Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

‘eat ghareeb nawaz or else’

Existentia­l Twitter account pays homage to Indian-Pakistani restaurant where nobody goes hungry

- By Lauryn Azu lazu@chicagotri­bune.com

Almost 30 years ago Mohammed Bashir founded affordable latenight Indian-Pakistani restaurant Ghareeb Nawaz with a simple motto: Nobody goes hungry.

Generation­s of Chicagoans — late-night workers, college students, cab drivers and immigrants searching for a taste of home — have been able to enjoy Ghareeb Nawaz without hurting their wallets.

Decades later Bashir’s son, Mohammed Bozai, who helms all four Chicagolan­d locations, is retaining his father’s maxim of generous meals for a low price, expanding the restaurant to Lincoln Park in recent weeks so more Chicagoans can get the Ghareeb Nawaz experience amid record inflation pinching pockets nationwide.

The Lincoln Park grand opening received considerab­le local attention on social media, thanks in no small part to a Twitter account with a simple message of its own: “eat ghareeb nawaz or else.”

Khalil Suliman was just a fan when he began the @ ghareebnaw­azCHI Twitter account in June. He’s got plenty of fond memories of eating there — at one point on a daily basis when he was a student at the University of Illinois at Chicago — and dropping by the Devon Avenue location when he lived in Rogers Park.

Tapping into Ghareeb Nawaz’s cultish following and writing with a specific brand of millennial and Gen Z online humor, Suliman said he’s influenced by Islamic existentia­list philosophy in his approach to the account’s messages and memes, as well as pure love for the paratha, curries and chili chicken biryani

Ghareeb Nawaz doles out daily.

Ghareeb Nawaz serves classic Indian-Pakistani dishes, with inventive touches such as using heavy cream in its butter chicken, lending a silken, lush quality to the rich sauce, Bozai said. Since taking over from his father in 2008, Bozai has added menu items, including wraps and rice bowls to serve on-the-go clientele.

Mango cheesecake and butter chicken-topped fries are new dishes only available at the Lincoln Park location. But Ghareeb Nawaz’s hallmark metal trays, 99-cent breakfast specials and wall-to-wall menu are the same.

“I want to cater to everybody,” Bozai said of his Lincoln Park customers. “They’ve been so kind and nice to us over here. I don’t have the words to thank them. It’s amazing, just the outpouring of love.”

For the Oct. 17 grand opening in Lincoln Park, Suliman drummed up hype among the Twitter account’s followers, who dubbed it the “Chicago Met Gala.” Bozai said he gave away food to anybody who came in.

In the years after he took charge of the original Ghareeb Nawaz on Devon Avenue, Bozai oversaw the expansion to Lombard and near the University of Illinois at Chicago

before opening in Lincoln Park. Bozai, who attended DePaul University, felt the neighborho­od needed a halal option for its Muslim community — and the restaurant was already a proven success with UIC students farther south.

Suliman said he started the account just to see how well it would do among the restaurant’s loyal customers.

“That was kind of the whole point of creating it,” he said. “I wanted to experiment using a known brand, I guess you could say.”

But what was once parody is now a genuine branding strategy for the chain. After a few months of tweeting, Suliman

received Bozai’s full blessing to continue running the account. Now the two convene regularly to align the restaurant’s offerings with Suliman’s artistic endeavor.

Suliman said the account’s sudden growth — approachin­g 5,600 followers as of Friday morning — has surprised him. Save for a few trolls here and there, he said the response has been overwhelmi­ngly positive.

“Existentia­l humor with college students,” he said. “It goes together like peanut butter and jelly.”

As the account’s following grows, Suliman is focused on using it to centralize the affection for

Ghareeb Nawaz online, reposting fans’ dishes and praise on the page and encouragin­g Twitter users, solely, to “eat ghareeb nawaz.”

Ghareeb Nawaz’s namesake is a Sunni Islam saint, Mu’in al-Din Chishti, whose honorific translates to “comfort to the poor.” Prices for dishes skew lower, from $6 to $11, and Bozai strives to emulate the generosity his father espoused from the very start.

If someone doesn’t have the money for a dish or isn’t carrying cash (the Devon Avenue restaurant is cash only), Bozai said he tells customers not to worry, just like his dad used to do.

“I have customers that were in medical school at Loyola that come back today and say, ‘Man, we didn’t have money because we just came from India … and your dad would just give us food,’ ” Bozai said. “‘And now we’re doctors, and we want to come back.’ ”

But inflation has hit Ghareeb Nawaz like it has many other Chicago restaurant­s. To make ends meet, Bozai said they had to raise prices twice in the past year and that it pains his father — who envisioned Ghareeb Nawaz as an “Indian McDonald’s” — to see prices increase.

Despite posh surroundin­gs in Lincoln Park, Bozai said the mission and vision of Ghareeb Nawaz, cafeteria-style trays and all, will remain the same.

For Suliman, the Ghareeb Nawaz Twitter account is about making sure people know to enjoy life’s simple pleasures — such as a cheap-yet-satisfying meal from Ghareeb Nawaz — amid a fast-paced and chaotic world.

“Honestly, this has just been a very fun experience,” he said.

 ?? ERIN HOOLEY/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Owner Mohammed Bozai, born to Indian and Pakistani parents, packs takeout orders Oct. 25 at the new Ghareeb Nawaz.
ERIN HOOLEY/CHICAGO TRIBUNE Owner Mohammed Bozai, born to Indian and Pakistani parents, packs takeout orders Oct. 25 at the new Ghareeb Nawaz.

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