Ethnic enclave in Manhattan, New York
"
Curry Row
,"
[1]
or "
Little India
,"
[2]
and sometimes called
Curry Lane
,
[
citation needed
]
is an area of
East Sixth Street
, from
First Avenue
to
Second Avenue
,
[3]
in the
East Village
of
Lower Manhattan
, with approximately 20
South Asian
restaurants.
Curry Row started in 1968 when six brothers,
[2]
all from
Bangladesh
, bought a former
Japanese
restaurant for $1,800; the owner of the property accepted that price instead of the initial $2,000 because the brothers could only pay $1,600. The brothers established the restaurant Shah Bag because of existing demand and because the area South Asians wanted a place where they could eat
familiar cuisine
.
[4]
One of the brothers, Manir Ahmed, immigrated to the United States in 1954.
Andrew Jacobs
of
The New York Times
stated that "Manir Ahmed was the one name that was invariably stuffed in the pockets of new arrivals" and that the brothers "are revered as patriarchs in the Bangladeshi community".
[2]
Most of the restaurateurs that came to the area were from
Sylhet Division
.
[2]
The restaurants, many named after films or people or characters seen in films, were popular with
hippies
in the 1970s who expressed an interest in South Asian culture. Many of the cooks served
northern Indian cuisine
even though their native
Bangladeshi cuisine
was significantly different.
[1]
Olid Ahmed, the nephew of the first restaurateurs in Curry Row, stated that he got assistance from the chef of the Embassy of Pakistan. By the 1980s the restaurants became financially lucrative, and changes in immigration law meant there were more immigrants from Bangladesh.
[2]
In 1984 there were about 10 South Asian restaurants. In the following decade that number was 27.
[1]
By 1996,
The New York Times
reported that several of the restaurants experienced financial issues as Indian restaurants opened in other parts of the
New York metropolitan area
. With increased competition, the newspaper reported that a "price war" resulted in relationships between people being damaged.
[2]
In 2008 there were around twelve South Asian restaurants in the area.
[3]
In 2019 the South Asian-oriented publication
The Juggernaut
reported that some of the restaurants remained in operation while others had closed.
[5]
See also
[
edit
]
References
[
edit
]
40°43′37″N
73°59′15″W
/
40.72694°N 73.98750°W
/
40.72694; -73.98750
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Culture
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Restaurants/
nightlife
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Theater
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Stores
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Museums and galleries
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Other
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Former
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