Truro News

Chocolates by Peace owner inks deal with Sobeys

- BY JAMES RISDON

“We don’t have an exclusivit­y agreement but have agreed to purchase all the product they can make.

Shauna Selig

A marriage of two businesses that started off — as do many great love affairs — with a box of gourmet chocolates is driving the growth of a start-up Antigonish chocolatie­r.

In a deal inked between Sobeys and Tareq Hadhad’s Peace by Chocolate, the national grocery store chain is going to carry the Syrian-born, Canadian entreprene­ur’s chocolates in its Atlantic Canadian stores starting in October.

“We’re really excited about it,” said Sobeys spokeswoma­n Shauna Selig. “There’s the appetite to take it nationally if they have the capacity and want to do it.

“We don’t have an exclusivit­y agreement but have agreed to purchase all the product they can make,” she said. “To start, that will be the Sobeys in Atlantic Canada and then, as they increase production, we will be letting other regions know. Product may be in Foodland and Co-op stores throughout the Atlantic as well in the future.”

Peace by Chocolate, which started out as a tiny chocolate factory in a shed, is booming and moving into much bigger digs at 746 Clovervill­e Road in Antigonish.

That’s a Sobeys-owned building. Big 8 Beverages, a Sobeys subsidiary, operates on one side of the building. Peace by Chocolate is moving into the other side with a grand opening scheduled for Sept. 9.

“It’s almost twelve times bigger,” said Hadhad. “The old factory was just a tiny shed. We moved the machines last weekend … and we are still doing the hiring.”

The company is planning to hire 15 to 25 people depending on the final configurat­ion of its production line.

The main criteria to get those jobs is simple enough: It’s a passion for chocolate.

“We just need people who love chocolate,” said Hadhad. “It’s a job that can be trained for in a week.”

Born in Syria, the physician-turned-entreprene­ur and his family left the country in 2013. After working with the United Nations and World Health Organizati­on in the region, he came to Canada as a refugee in December two years ago.

Within months, he and his family were making their first chocolates. Their adopted community of Antigonish embraced them and went so far as to help them with that shed which has housed their first chocolate factory.

It was a love affair from the start. And when Prime Minister Justin Trudeau mentioned the family’s chocolate-making business in a speech before the United Nations in September last year, Peace by Chocolate’s business skyrockete­d.

“When I opened the online store at Christmas last year, in December, there were 1,500 boxes of chocolate ordered in three hours,” said Hadhad. “People were so excited that we had to shut it down. There was no place to make that chocolate.”

Now, there will be. Although Peace by Chocolate’s products do taste great, Hadhad admits that most people are in love with the chocolates even before they taste them.

This family’s success clearly inspires many people. It’s Peace by Chocolate’s social commitment, though, that clinches it for most people.

The privately-held company, which does not disclose either its revenues or profits, takes at least a part of those profits and uses them to help others in need.

“When there were wildfires in Alberta … part of the profits … went to the relief efforts in Fort McMurray,” said Hadhad.

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