Home Subtitle videos How can small local restaurants increase food access to those in need?

How can small local restaurants increase food access to those in need?

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On August 4, 2020, I was with my team in the kitchen

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preparing thousands of meals for hospitals in New York City.

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And we were playing salsa and hip hop music to make the long days go by quickly.

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That day, my phone was ringing more than usual.

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Suddenly, Santos, one of my team members, turned off the music and said to me,

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“veste que lo pasó en Beirut”

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which means “did you see what happened in Beirut?”

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Honestly, I didn’t understand what he meant.

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I took the phone and saw messages on WhatsApp from our team in Lebanon

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saying “did you see what happened? We are under attack.”

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I quickly went on Twitter and saw that everyone was talking about

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a devastating incident that happened in the port

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and that the sky was all red.

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Unfortunately, Lebanon is going through its hardest economic time in its history.

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People’s money is stuck in banks, corruption

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and currency collapse have made food prices very expensive,

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and prices for everything else have skyrocketed.

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And unfortunately, the most famous Arab kitchen in the world

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has become difficult for its people in their own country.

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To alleviate this problem, we had a team on the ground

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providing hundreds of meals daily

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to the affected neighborhoods suffering from food shortages

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and also to refugee camps.

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But I was fully aware that regardless of the cause of this incident,

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the problem will only get worse,

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and unfortunately I was right.

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I am not a cook or a chef,

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and I do not consider myself a cook or a chef or identify myself as one.

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I am an immigrant who first worked in a restaurant as a waiter

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and then became a restaurant owner,

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and by pure coincidence, I ended up working in the food security system.

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If you grew up in an Arab family like ours

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and didn’t become a doctor, lawyer, or engineer,

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you’re not that successful.

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And my mother always reminded me that

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she didn’t send me to America to make falafel.

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But if you grew up in Palestine,

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you always see hunger and food insecurity in front of you.

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And not just in Palestine, in most parts of the Arab world.

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Unfortunately, reliance on foreign aid, wars, climate change,

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and lack of support for agriculture has led the region towards disaster.

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But unfortunately, the media always tells us that only governments

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or non-governmental organizations can solve this problem.

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But the question is,

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as an individual living in this society,

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with a small restaurant that serves hummus, ful, and falafel,

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can I make a difference and bring about change?

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The answer is yes.

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I will tell you how.

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The idea began in 2017.

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My friend Laila called me and she told me that a refugee from Syria

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had arrived in New York and needed a place to stay and work.

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Unfortunately, I didn’t have any job openings,

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but I had a table that could accommodate 10 people.

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Since Palestinian and Syrian cuisine are similar to each other,

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the idea was to host a dinner party and sell tickets to my friends.

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The proceeds from these tickets would go to the refugee

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to help him financially while he cooked Syrian food.

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I called my friend Justin and told him that

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we should work on the first dinner together.

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My friend Justin is a playwright, so he said,

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“Nasser, we have to make this dinner theatrical.”

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Because Americans love happy endings.

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I said, Okay.

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We made the dinner, and the first course was about the origin story.

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The second course was about the problems and how they arose.

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The third course was about displacement from home.

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The fourth course tells about his arrival to his new country.

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And the fifth course talks about his plans for the future.

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Dinner was very successful,

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and he was able to find a place to stay and work in the same night

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because there were people at the table who helped him.

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We took this system that we created

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and repeated it with other refugees in several states.

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This is what Joanna Forman, who teaches at the American University in Washington

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and is a friend and mentor of mine, calls “dinner table diplomacy”.

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Dinner table diplomacy then took me to Turkey,

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where we built communal kitchens for Syrian

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and Yemeni women to work on small food projects.

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And then to Morocco, where I met Nora Fitzgerald,

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founder of the non-profit restaurant Amal,

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Which helps Moroccan women achieve economic empowerment

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through cooking delicious Moroccan food in Marrakech.

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The idea then evolved further, and I created the Immigrant Kitchen

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with my colleague Dan Dorado.

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But luck was not on my side as a Palestinian,

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because just as we opened our first week, coronavirus hit and we had to close.

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On the night of March 16, the day New York City shut down.

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A friend from Sloan Kettering Hospital called me and said she needed 20 meals

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because all the restaurants were closed and the emergency room was crowded.

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New York was the epicenter of the coronavirus at that time.

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I had 1000 meals in my refrigerator,

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so I told her I could feed every emergency room,

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and if there were other hospitals, please let me know, and I did just that.

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The news spread quickly.

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We also joined forces with other restaurants and food suppliers,

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and within a week, we were able to produce 3000 meals a day,

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not only for hospitals, but also for neighborhoods affected by food shortages.

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Now, if you don’t work in commercial kitchens,

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you might think that this is an impossible task.

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But commercial kitchens, like factories, have assembly lines.

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We have the machines and technologies to make large quantities of food.

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And the idea was simple: a dish,

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a new meal every day, with carbohydrates, vegetables, and protein.

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We wrap them and deliver them to distribution points,

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whether they are churches, mosques, or places where people can pick up the food.

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There was a story that affected me a lot about an elderly man from Bangladesh.

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He told a Washington Post reporter that he was very embarrassed

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to say that there was no food at home.

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And we were offering him food from his heritage

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and from Bangladesh quietly and not in front of everyone,

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and he could maintain his dignity.

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This made me fully convinced that chefs, cooks, and restaurants

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can play a very important role in fighting hunger in their country.

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We learned many lessons from this idea.

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First, we learned how to cook huge amounts of food.

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Second, we discovered that our employees themselves began to enjoy working

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because they had become an active part of this community that helps people.

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The third thing was that after the city reopened,

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we found that our entire community were our customers,

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and they were willing to pay a 5-10% increase in price

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to cover the cost of the donated food.

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So, we took all these lessons and applied them in Lebanon,

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but unfortunately, with the incident, the demand has increased.

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So, I called the wonderful couple, Rawan Hayek and Mamoun Arafeh,

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owners of the TrickerTreat brand.

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They were able to move quickly on the ground and produce hundreds of meals

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and deliver them to affected areas using motorcycles and cars.

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I booked the first flight and went to Beirut.

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I landed and joined the team in the field.

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The team consisted of two Chrises: Chris Kattanah and Chris Ibrahim,

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and honestly,

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I couldn’t tell the difference between them, Chris 1 and Chris 2.

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But when I arrived in Beirut for the first time, I felt a lot of sadness.

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The city was very sad.

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But if you know the Lebanese people, they love life,

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and I am sure they will be able to overcome all difficulties,

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no matter how hard the times are.

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Honestly, I felt a lot of optimism when I saw Rawan and Ma’moun

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working eagerly to help their fellow countrymen.

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I think this important lesson must be known to all:

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there is nothing better in life than living in service of others.

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And now, this dinner table diplomacy,

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uses food and cooking to solve five issues.

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First, to eradicate poverty.

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Second, to create jobs.

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Third, to ensure food security.

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Fourth, to create job opportunities, and fifth, to avoid food waste.

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We are not the only ones saying this.

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In Kuwait, Noor Al-Obaid works through

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“Bake and Educate,”

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a school where 620 people from low-income families

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learn how to cook and become economically self-sufficient.

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Qatar Forum

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Qatar Forum worked on dinner table diplomacy

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with Georgia, Mexico, and Nigeria.

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The message is very clear:

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we don’t necessarily have to wait for

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governments or non-governmental organizations to help us.

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We can find the answer ourselves and help ourselves.

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If we have the right practical plan, strategy, and will,

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we can create wonders, create jobs,

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And support our farmers and economy to eradicate hunger

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in our neighborhood, region, country,

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and in every Arab nation.

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Even if we start with a small restaurant that serves hummus, falafel, and beans.

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