A restaurant in Dubai is doing its business a bit differently by adding a little dose of philanthropy to it.

The Kebab Shop located in the Dubai Silicon Oasis has a board outside the shop that is not advertising for food but offering free meals to jobseekers. The board reads: "If you are unemployed and looking for a job, drop by for a meal on us. Don't think of it as charity, you can come back to pay us whenever you can."

Over a year ago the Pakistani-Canadian entrepreneur Kamal Rizvi, who owns the DSO branch of the restaurant, said there was an incident that led to the launch of this initiative. "We had a pair of customers who would visit us on a daily basis and would have their meals here and spend good time chatting at our restaurant. This was a second home to them. But after sometime, I noticed that one of them stopped coming."

On inquiring, Rizvi found that the man had lost his job and to curb his expenditure stopped coming out to eat. "I was sad to hear that and I told his friend to tell him to continue coming here and eating his meals as he used to. I told him don't consider it charity but consider it like a loan and later if he gets a job and wants to pay then he can come back and pay.

"He started visiting again and I saw how happy, grateful and full of energy the friends were," said Rizvi. "This led me to think how many more such people would be struggling out there who probably would be even skipping meals to cut their expenditure. I decided that I will start an initiative where such people will be comfortable. That is why I have mentioned on the board that 'don't think of it as charity'. People should not feel embarrassed or feel hesitant to come."

A Dubai-resident for nine years now, Rizvi has given strict instructions to his staff to not ask any questions, or for any ID proofs, or paperwork to any customer who wants to avail the free meal. "All that the customer has to say is point to the board outside and the staff won't ask any questions. The staff will simply ask the customer if he wants vegetarian or non-veg meal; rice or roti meal. Accordingly, our staff will serve them either biryani or else roti with a curry along with a cold drink."

Asked about how often the restaurant gets such customers, Rizvi said: "They come randomly, sometimes one or two a day some days we even get a group of three or four friends but mostly they don't come repeatedly. They usually come and sit shyly in a corner of the restaurant and we serve them just like any other customers. Many of them get so overwhelmed that they write thank you notes on paper napkins and leave them on the table."

On being asked if any customer has come back to pay back for the meal he had, Rizvi said: "Yes, although very few but people have returned to our restaurant asking us how much they owe us and all we say is give what you feel like because we do not keep record of such service. You can pay us whatever you feel like."

'A sense of happiness and peace'

Pakistani-Canadian entrepreneur Kamal Rizvi, said there is certain happiness and peace he experiences through this initiative. "It doesn't cost me much by feeding a couple of people a day because Almighty Allah has given me enough to be comfortable and there is a sense of completion and peace I feel when I am able to serve people in one or the other way."

Giving out his message of hope to all, Rizvi said: "If even a few percentage of restaurants contribute this way to the society then no one will sleep hungry, no one will suffer a loss, it will only lead to a happier and a healthy society."

Rizvi also intends to start something similar in Karachi, Pakistan, where he is looking to tie up with restaurants and banquet halls so as to collect the surplus food from them, repack it and distribute it among the needy.

Copyright © 2018 Khaleej Times. All Rights Reserved. Provided by SyndiGate Media Inc. (Syndigate.info).

Disclaimer: The content of this article is syndicated or provided to this website from an external third party provider. We are not responsible for, and do not control, such external websites, entities, applications or media publishers. The body of the text is provided on an “as is” and “as available” basis and has not been edited in any way. Neither we nor our affiliates guarantee the accuracy of or endorse the views or opinions expressed in this article. Read our full disclaimer policy here.