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He couldn't get inexpensive Indian food to eat. Dealing with strangers
throughout his working day, he needed a place where he could meet other
cab drivers and exchange a few words.
What was
more important was that there were few public restrooms.
"When
I was driving a cab, and I had to use the bathroom, I usually had to stop
at gas stations, of which there are very few," said Singh in Hindi.
"And often the restrooms were not clean and they had no toilet paper."
So, when
in 1993, he decided to start his own business, he knew exactly what would
work. A cab-and-curry restaurant where city drivers can pull over, have
a quick bite, and also use the coveted little room.
Taxis:
"A sweatshop
on wheels"
Bhairavi
Desai, founding member of the Taxi Workers Alliance
in New York

PHOTO: Kalyanaraman
"Imagine
40,000 people working 12 hours a day on minimum wage without a place
to rest and relax, or even restrooms. That is the City taxi system,
a sweatshop on wheels.
"The
drivers cannot leave their taxis in taxi stands and these stands
have no restrooms.
"The
cab drivers are always on the move. They do not get any exercise.
One of our surveys found high levels of diseases like kidney problems,
back aches and heart problems. And they do not even have medical
insurance."
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Singh's Punjabi
Deli at Houston and First Avenue offers relief to cab drivers, as well
as six different vegetable curries, rice, Indian bread and seven desert
items.
At 9 p.m.
on a recent evening, Mohammed Rahman walked into the Punjabi deli, nodded
to Singh, and headed straight for the bathroom.
A few minutes
later he emerged, ordered his standard $3 bowl of curried chick peas,
and commented on the importance of Singh's store for cabbies who rarely
get a chance for a break.
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Kulwinder
(right) is a former cabbie himself. PHOTO: Kalyanaraman
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"If
you want to take rest, how can you support yourself and family,"
he asked, shuffling out of the door and back to his cab.
The deli
is open 24 hours. Singh, who immigrated to the U.S. from Punjab in 1974,
says that besides cab drivers and students, other New Yorkers looking
for inexpensive Indian food also come to his restaurant.
A few others
walking by the shop also drop in sometimes, their curiosity kindled by
the strong smell of curry wafting over the sidewalk near the basement
deli.
Referring
to his deli which was crowded even at 11 p.m., Singh said, "It is
all God's grace," and added the customary Sikh salutation, "Sat
Sri Akal," which can be loosely translated as "God is Eternal."
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