MTA vs. NYC Transit

In my neighborhood, there are two public transit buses that service the area.  The Q20B, an MTA bus, runs every 20-30 minutes Monday-Friday.  The Q25, a NYC transit bus, is supposed to run every 15 minutes seven days a week.

However, despite what the schedule for the Q25 states online, this bus line has been having troubles lately.  Frequently, if you were to take the Q25, you will find that two or three buses come at the same time.  If you are unfortunate enough to miss one of those buses, odds are you’ll be waiting for up to 45 minutes in order to catch another one.  This time delay gets even worse on Saturday and Sunday, when unfortunately, the Q20B doesn’t run.

“It is frustrating,” said Naji Kaseem, a Q25 passenger from Flushing.  “I work on the weekends, and this is the only bus that runs past my house.  I feel like I get home to my children later and later every day.”

I filled out a contact form on www.mta.info, but I have not received a reply.  I was wondering why the schedule is not stuck to more often, since when I ride the Q20B, I often see MTA employees monitoring what time the buses show up.  I never see these people monitoring the NYC Transit buses.

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Balancing Act

Balance Hair Salon, located on 18 Erie Street in downtown Jersey City, is unlike any salon in the area. It is a far shot away from the all-white decor salons that play ambient trance music and charge extravagant prices that many of us are used to going to in the metropolitan area. At Balance, the walls and floors are decorated with colorful murals of aliens and peace signs, the soundtrack is usually some 70’s punk or 80’s pop music, and the outside window proudly boasts, “We Fix $250 Haircuts!” and “Our Haircuts Will Get You Laid!”
Carla Anderson, the outspoken and animated proprietor of the salon, recently started peddling sex toys to interested clientele. She uses the salon to showcase local artists and musicians. She even broadcasts the goings-on of the salon to the rest of Jersey City in her local-access television series, Groovy! At 18 Erie.
What I would like to know is what prompted Anderson to open up all of these different business ventures in one centralized location, and what do her clients and employees think of her decision to do so. I would also like to find out how her shop is doing in this state of economic turmoil.

 A June art event held at Balance Hair Salon

A June art event held at Balance Hair Salon

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A Three Headed Monster to Satisfy Late Night Hunger

Have you ever been a victim of settling for late night grease (processed or unprocessed) to satisfy your late night stomach grumblings? If you happened to be stumbling around in Flushing, Queens, we have the solution.

On the corner of 39th Avenue and Prince Street, there are 2.5 restaurants adjacent to one another each having their own cult of followers, yet they are not in competition of customers. Rather, they seem to feed off of each other.

A far east variation of an American waffle house, Corner 66 restaurant would be fittingly named the pork chop house for its popular fried pork chop dish ($6.75) which is served over white rice layered with a blanket of minced beef stew along with traditional Taiwanese condiments, a hard boiled egg boiled in tea and sour cabbage.

Corner 66 is opened to 4am, seven days a week, and has upstairs and downstairs seating. Most patrons order the pork chop over rice, but whether the fried chicken leg rice dish ($6.75) is superior to the pork has always been a pre-meal debate. If you choose to deviate from the two popular rice dishes, all orders are served in rapid manner and to the freshest and most savory standards.

Diagonally across the street is Sunway, a Hong Kong style tea-house that serves colorful bubble tea into the darkest hours of the night.

Sunway is brightly lit with LCD televisions and prides itself on its extensive menu designed to satisfy all three meals and then some. The menu has the likes of spring rolls, chicken wings, noodle and rice dishes, and even lobster can be ordered at the market price. My recommendation is the shrimp and watercress dumpling noodle soup ($4.75), a bowl of skinny egg noodles in a light soup broth that are accompanied by al dente dumplings stuffed with a blend of bulging shrimp and chopped watercress.

Both of these establishments have their own fair share of intrigue, but the half sized restaurant that I find the most appealing is the nameless skewer stand.

A hot dog sized cart operated by a mother, father, and son, turns out countless skewers of barbequed chicken, beef, and squid kebobs, all for $1 each. You can see the smoke arise from the pint sized food truck all the way from Main Street where all the buses operate. Although the demographic of the servers and the customers are predominantly Chinese, the black and white text menu to the side of the car is in English, however, this is no ordinary beef and chicken stick menu.

The exotic, yet affordable menu, includes quail, fish balls, and pigeon. I have not been fortunate enough to try Queens pigeon and compare it to Manhattan pigeon since it is long gone by 4:30 am, but it will definitely be in my next report of the food truck.

It is not abnormal to see waitresses stepping out of Corner 66 for a smoke and conversing with the woman behind the grill over a chicken or beef stick, or the grill woman going on break and eating congee take out from Sunway.

It may seem that these three restaurants are unaware of the current state of our economic climate, but past 10:00pm, they own the night, filling the hearts and stomachs of the hungry and the hasty.

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Companies Compromise

Two local businesses have felt the heat of the recession causing them to come together. On Lefferts Blvd. right at the heart of Liberty Avenue, Camera Corner and Boom Boom Electronics have both been independent businesses for many years both positioned a store away from one another. However, Camera Corner store owner Haseeb Mohamed indicates that recently due to sales decreasing, rent has become an issue for most stores within this block which is why he decided to rent half of his store to Boom Boom Electronics. Boom Boom Electronics has offically moved into the Camera Corner property occupying the front portion and Camera Corner is situated in the back area.

Although this was a compromise made in order to benefit both companies, Ccamera Corner seems to suffer for other reasons now. Due to the new sign which once read “Camera Corner”  now says “Boom Boom Electronics and Camera Corner,”  most customers are not aware that Camera Corner is still in business. Especially since Camera Corner is situated in the back, most customers believe that the store no longer exists and was taken over by Boom Boom Electronics. Camera Corner store owner has this to say, “We combined the two stores to make things easier on us, however we have lost some customers by doing so because they think we have closed down.” Hopefully they will use more advertising tactics to attract customers and prosper at the same time.

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Mandala Tibetan, A Diamond in the Ruff

Mandala Tibetan

In a neighborhood where cafes and thrift shops are in high demand, there is one place that is entirely different from the “norm.”  Conveniently located on the corner of Lincoln and Seventh Avenue in Park Slope, Mandala Tibetan, the India and Nepalese establishment, is a unique addition to the area and residents of The Slope region.  One who takes the initial step onto the pavement that links the street to the shop will never be the same, at least culturally speaking.  Mandala Tibetan, or comfortably known as “Little India” holds an array of genuine India merchandise, featuring real leather, custom antiques, along with clothing and accessories that will do nothing more than leave you in an intellectual trace.  Surely, it is impossible not to venture inside and take on the experience resonating from the store.

Kunga Chonjor greets customers as they walk into the shop, a shop that embodies a platform of inner-city diversity.  With his sister handling the monetary responsibilities of the Tibetan, Chonjor spends most of his time tending to the customers that find intrigue in the store.

clothing statues

“I get customers who have seen Slumdog Millionaire and want to buy what they saw the characters in the movie wear,” said Chonjor.

According to Chonjor, the Brooklyn based Tibetan is an expansion of the Manhattan sites.  Although intentions were not to diversify the neighborhood, still the Mandala Tibetan is one representation of the assorted cultures that continue to fuse in the nation.

“We are not bringing the stores for the culture per say, we simply want to be here and make good business with the people,” he stated.

Chonjor and his sister are originally from Tibet, but the two grew up in India, where much of their original products come from.

This profile piece would be found spreading the pages of the N.Y./Region section of the New York Times.

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“A Slice of Manhattan in The Bronx”

Image25

Down the block of 238th St and Review Place, just off Broadway and a negligible walk from the 1 train, you will find what one employee described as “A little slice of Manhattan in the Bronx.” The best part? It is not another pizzeria (that’s two doors down). No, it’s the new Bronx Alehouse, in business for just over a month.

The eight months or so before its grand opening, residents were subjected to assorted construction and an eyesore of a green-colored wooden construction barrier.  The four owners worked diligently to create a brand new, and certainly welcomed, experience. The neighborhood, a formerly predominantly Irish neighborhood, maintains its roots, with two additional bars and a massive four leaf clover painted (and repainted nearly every St. Patrick’s Day) in the middle of the street. Truly, anything would have been better than the previous pub on this same spot, an “old man’s bar” with a loose collection of loyal customers and a dilapidated interior.

Needless to say, the hard work has paid off—Bronx Alehouse is quite the destination, from neighboring Manhattan College to the local “youth”, the Alehouse rarely sees an empty row of stools.  Upon walking in, you’ll first notice the brick and wood interior, the meticulously planned décor, and of course, the popcorn machine, a tradeoff for the ubiquitous pool table. Oh, and the popcorn is on the house. But to focus on the popcorn is nothing shy of an insult. When asked what their pride and joy was, Brian Duffy, the daytime bartender replied, without the least trace of hesitation, “Our beers!” And beers they have—fifteen on tap, all but one consistently cycled throughout the seasons (loyalty to Guinness never wavers). Image26

But what is an affordable beer without equally affordable (and surprisingly tasty) greasy bar food? You certainly won’t find a larger burger in your usual bar, or a set of tastier fries. As for fried pickles? Gitouttahere. Happy “hour”? 11-7, $4 beer. Cheers.

Bronx Alehouse, the only specialty beer location in the Bronx, certainly makes one thing clear, with their sign prominently displayed on the front door, their extensive collection of experienced bouncers, and their $1500 ID scanner—no one under 21 is getting inside. The setting may be new, but all those involved are seasoned veterans, and they are certainly not risking their dazzling investment on the premature valor of the under aged.

Potentially found in Daily News, Money-Spotlight on NYC small business

Image source (first image):  http://www.bronxalehouse.com/ordereze/images/items/IMAGE25.JPG

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A Day at the Park

A few years ago the corner by 170th street and Morris Avenue in the Bronx was a vacant lot with overgrown grass. They renovated the lot and built Grant Park, a small area where people in the community can relax, sit on the benches, run for exercise, or kids can play in the grass. Currently, they are extending the park because there was some empty space left over.

The parks department has done a great thing turning these empty lots into something that can be used by the community.

For this story, I would interview people around the community and attend a community board meeting to see how people view the park. Do they like it or do they feel like the money could be used for something else? Depending on the response, it could be a profile story on the park or a critical story about it.

I would put this in the local section of the Daily News, for the Bronx.

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Trump On The Ocean: Still Floundering

For a few years, Donald Trump has been foiled in his attempts to open a high-end restaurant at the main boardwalk at Jones Beach. The old restaurant, a beautiful 1930s era building constructed when Robert Moses designed the beach, was demolished, and in its place nothing but four construction site walls and a sign proclaiming “TRUMP ON THE OCEAN” has stood since 2007.

Apparently, Trump wanted to avoid paying taxes to the town of Wantagh, to which Jones Beach State Park belongs, and encountered much red tape while attempting to do so. He also wanted the eatery to include a basement, unaware of various rules of geology and physics which make it impossible to dig down more than ten or so feet when on a floodplain, especially one at a beach- the water table is too high, and every time the tide rises, his chic restaurant would be underwater.

Upset that the laws of nature would not allow him special privileges, Trump seemed to have hit the proverbial wall. The Trump sign was gone for a few months.

Recently, however, to the chagrin of many residents who would rather not have the Don in their neighborhood, the sign is back. There are two, in fact- one now graces the Field 6 parking lot, its promise of  “Parking for TRUMP ON THE OCEAN” leading unsuspecting beach goers to a restaurant that does not yet exist.

The website (http://www.trumpontheocean.com/home.html) would have you believe the place is up and running, what with all the pictures of Miss America drinking Bellinis on the shore, but there has been little if any actual construction, although the site says that they anticipate a Summer 2010 opening.

I would like to investigate the history of the situation, the circumstances behind the possibility of this restaurant being constructed, the effect on the community and Jones Beach, and the reactions of residents to the restaurant.

Rachel Vincent

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Finding Joy in the Recession

rockland conservatory of music 1rockland conservatory of music 3When you think of the emotional effects of a recession, you probably think of insecurity, depression, and a worthlessness that can even lead to risk of suicide.  But you don’t expect to hear that for some, the current recession has been their ticket to joy and meaning.  The venue for this joy?  Music.  The Rockland Conservatory of Music has seen expansion in the face of the recession:  “We have expanded programs in order to include members of the community we might not have engaged before,” Marigene Kettler, Executive Director of the Rockland Conservatory of Music, told me on Friday.  The recently unemployed, she said, “now have time to pursue something they really want…something in life that lasts.  People are looking to invest in something that actually has a long term investment…something that really gives them joy.”

            This article will discuss the ventures the Rockland Conservatory of Music has undertaken to make music more affordable.  It will discuss their broad range of clientele and will include quotes from interviews with staff, adults and children participating and benefiting from the music they have to offer.  

http://www.samhsa.gov/economy/ This link provides an interesting contrast; it is the government’s “advice on how to deal with the effects financial difficulties can have on your physical and mental health.” 

http://www.rocklandconservatory.org/

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Lack of Space

Picture

Last month, I read an article in Washington Post about muslims in Washington D.C. and Virginia renting space for prayer during the Islamic Holy month of Ramadan. They were renting the synagogues for prayer increased my interest in the story.

I live in a Orthodox Jewish/South Asian neighborhood of Brooklyn. There are three mosques in my neighborhood. Makki Mosque is the biggest of the three and it is the biggest mosque in Brooklyn. Makki Mosque is located on Coney Island Avenue between Glenwood Road and Avenue H. It has been under construction since last year. I decided to visit the mosque and see if the attendees had increased during the Ramadan. One regular Sajjawal Akbar said, “We need more space for Ramada. Sometimes people are praying on footpath.” It will take a while for the construction of Makki Mosque to complete, Islamic law known as Sharia prohibit borrowing money with interest.

I would tag this story to New York Daily News, because they have Brooklyn section on their website. I would like local Brooklyn paper Brooklyn Eagle to cover this story as well.

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Bad Luck Block?

My proposal for a story is about a block on Main Street, Queens. There are about ten small businesses that currently occupy the store fronts of this block. There is a pizza shop on one corner, and a dance ballroom on the other, in between are a range of stores, including a grocery and candy shop. However, this block is plagued by signs proclaiming “For Rent” and the like. Most businesses close just after they hang up their sign. In the past year a bakery, Thai restaurant, and paper goods store have closed. Seemingly, there is no correlation between each of these stores shutting down.

In this article, I would interview one of the grocers and the lady who owns the candy shop to see if there is a reason for the demise of all these businesses, those that were only open for a week, or one that has been open for years. It might really be a bad luck block, or maybe the recession is finally sinking it’s teeth into this community.

I would tag this article to the Daily News Local section, since Kew Gardens Hills is listed there, and there are no stories in that section as of now. http://www.nydailynews.com/ny_local/your_neighborhood/community_reports/index.html?DataType=1&State=NY&nhood=Kew%20Gardens%20Hills

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Learning for Free

One day while looking through my e-mails I found one that stated that they were offering free French and Spanish courses at the Harlem Children’s Zone for adults. Since it was the summer and I didn’t have anything particularly important to do at the time I decided to register and take the French class. I thought it was a good idea because it was a free class, and in America when do you really get anything free. On July 1, 2009 I began taking my French class at the Harlem Children’s Zone (which I am still taking).

I think what the Harlem Children’s Zone is providing to its neighborhood and for the adults in New York City is a great idea. This program provides a service that helps teach you a new language at no cost. In the economic situation that most people find themselves in finding something that is really free is hard to do. In my time taking classes at the Harlem Children’s Zone it has been a great experience for me as well as the classmates that attend class with me.

On of the other great experiences I had was meeting my professor, Rudolph Solis. He is the type of professors that will stay after class is over to help us with anything we don’t quite understand. He will repeat things over and over to make sure we understand. And if we still don’t get it he will repeat it again. He will also write the word out so that we get a better idea of how it sounds. After interviewing him on the phone for this article about the Harlem Children’s Zone I realized that his life was much more interesting than I expected. He told me that he is a person that does not like to be boastful about all he has done. What I will tell you about him is that his first goal was to be a doctor. But, through a series of circumstances he became a professor. After many years he retired. When he joined the Harlem Children’s Zone, 2 years ago, he thought he was going to be a volunteer, and it was after he had arrived that he realized it was a job. He told me that the best part of teaching was “to know that you are helping” the students. He also stated that more programs like the one given in Harlem Children’s Zone would be a great idea because programs like this help people “regardless of their race to learn whatever they can”.

I believe that more stories like this one should be reported on more often because it can help people learn a new language, get to meet new people, and the best part is that it is FREE.

 

 

 

Professor Rudolph Solis
Professor Rudolph Solis

 

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Junk spot? Hardly

My news story proposal is about the concrete skateboard area that recently sprung up behind Liberty State Park in Jersey City. The area, known as “the junk spot”, was built without city approval or supervision in July and has immediately attracted skateboarders of all ages from all over the Garden State. Despite the park’s popularity, little is known about the four men who designed and built it.
I intend to interview the three principal architects as well as visiting skaters from across New Jersey. What would drive these men to build on this vacant location? I would also like to gather quotes from Jersey City officials and find out their opinion on this unregulated and uninsured skateboard haven. Since I couldn’t upload a photo (I do not own a digital camera), I have attached a video link from Youtube.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0eM5CGBmL0A

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Private nursing home are feeling the squeeze from the recession

Brandywine Assisted Living at the Savoy

For many years, private nursing homes such as the Brandywine Assisted Living at the Savoy have reaped huge benefits from families who want their elderly members to enjoy the remainder of their lives under professional care. Savoy boasts of its “affordability” and its elegant environment that puts even luxurious hotels to shame. Located on the Queens / Nassau border, it is home more to members of the wealthier community of Long Island than to members of the Little Neck neighborhood. With today’s recession, however, it is private nursing homes feeling the squeeze of the drying economy. Hotel-like living quarters and care come at a price that many struggling households can no longer afford to pay. With families now turning away from its private care for more affordable state care right across the street at the Little Neck Nursing Home, Savoy is losing both residents and prospective clients alike.

For Savoy and nursing homes across the United States, the dilemma they now face is how to reduce costs without worsening the care and comfort they offer to their residents. Gardens must be well kept, dining rooms must replicate upscale restaurants, furniture must be in pristine conditions, and on-site nurses must remain on-site 24/7– nothing, ultimately, can be compromised because it is these conditions that Savoy boasts and guarantees. It is these factors that appeal to families in search of new homes for their aging loved ones. The largest challenge that Savoy must resolve as soon as possible is finding a perfect balance between the two. Having more volunteers, while helpful, is not the solution because volunteers have neither the training nor the qualifications to take care of Savoy’s elderly residents. For now, this question still remains unanswered.

(Can be found in the Daily News, Business section of New York Times)

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In low-key community, an illusory increase in people

Garages converted into living spaces

Garages converted into living spaces.

Fresh Meadows, a neighborhood in Queens, has had a population increase in recent years – an increase that won’t show up in the 2010 Census. Households with school-age children feel the change through the increased enrollment in the neighborhood elementary school, middle school, and high school. Residents of the area see an increase in the number of people who spend their days in the neighborhood park. Yet, there has been no residential developments in the area to bring in these new residents.

The evidence can only be found in the classifieds section of the World Journal, a Chinese language publication. The pages are filled with advertisements of housing units for rent in the Fresh Meadows area. These units are actually garages that have been illegally converted into living quarters, usually complete with a bathroom and a stove.

Over the past ten years, more and more Chinese families moved from nearby Flushing into the once mostly Jewish neighborhood. The families looking for homes usually have small children, who could attend the community’s schools. Fresh Meadows’ schools belong to School District 26, one of the best school districts in New York City. Many of the newspaper’s ads use this point to attract new residents. The landlords can often bring in an extra 800 dollars a month through collecting the rent.

The area’s zoning laws do not allow for two families per house. Unhappy neighbors can (and often do) submit a complaint to the Department of Buildings. Recently, a house down the block was found under violation of zoning laws, and the owners were forced to remove the compartmentalization of the house. The number of housing violations in the neighborhood can be found on the NYC Department of Buildings’ website.

( This article might appear in the Daily News, Newsday, the Metro section of the NYTimes, Queens Courier)

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New Condos in Old Neighborhoods

Greenpoint Pencil Factory Condominiums, image courtesy of Flickr.com

Greenpoint Pencil Factory Condominiums, image courtesy of Flickr.com

Fact: condos are nice. In Williamsburg and Greenpoint, they offer many things one rarely used to see in these old, somewhat industrial neighborhoods, like  new construction, modern architecture, and many luxury amenities, to name a few. They attract a hip, new crowd which helps give a small neighborhood a culture and vitality it may not have had before.

But if you walk through these neighborhoods, there a distinct disparity between these new condos and the older construction of the rest of the neighborhood. The intent is obvious, and many people like the idea of merging the old with a touch of new. It really is an attractive idea in theory, symbolizing an update of the area but still retaining old charm, but I have to question the practicality of it. It seems that these condos aren’t selling as well as developers and owners would like and the result is half-empty complexes and projects shutting down mid-construction.

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Here Today, Gone Tomorrow

About once a week, my apartment is filled with the sounds of excited laughter, high-pitched squeals, and endless chatter.  The explanation to an outsider would be simple – I live near a playground, right?

Wrong.  Amidst the sea of identical two-family homes on my street in College Point, Queens, sits this drab, uninviting “park” – at least according to its name, Powell Cove Park.  It holds no swings, no slides, no sandbox.  Yet every week, there they are – 30 or so children, running carefree through the overgrown grass for no longer than a half an hour.

SD531490

Normally, I would say “so be it.”  It’s their parents’ problems when their kids come home covered in filth.  But there’s my issue – only when the crowd disperses for the day have I ever seen an adult in the throng of what appear to be second-graders.  So where do they come from? There’s no distinguishable pattern to what time or day they appear.  The nearest elementary school is over ten blocks away, and it has its own playground for recess hours.

I would need to look out for when they next appear; then I could ask some questions to any adults that show up.  This article could be in a publication like The Daily News, since they tend to publish small pieces about neighborhood issues.

Mary Iannone

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Residents Protect a Lower East Side Oasis

By Douglas A. Hinnant

Dollars & Sense multimedia feature

The Green Oasis and Gilbert’s Sculpture Garden, deep in the East Village, is a place of both tranquil respite and family hustle and bustle. It is in many ways the heart of a neighborhood that still takes pride in its families and relatively quiet streets. But some residents fear the garden’s days may be numbered.

 

Continue reading

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Unleashing your inner Gypsy Rose Lee

By Silissa Kenney

Dollars & Sense multimedia feature

New York City may have undergone another scrubbing, the seedy nightclubs and topless ladies of Times Square replaced with shining beacons of advertising, chain stores and restaurants. But burlesque has made a comeback, full of sizzling and sultry fun. Dancers are again twirling their pasties and hypnotizing delighted audiences with their theatrics and allure. 

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Integrating Long Island, the Halal Way

Previously the location of the Long Island Muslim Society, the newly built

peach Mosque with curved white trimmed windows has set up shop right next to

the Church, its there for one sole purpose, to provide services for the local

Muslim community which is scattered through out East Meadow. This is not the

only way that The town of Hempstead is integrating to provide a social and

economical habitat for the Muslim kind. Four Islamic centers, halal items at the

“American” grocery store, Quran classes, and even the library is holding Islamic

information lectures.


The Town of Hempstead which is predominantly white, 74.65% of 755,924

people according to the 2000 census is slowly being changed to feed the needs

of the growing Muslim South Asian population. Four Islamic centers which

provide prayer services for all, as well as Islamic classes for women, children

and teens. Neighbored by halal grocery stores and restaurants that cater to the

South Asian community, and now even supermarkets like Pathmark located in

East Meadow is offering Al-Safa hala frozen food.

According to the members of Jamm-e Masgid in North Bellmore, next door

to East Meadow, there are more young people attending Friday services. The

mosque also provides Sunday school for children so that they can learn about

Islam, and lessons in classical Arabic to read the Quran. More woman have

also been spotted around town sporting a hijab. Even local universities like

Hosfstra are providing classes for woman to gain knowledge and connect with

fellow sister’s, they also have hosted woman only Eid-ul fitr events and woman

only fashion shows, which is also becoming a trend itself across many colleges in

New York, like CUNY Baruch, which held theirs two weeks ago by the

Women in Islam club.

“Many woman have started wearing hijab, a lot of young girls” says Nelo

Sheikh, a local resident, her daughter Natasha also stated that there have been 7

more South Asians, especially Pakistani students now attending her high school.

There are at least 46 Muslim students in the 11th and 12th grade at East

Meadow high school according to Sabih, a Pakistani American senior at the

school.
Zayed another local and attendee of Friday prayer services at Jamm-e

Mosque also a student at CUNY Baruch, says “ I’ve seen more youth coming

in, I meet more people with similar culture, background as mine when I go to

pray.”

There is a new Mosque which has been built and awaiting its’ grand opening. That mosque is located in East Meadow. It was the location of the previous Long Island Muslim Society, which opened in Hicksville initially, then settled on East Meadow Avenue by Bangladeshi immigrants.

The first priority of this newly formed executive committee was to teach the Muslim children how to read and understand the Qur’an. As a result, in June 1991, a small facility off of Hempstead Turnpike in Levittown was rented. This place was mainly used to hold Friday and Saturday Qur’anic classes. Iftar parties and Eid reunions were held here as well.” States the LIMS.org website.  Though the new Mosque is being built in East Meadow many locals are planning to still attend the one in Bellmore,
“It’s a Bengali Masjid, and I prefer my own language, and then it depends on how good his English is.” says Zayede.

The Al-Maghrib classes that were held at Hofstra University, and will be moving to New Jersey next, says Zahra a resident of Rockville Center and Baruch College junior. “I enjoyed them so much, it’s nice meeting new sisters at these type of places, you come across people with similar ways of thinking as you.” She also states “there’s been an increase of college students taking interest in the religion, starting to practice it more, it makes me happy.”

According to MSA.org, there is an MSA in almost every campus across the United States. “We had over 700 students representing nearly all 22 states across the East Zone. The east zone attendees participated in inspiring lectures delivered by some of our greatest scholars and speaker throughout North America.” Says Tauqeer Zaidi
East Zone Representative – USA MSA National.

The growing population of Muslim students at Nassau CC and Hofstra university has become a business opportunity for the Halal food industry. A Kennedy Fried Chicken fast food restaurant is a favorite amongst many local college students. “The burgers are huge, I love it!” says Zain Huda. Gigi’s is a pizzeria that has coverted to selling halal Italian food, it is also located 2 blocks from the newly built Mosque, close to Indus Spice grocery store, and near Nassau CC and Hofstra University. My personal favorite is the buffalo chicken pizza.

Muslim establishments across Long Island have been increasing. In an area that is predominantly white, there is a flow of South Asians moving in and changing the demographics as well, 8% of the population was reported to be Asian and other race in 2000. The neighborhood is changing; I myself have been part of the change, moving into East Meadow in 2003 I have seen atleast 2 other Pakistani families buy houses around my block, and viewing my brothers year book I can vouch that mine was composed of a lot less South Asian and even more less Muslims. The change is something that the town is welcoming not opposing. It’s integrated peacefully and gives the older residents a taste of South Asia in their backyard.

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