The National - News

A restaurant owner who never forgot hungry days

The owner of Dubai’s Special Ostadi who died last week is remembered by family and friends for his humility and generosity

- Naser Al Wasmi nalwasmi@thenationa­l.ae

DUBAI // Mohammed Ansari, who opened one of Dubai’s most well-known restaurant­s, Special Ostadi, and was known by his customers for his generosity and humility, died last week in Shiraz, Iran. He was 83.

The cause was kidney failure, his son Abbas said.

“His last will was ‘eat little, eat always’. It’s a very different world for him, and many people are coming back to this again, to be humble and simple and good in what you do,” said Abbas.

“My father came here during the Second World War as a child. He came looking for food. They were hungry in Iran and it took eight to nine days onboard a dhow. After he came, he worked in a store. In 1978 he opened Special Ostadi.”

Abbas said his father spent more time in the restaurant than anywhere else, including his home.

“My first memory of the restaurant, my father used to bring me after school to the old shop. He would sit me down behind the fridge on a cinder block and make me study there,” said Abbas, 37.

“We are the new generation, he came from the past generation and he wanted to keep it in the old way – no delivery, no credit cards. If you don’t have money, you can pay the next time.”

One customer recalled a day, several years ago when he went to have lunch at Ostadi only to realise that his card was blocked and could not withdraw at a nearby cash machine to pay.

“He told me pay next time, and he even gave me Dh500 and told me ‘for the groceries and your family maybe you need to buy something on the way home’,” said the customer, who wanted to remain anonymous, said.

Abbas said that since the restaurant reopened after the mourning period, a constant stream of customers were coming in to pay their respects and tell him stories about his father.

“He used to tell us never be greedy for money – he never was, but the stories I heard this last week make it even more clear,” he said.

One of the stories recalled was how almost 10 years ago his father and his best friend were on the 400-kilometre trip from Mohammed’s hometown of Gerash to Shiraz, and found a farmer selling watermelon­s in the heat on the side of the road. He bought all of them.

“His friend asked him ‘are you crazy, what are you going to do with all this?’ My father told him ‘I don’t want him to be sitting in the sun. I want him to go home and sit with his family,’” Abbas said – recalling the story that he had just heard from one of his father’s friends.

Among the many traits he has instilled in his sons, were simple attributes such as waking up early, leaving the house for prayer and conserving resources.

Mohammed Ansari is survived by his wife, three daughters, and four sons, the youngest of whom is Abbas, who said that his father was one of the few businessme­n who did not care about money.

The restaurant opened in Al Mussallah Road in 1978 and has since become one of the most well-known old restaurant­s in Dubai.

 ?? Jeffrey E Biteng / The National ?? Mohammed Ansari, owner of Special Ostadi, with his two of his four sons, Taleb Ansari, left, and Majeed Ansari. The 83-year-old who came to Dubai after being displaced by the Second World War died last week in Iran’s Shiraz because of kidney failure.
Jeffrey E Biteng / The National Mohammed Ansari, owner of Special Ostadi, with his two of his four sons, Taleb Ansari, left, and Majeed Ansari. The 83-year-old who came to Dubai after being displaced by the Second World War died last week in Iran’s Shiraz because of kidney failure.

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