| Hindville By Lavina Melwani
Hicksville reclaims its old reputation as
an Indian stronghold — this time of the desi variety.
The town of Hicksville
in Long Island was an Indian stronghold before the
arrival of the pilgrims. Not the desi variety, to
be sure, but native American Indians.
And now interestingly enough, Indians are reclaiming
the town back — the desi ones, this time! Yes, the
Indianization of this all American town, situated
in the Hempstead Plains, is taking place, one samosa
at a time. Hicksville’s Indian residents are now in
the happy position of having a lifetime’s supply of
samosas for they have not one Indian grocery store,
not two, not three, but half a dozen — all within
shouting distance of each other! That’s probably more
than most had back in their neighborhood in India.
In fact, just over the course of this year at least
four new stores have sprouted up, including two Sabzi
Mandi stores on the same stretch of road. The aroma
of tandoori food permeates restaurants and catering
establishments, such as Punjabi Dhaba, Sher-E-Punjab
catering, Kiran Palace and Rang Mahal.
Want a dosa, you have House of Dosas. Feel like rasmalai,
step into Rajbhog or Rasraj or Shaheen Sweets. And
if you need to buy a kurta or get an outfit altered
you don’t need to go to Jackson Heights or New Jersey
— there are now several boutiques within a 2-mile
radius. Hard to believe but just 15 years back, Hicksville
had just one Indian grocery store. Rajesh Kumar, who
owned Modern Bazaar, recalls that his was the only
Indian store around. Yet slowly, a metamorphosis has
taken place, driven by the rapid expansion of the
Indian population in Long Island. According to the
2000 U.S. census figures, the Indian population in
Long Island (comprising Nassau and Suffolk counties)
almost doubled to 34,333 from 17,523 in 1990. The
region is home to another 8,000 South Asians from
Pakistan and Bangladesh.
Hicksville has caught on as the center of Indian commerce
for the entire Long Island region. Why Hicksville?
According to Kumar, it’s got a lot to do with its
central location, midpoint on the Long Island Expressway,
and with Route 106-107 accessible from all directions.
With the Hicksville railroad station being the transfer
point for many travel destinations, the town has become
a magnet for Indians who work in the city and yet
look to have a suburban lifestyle and better education
and housing for their families. The train journey
to Penn Station in Manhattan takes just 45 minutes,
and there are no traffic jams to face or tolls to
pay.
“When they are progressing from Queens they are thinking
it’s a better lifestyle for the next generation,”
says Kumar, who now owns a Rajbhog franchise and a
dollar store, and himself lives in Hicksville. He
points out that all the neighboring towns like Woodbury,
Syosset, East Meadow, Bethpage, and Westbury have
large South Asian populations and for all of them
Hicksville has become the hub, as well as for the
people who are living much further east in Long Island,
in Suffolk County.
Many new immigrants are bypassing Queens altogether
as they move to the suburbs directly, where their
family members have already set roots. Businesses
from Queens are also moving to Hicksville because
of cheaper rents and better parking for their clients.
Jai-ya, a popular Thai restaurant in Elmhurst with
a largely Indian clientele, recently moved to Hicksville.
The Indian population
in Long Island doubled to 34,333 in the 1990s. “Hicksville
has been a very stable community,” observes Reena
Khera, a realtor with Century 21 Kaufman. Khera, who
sells homes in Hicksville, says, “A lot of the Queens
and Brooklyn Indians want to come into Hicksville.
The prices of homes here have gone up a lot and I
think the Indian community has a lot to do with it.
They certainly have added value to the place.”
She adds that the Indians are well respected and desired
as neighbors, because they are helpful and hospitable.
Census data shows that almost 5 percent of the population
of Hicksville is South Asian.
Sabita Mahtani, who has lived in Hicksville for 11
years, says, “There’s no need to go to Queens anymore,
it’s nice, it’s not over-populated. And for my children,
it’s really good for there are so many Indian children
in school, they have Indian cultural programs. Hicksville
High School has an Indian principal, Mrs. Brijinder
Singh.”
Hicksville boasts an Arya Samaj Temple as well as
a Ram Mandir, and the neighboring town of Plainview
has a Sikh Gurudwara. There’s a mosque in East Meadow,
just three miles away, and Vedic Heritage of New York
in the town of Hempstead. There are at least two catering
halls, Antun and Imperial Manor, which are Indian-owned,
and a host of Indian restaurants offer catering services.
With their spiritual and material needs looked after,
the South Asians of Long Island need travel no further
than Hicksville.
Satpal Malhotra, president of India Association of
Long Island, recalls: “Way back in 1980 I told my
wife about Hicksville, ‘’This is going to be the place’
and that’s what it’s turned out to be. Recently I
went to the gurudwara in Plainview and one of the
assistant granthis told me that within a month and
a half a hundred Indian families have moved into the
Hicksville area. There are so many new faces in the
gurudwara.”
“It is becoming another satellite center outside of
Queens and New Jersey. I didn’t know there were so
many Indians here,” observed Shailly Arora, a business
manager at Wipro Technologies, as she shopped at an
Indian boutique. “Since I travel to India three or
four times a year, I don’t usually shop for clothes
here, but the groceries are a real boon. They have
everything so you don’t need to bring anything back
from India.”
Patel Brothers does brisk business in its stand-alone
supermarket, as do all the other grocery stores that
have opened shop recently. The HIP Center with its
many Indian doctors and patients is a stone’s throw
away and many of the houses in the vicinity are Indian-owned.
Sohail Butt from Pakistan owns Kashmir Groceries,
which has a halal meat section to which Indian, Pakistani,
Bangladeshi and Middle Eastern customers throng for
goat meat and other meat cuts popular on the subcontinent.
Butt has been there for five years has certainly seen
a sea-change: “It’s increased tremendously. When I
came here, you could hardly see an Indian or a Pakistani
— they were so few!”
The beauty business is also thriving. Kumar observes,
“There are now ten beauty parlors in a one mile radius!
Unbelievable! One every month for the past five months!”
The list includes Aina, Sana, Trends, Femme, Roop
and Habib.
Yes, businesses are
flourishing as the grocery stores, beauty saloons,
jewelry stores and video stores have followed the
burgeoning Indian population. Part of the equation
lies in the fact that many of these businesses are
also catering to the larger American population now.
It is common to see white Americans and Hispanics
picking their fruits, vegetables and milk at Indian
grocery stores and yes, the occasional packet of samosas
and spices too.
Indian beauty saloons
are also popular with the local population, because
of the miracle of threading, which is very much an
Indian phenomenon where unwanted facial hair is removed
not by wax, creams or electrolysis, but by a simple
thread and tooth power. Eyebrow shaping is particularly
in demand by Hispanics and African Americans, whose
hair quality is thick like that of the Indians.
Not only are Indian stores sprinkled along South Broadway
down Route 107, but they have also carved a niche
in Delco Plaza, a shopping mall with a mainstream
King Kullen Supermarket and other must-haves of Americana
— Blockbuster, Hollywood Tanning and Chuckee Cheese.
At least seven Indian stores have inserted themselves
into this all-American mall and are doing well, including
an Indian restaurant.
While there is a 22-carat gold jewelry store, East
West with all the ornate wedding sets from India,
there is also Vastra, which caters more to American
customers. The owner, Poonam Jain, says that in a
nod to the locals, they have included 14 carat as
well as 18 carat to their 22 carat gold fare, and
small diamond jewelry pieces, which are popular with
their non-Indian clientele. Jain estimates there are
more than 2,000 South Asian families in a 20-mile
radius, which she researched from the Internet for
her mailing list. As she jokes, with the new Singha
Pizza opening in Hicksville, there’s now every kind
of fast food that Indians could want, from dosas to
chaat. “Now you’re not supposed to cook at home! Everything
is available including ready-made foods. For under
five dollars you can buy a good meal or dessert.”
She is, however, firm in the belief
that Hicksville will never become another Jackson
Heights, which is so central to people driving in
from Washington, Connecticut or Westchester. She points
out that since mostly Indian professionals live on
the island, they travel almost every year to India
and so never buy big ticket items like jewelry here.
“Yes, the food stores will come here, but if you think
there will be 22 jewelry stores on one street like
in Jackson Heights, that will not happen.”
Indians are opening stores with an eye on the mainstream
— mixing and matching items. Amit Banot is following
this strategy at his specialty store, Bombay Gourmet,
which has not only Indian gourmet treats like Haldirams,
Roopak Spices and Kwality ice-cream, but also olives,
chocolates and exotic olive oils and pasta sauces
found in mainstream gourmet stores. “My store is not
a regular grocery store,” says Banot. “If someone
wants to order a special eggless cake, be it Black
Forest or with strawberry or custard filling, we can
make it for them.”
At the same time, he is catering to young Indian Americans
who like gift giving the American way. So he makes
special baskets with Indian spices and cookbooks and
also special decorative baskets for rakhi or wedding
ceremonies and decorative platters for the Indian
festival of Karva chaut.
Ladi Narang of Roopam Boutique is following a similar
strategy to reach a larger customer base. “I have
an Indian customer base, but Americans are also checking
out our stuff and they really like it,” she says.
“Two little American girls who had seen Bend It Like
Beckham came in and they said ‘We want to wear Indian
outfits on the first day of our school’ so that made
me feel so good.”
She adds: “Americans are also buying the kurtis, which
are like short tunics to be worn with pants. We have
started Indo-Western styles also so that we can attract
more of the community as a whole and not just the
Indian community. That’s how it has to be — you have
to serve the larger community and I think it’s a very
good start.”
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