National Post

Bullethole blunder

CANADIAN BAR- OWNER IN BROOKLYN ACCUSED OF ‘FAUX- GHETTO SCHTICK’

- Douglas Quan dquan@ postmedia. com Twitter.com/dougquan

In recent days, the online reviews for Becca Brennan’s fledgling restaurant and bar in Brooklyn, N.Y. have not been kind. “Embarrasse­d that this place is in my neighbourh­ood,” reads one post on Yelp.

“Can’t wait to see this business close,” says another.

The backlash started last week when Summerhill, which describes itself as a “boozy sandwich shop” with a “surf shop vibe,” began promoting itself in a way that, critics said, seemed to glorify the gritty past of its Afro- Caribbean neighbourh­ood, Crown Heights.

The bar sits on a corner that used to be occupied by a bodega with a “rumoured backroom illegal gun shop,” a press release boasted. Customers were invited to sip “bright cocktails” and munch on “unpretenti­ous sandwiches” against the backdrop of what it claimed was a “bullet hole-ridden wall.”

The marketing bl under worsened when Brennan, 31, a Toronto native and former corporate tax attorney, said in an interview the bar would serve 40-ounce bottles of rosé wine in brown paper bags.

The backlash on social media from local residents and anti-gentrifica­tion activists was swift. Brennan was accused of perpetuati­ng “faux- ghetto schitck” and being a privileged “colonizer,” who was “tone- deaf ” to the history of violence and poverty in the predominan­tly black neighbourh­ood.

A 2012 New York Times story reported Crown Heights, which in 1991 had erupted in riots between blacks and Hasidic Jews, had in recent years seen an influx of artists, young profession­als and families, all mostly white. But there remained an “undercurre­nt of unease, suspicion and resentment from some longtime residents, a legacy of the riots.” A follow- up article in 2015 noted surging rents caused by the influx of people flee- ing Manhattan — coupled with the arrival of fancy cafes and restaurant­s — was driving out many of the neighbourh­ood’s black residents.

Over the weekend, more than 100 protesters — some holding signs saying “This Is What Gentrifica­tion Looks Like!” — gathered on the sidewalk outside the bar and called for a boycott.

“You’re not going to take our pain and make it a novelty,” one impassione­d woman yelled as she stood atop a chair, as seen in a video posted to YouTube.

Tracy Reid, the owner of a store near Summerhill, told the New York Daily News that, “When you’re using the challenges we have as a community to mimic us … ( that) is very distastefu­l to the human experience.”

Gordon Douglas, a professor of urban planning at San Jose State University who spent the past year running a research institute at NYU and who came out to observe the protest, told the National Post the bar’s marketing materials seemed to celebrate the black community’s historic pain.

“It’d be different if there was a gunfight in the 1880s and (the bar said), ‘Ooh, we’re so cool, this place is so rough,’ ” said Douglas.

But gun violence is still a problem in the neighbourh­ood, he said, and many of the people who showed up to protest shared stories of personal tragedy.

Brennan reportedly was inside the restaurant during the protest, but did not come out to address the crowd.

The Canadian ex- pat said through a Manhattan public relations firm Monday that she was sorry her words had caused pain. “I made light of serious issues and that was wrong.” She said the restaurant’s decor was “not intended to make light of any aspect of Crown Heights, or its history.” (She had previously told the Gothamist blog site that she was just trying to be “cheeky” when she falsely claimed that Summerhill’s wall had been damaged by gunfire).

Forty-ounce bottles of rosé have never been sold in paper bags, she continued, apologizin­g for her “insensitiv­e comments” in that regard.

Brennan added that she intends to meet with protest organizers to listen to their concerns and that she is committed to being a “good community partner.”

“This is an opportunit­y to learn and grow that we will not let go to waste,” she said. “We are proud to be part of the community and we hope that we can continue developing the relationsh­ips we already have while healing the relationsh­ips that may have recently suffered.”

Supporters pointed out many of Brennan’s patrons and staff are black and that critics should get to know Brennan before judging her.

Last year, another Crown Heights business owner came under fire for calling a bar Crow Bar. Crown Heights was once known as Crow Hill, and some said the word “crow” had in the past been a derogatory term to refer to the neighbourh­ood’s black residents.The bar’s owner, Dan Wilby, initially didn’t know what all the fuss was about, telling local reporters he didn’t mean to offend — “but it’s a free world, I guess.”

A few months later he renamed the bar Franklin 820. Not having learned the neighbourh­ood’s history, he said, had been a “significan­t and regrettabl­e oversight.”

 ?? GORDON DOUGLAS ?? More than 100 protesters showed up outside a bar owned by a former Toronto lawyer turned restaurate­ur to call for a boycott of the business, which seemed to glorify the gritty past of the Afro- Caribbean neighbourh­ood in Brooklyn.
GORDON DOUGLAS More than 100 protesters showed up outside a bar owned by a former Toronto lawyer turned restaurate­ur to call for a boycott of the business, which seemed to glorify the gritty past of the Afro- Caribbean neighbourh­ood in Brooklyn.
 ??  ?? Customers were invited to enjoy bright cocktails with a bullethole-ridden wall backdrop.
Customers were invited to enjoy bright cocktails with a bullethole-ridden wall backdrop.

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