FOR A GOOD CAUSE -- Alma de la Torre
-- Story by Danette Goulet; photo by Don Leach
For 14 years, Alma de la Torre has ladled soup into bowls for hundreds
of folks who were down on their luck.
That has been her task at the Someone Cares Soup Kitchen since it
opened in June 1986.
Some volunteers serve salad, others desert. But serving minestrone and
chicken noodle has been Torre’s specialty.
She has ladled at three or four different locations over the years,
and into an ever-increasing number of bowls.
“We used to be in a church and the Rea Center -- a couple of different
churches -- but it just grows and grows and grows,” she said. “Used to be
50 to 100 people come in. Now it’s 300 a day.”
Wherever the soup kitchen went as it expanded over the years, a
dedicated Torre would follow to volunteer her services.
Four hours a day, twice a week, she and her fellow volunteers would
set up meals, serve lines of less-fortunate souls and clean up behind
them. For each day of the week, there’s a different crew of volunteers in
the soup kitchen.
“We keep the place clean and nice here,” she said. “It’s like a family
to me.”
A retired bookbinder from New York, Torre moved to Costa Mesa 16 years
ago to be near her family in Huntington Beach.
Torre was looking for something to do with her time when her son, who
works at Vanguard University, introduced her to soup kitchen founder and
director Merle Hatleberg.
Torre has served soup ever since -- at first, two days a week and now
one, she said, as she approaches her 80th birthday in December.
Despite cutting back from eight to four hours a week, Torre enjoys her
volunteer work more than ever.
“I love to be here,” Torre said. “You meet all kinds of people, not
just homeless. Some are lawyers and doctors, but because of the drugs or
alcohol, they had to come here. And there are so many friendly people.”
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