Mail & Guardian

‘I travelled the world; SA was special’

- Photo: Rogan Ward

I am from Yuzhno-sakhalinsk, on Sakhalin Island. It’s eight hours from Moscow and one hour from Tokyo. We have a whole community of Russian Koreans, we call them Saram. They were brought there in the war as slaves.

My son’s father is Korean. His grandmothe­r taught me all the secrets of Korean food.

I worked in the petrochemi­cal industry for 10 years. That’s what brought me to South Africa. I had to mobilise 1 000 engineers, including South Africans.

The company sent me here. It was easier. That was in 2005.

Since then I cannot complain. I travelled the world, but for me South Africa was special. For me, when I thought about where I wanted to live, I thought of South Africa all the time.

I started working in the travel industry. I became an agent for the Russian market. In two years I built a business of R10-million a year.

Then Covid happened. I was retrenched. I don’t cry about it. I really feel for people in the travel industry. It suffered the most, from what I see.

I plan to go back to travel. My clients will be waiting for me. It is not easy to work with Russians.

I had never run a coffee shop before. I did do a business plan to open a Russian restaurant in Malaysia, for somebody else.

Covid made it very hard. I had just opened and they closed the schools again.

I started selling Russian and Korean food.

Then we had looting. I wasn’t looted, thank God, although it affected us. I had to spend five hours to stock-up — three hours outside and two hours at the till.

What I like about Glenwood, the vibe is good. People don’t turn their noses up. The people like to try Russian and Korean food.

I walk the dog every morning. Yes, you need to be careful, but you can enjoy the environmen­t, just remove your jewels. — Elana Terentenye­ra, owner of Wendy’s Deli in Glenwood, Durban, as told to Paddy Harper

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