The coronavirus pandemic hasn't made life on the streets of Berlin any easier for Kaspars Breidaks.
For three months, the 43-year-old Latvian has faced homeless shelters operating at reduced capacity so that people can be kept at a safe distance from one another. And with fewer Berliners going outdoors, it's much harder to raise money by panhandling or collecting bottles to sell for recycling.
But on a chilly winter morning this week Breidaks found himself with a free hot meal and a place to warm up, after the German capital's biggest restaurant, the Hofbraeu Berlin 바카라” itself closed down due to coronavirus lockdown restrictions 바카라” shifted gears to help the homeless.
바카라śOther homeless people at the train station told me about this place,바카라ť Breidaks said, removing a furry black hat with long ear flaps as he sat on a bench in the warm, spacious beer hall near Berlin's landmark Alexanderplatz square.
바카라śI came here for hot soup.바카라ť It was a restaurant employee who volunteers at a shelter who proposed opening up the shuttered Bavarian-style beer hall 바카라” patterned after the famous Munich establishment of the same name 바카라” to the homeless.
It was a clear win-win proposition, said Hofbraeu manager Bjoern Schwarz. As well as helping out the homeless during tough times the city-funded project also gives needed work to employees 바카라” and provides the restaurant with welcome income.
In cooperation with the city and two welfare organizations, the restaurant quickly developed a concept to take in up to 150 homeless people in two shifts every day until the end of the winter, and started serving meals on Tuesday.