San Francisco Chronicle

Rival gang members unite at unique Los Angeles cafe

- By Russell Contreras Russell Contreras is an Associated Press writer.

LOS ANGELES — In a different time, at another place, and under other circumstan­ces, you might have run away from Latisha Valenzuela and Glenda Alvarenga. But at Homegirl Cafe, a Los Angeles breakfast and lunch spot with a Latino twist, the two waitresses welcome you with smiles and friendship.

“You alone?” Valenzuela asked when I recently visited. “Don’t worry. We’ll keep you company.” After seating me, she tells me, “you’ll want our cinnamon coffee. We make it ourselves.” She says it as if we’ve been friends since middle school.

Here, in the City of Angels, Homegirl Cafe offers a unique dining experience with food prepared by former gang members gaining new skills. It’s a haven for them, to be sure. But the popular cafe in the city’s Chinatown is a special place for visitors, too, providing carefully crafted meals along with inspiratio­n from ex-inmates who willingly tell stories about how they are seeking a better life.

And where these hands once hurt others, now they are steering their energies to serve pleasurabl­e, satisfying dishes made with love and perseveran­ce.

The hip cafe is an offshoot of the Homeboy Industries social enterprise­s founded by Jesuit priest Greg Boyle. After working in one of the city’s poorest and most gang-plagued regions, he quickly found out that businesses wouldn’t hire former gang members and inmates, even when they had marketable skills. So, he formed nonprofit businesses aimed at giving jobs and training to the “least of these,” as the poor and vulnerable are described in Scripture.

He formed Homeboy tortillas, Homeboy bakery and then, Homegirl Cafe.

Trainees learn all aspects of culinary arts while developing social skills that create tender encounters with visitors. In addition to job training, the former gang members can take advantage of tattoo removal, anger management classes and drug treatment.

Former enemies become friends. Instead of trading gunshots, they shoot playful texts to each other. That tenderness is passed along to customers, who include writers, lawyers, actors and teachers.

Actress Diane Keaton once came in for brunch with a guest. A waitress, a former gang member who’d spent time in prison, went to serve her. Keaton asked for advice on platos and the waitress gave her suggestion­s. Then, it hit the waitress.

“Wait, I feel like I know you,” the waitress reportedly said. “You so look familiar.”

“Oh I don’t know,” Keaton said. “I must have that face.”

“No. Now I know,” the waitress said. “We were locked up together!”

The story always gets a laugh, but Boyle retells it to highlight the power of kinship, and how a former gang member and an Oscar winner connected in a most unlikely place.

 ?? Jae C. Hong / Associated Press ?? Maria Hidalgo, 26, talks to a co-worker while preparing food in the kitchen at Homegirl Cafe in the Chinatown section of L.A.
Jae C. Hong / Associated Press Maria Hidalgo, 26, talks to a co-worker while preparing food in the kitchen at Homegirl Cafe in the Chinatown section of L.A.

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