As football fans around the country prepared for Super Bowl parties and players warmed up for the big game, Catholic school students around the Archdiocese of Newark were busy tackling the issue of hunger. Catholic school students spent the weeks leading up to the Super Bowl collecting canned goods and nonperishables for the annual nationwide Souper Bowl of Caring.
The Souper Bowl of Caring began in 1990 when Reverend Brad Smith at Spring Valley Presbyterian Church in Columbia, South Carolina called on his congregation to “be mindful of those who are without a bowl of soup to eat” as they celebrated the Super Bowl that weekend, according to Tackle Hunger, which now organizes The Souper Bowl of Caring.
Tackle Hunger partners with the NFL and other national advocates to promote charitable giving during Super Bowl weekend.
Over the years, the movement has evolved into an annual nationwide event with over 300,000 groups participating to support local food programs in their communities.
The non-profit “asks school groups, college students, and anyone with a heart for kids to use the Tackle Hunger Challenge to support food charities, especially those that are feeding our students in K-12 schools and colleges,” according to the Tackle Hunger website.
The Community Food Bank of New Jersey reports that more than 650,000 people in New Jersey face hunger every day, and approximately 175,000 of them are children.
Students at Our Lady of the Lake School in Verona brought in cans of soup for a local soup kitchen.
The whole school community at Academy of the Most Blessed Sacrament in Franklin Lakes came together to collect cans during the Souper Bowl of Caring.
Students at Our Lady of Mercy Academy in Park Ridge brought in cans of soup in exchange for wearing their favorite sports Jersey to school. Students donated over 500 containers of soup to help those in need at the The Tri-Boro Food Pantry in Pascack Valley.
Students at Queen of Peace Grammar School in North Arlington collected canned goods for the Queen of Peace Church soup kitchen.
Students at St. Bartholomew School in Scotch Plains brought in cans of soup for a local soup kitchen in exchange for wearing their favorite team’s sports Jersey to school during a dress-down day.