to pick up Hebrew, others just smiled at us and ran around the pavement in front of the apartment doors.

Interviewed recently for TimeOut Tel Aviv, Fox said he has gotten complaints from poor Israelis in the Shapira neighborhood where he delivers, who say that he should put his own city’s poor first, rather than newcomers from Africa.

“For now we are working on the idea of bringing boxes of food to poor families in Shapira,” Fox told TimeOut. “Maybe this is the way to diffuse the tension between the refugees and their neighbors.”

Fox told the Green Prophet that Fugee Fridays is also considering starting a community garden in Shapira to bring together the refugees and their Israeli neighbors. Finally, he said, the volunteers have taught the refugees to put the vegetables they won’t eat on the curb so their neighbors can eat them.

Fugee Fridays depends on cars to deliver the vegetables and fruit, so if you have a car and don’t mind driving it on early Friday evening, get in touch with Jesse at Jessefox82 [at] gmail [dot] com.

Daniella Cheslow
Daniella Cheslowhttp://www.greenprophet.com
Daniella Cheslow grew up in a car-dependent suburb in New Jersey, where she noticed strip malls and Wal-Marts slowly replacing farmland. Her introduction to nature came through hiking trips in Israel. As a counselor for a freshman backpacking program at Northwestern University, Daniella noticed that Americans outdoors seemed to need to arm themselves with performance clothing, specialized water bottles and sophisticated camping silverware. This made her think about how to interact with and enjoy nature simply. This year, Daniella is getting a Master’s in Geography from Ben Gurion University of the Negev. She also freelance writes, photographs and podcasts. In her free time, she takes day trips in the desert, drops off compost and cooks local foods like stuffed zucchini, kubbeh and majadara. Daniella gets her peak oil anxiety from James Howard Kunstler and her organic food dreams from Michael Pollan. Read more at her blog, TheTruthHerzl.com. Daniella can be reached at daniella (at) greenprophet (dot) com.
1 COMMENT
  1. This is a great idea and I’m sure it could be applied to other parts of the world too. I took part in a Donate Boat Charity event a few months ago and some of the money raised went towards supporting refuges in Israel, especially orphaned children.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

TRENDING

Play spogomi the garbage picking sport and win a World Cup

If the future of environmental action looks less like a lecture and more like a pickup game, that might not be a bad thing at all.

Quintin Tarantino walks on a bike lane in Tel Aviv

Quentin Tarantino lives in Israel now, quietly blending into Tel Aviv life (which is pretty loud and late night!) — until Tel Aviv, of course, notices him.

Creative Gifts for Christmas

With the gift holidays officially open now is the...

All 13 Tel Aviv Beaches Reawarded the Prestigious ‘Blue Flag’ for 2025

Reaffirming its leadership in sustainable coastal management, all 13 of Tel Aviv-Yafo’s public beaches have once again earned the prestigious Blue Flag certification for 2025. This honor, awarded by the International Blue Flag Committee and the Foundation for Environmental Education (FEE), recognizes beaches that meet exceptional standards in water quality, safety, accessibility, and environmental education.

Tel Aviv’s mayor Huldai is taking smart phones from schools – his irony in education

Waldorf schools, created by Austria's Rudolph Steiner, are the fastest-growing school system in Israel because of their focus on arts and crafts and their avoidance of technology in the classroom. It’s ironic that Huldai is being praised for pushing a tech-free school environment while his administration shattered a community that has been practicing this philosophy for over a decade.

Qatar’s climate hypocrisy rides the London Underground

Qatar remains a master of doublethink—burning gas by the megaton while selling “sustainability” to a world desperate for clean air. Wake up from your slumber people.

How Quality of Hire Shapes Modern Recruitment

A 2024 survey by Deloitte found that 76% of talent leaders now consider long-term retention and workforce contribution among their most important hiring success metrics—far surpassing time-to-fill or cost-per-hire. As the expectations for new hires deepen, companies must also confront the inherent challenges in redefining and accurately measuring hiring quality.

8 Team-Building Exercises to Start the Week Off 

Team building to change the world! The best renewable energy companies are ones that function.

Thank you, LinkedIn — and what your Jobs on the Rise report means for sustainable careers

While “green jobs” aren’t always labeled as such, many of the fastest-growing roles are directly enabling the energy transition, climate resilience, and lower-carbon systems: Number one on their list is Artificial Intelligence engineers. But what does that mean? Vibe coding Claude? 

Somali pirates steal oil tankers

The pirates often stage their heists out of Somalia, a lawless country, with a weak central government that is grappling with a violent Islamist insurgency. Using speedboats that swarm the targets, the machine-gun-toting pirates take control of merchant ships and then hold the vessels, crew and cargo for ransom.

Leopoldo Alejandro Betancourt López Turned Ocean Plastic Into Profitable Sunglasses

Few fashion accessories carry the environmental burden of sunglasses. Most frames are constructed from petroleum-based plastics and acrylic polymers that linger in landfills for centuries, shedding microplastics into soil and waterways long after they've been discarded. Leopoldo Alejandro Betancourt López, president of the Spanish eyewear brand Hawkers, saw this problem differently than most industry executives.

Why Dr. Tony Jacob Sees Texas Business Egos as Warning Signs

Everything's bigger in Texas. Except business egos.  Dr. Tony Jacob figured...

Israel and America Sign Renewable Energy Cooperation Deal

Other announcements made at the conference include the Timna Renewable Energy Park, which will be a center for R&D, and the AORA Solar Thermal Module at Kibbutz Samar, the world's first commercial hybrid solar gas-turbine power plant that is already nearing completion. Solel Solar Systems announced it was beginning construction of a 50 MW solar field in Lebrija, Spain, and Brightsource Energy made a pre-conference announcement that it had inked the world's largest solar deal to date with Southern California Edison (SCE).

Related Articles

Popular Categories