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Cozinha Económica Israelita

Founded in 1899 as a Jewish charitable institution, the Cozinha Económica Israelita became one of Lisbon’s most important community-run relief services, especially during the refugee crisis of the Second World War.

By the late 1910s, it was operating in Travessa do Noronha, a short dead-end lane just below Rua da Escola Politécnica and near Jardim do Príncipe Real, an urban setting that would later become strongly associated with wartime transit, hunger, paperwork, and survival.

Institutional context

Because the Jewish community in Lisbon faced long periods without full legal recognition, communal life was often consolidated through autonomous benevolent institutions. In the official historical narrative of the Comunidade Israelita de Lisboa (CIL), the Cozinha Económica appears alongside other key welfare initiatives as a foundational pillar of organized Jewish life in modern Lisbon.

During the Second World War, this support network expanded dramatically. Financed through international Jewish aid, including the American Joint Distribution Committee, the community maintained the Cozinha Económica and other services, distributing food, clothing, and medical support to refugees in transit through Portugal.

The Travessa do Noronha complex

Contemporary reporting identifies a small institutional cluster in Travessa do Noronha: the soup kitchen at no. 17, a Jewish hospital at no. 19, and a shelter or albergue at no. 21.

This was not only a social service address, it was a micro-geography of wartime Lisbon. Refugees, aid workers, and state surveillance all intersected here, and the street entered later memory as a place where daily subsistence and bureaucratic uncertainty were lived side by side.

Material object with a biography: meal tickets

One of the most revealing material traces of the Cozinha Económica is the meal-ticket system. Refugees who needed to eat there received senhas de refeição, a practical mechanism that turned communal aid into an organized, trackable routine.

A surviving example, reproduced in press coverage, is a meal ticket issued in the name of the child refugee Benjamin Schlesinger, linking the institution to specific lives and family trajectories, not only to abstract numbers.

Scale of assistance

Sources describe the Cozinha Económica as providing hundreds of meals per day and as part of a wider effort that supported thousands of Jewish refugees passing through Portugal during the war years.

A decisive rupture: sale, demolition, and disappearance

After the postwar period, the physical site did not remain intact. Reporting based on community testimony states that the CIL sold the Travessa do Noronha buildings in 1959 or 1960, after which the original structures were demolished and replaced by later developments. The area saw further demolition again in 2019 in the context of new real-estate projects.

A contemporary gesture of memory

To mark and honor this historic site in the urban fabric, the Centro Cultural Rua da Judiaria already has a Stolperschwellen prepared to be installed on the pavement in front of the building, creating a visible, permanent point of remembrance for the Cozinha Económica Israelita and the lives sustained here. The installation is planned for 2026.