New York Daily News

Coffee shop nixed treats for black kids

- BY ELLEN MOYNIHAN and RICH SCHAPIRO

A BROOKLYN coffee shop has turned into a neighborho­od pariah after it was accused of doling out Halloween treats to white children only.

The Strand Cafe on Nostrand Ave. in Bedford-Stuyvesant has come under fire on social media and at its location since a pair of prominent residents aired their account of discrimina­tion.

“Tricks for some, treats for others,” read one sign plastered on a window Saturday, complete with a drawing of a crying pumpkin.

“It’s absolutely disgracefu­l when other people come into black communitie­s and try to change the whole atmosphere of a community,” said Iman Essiet, 27, after she stopped to look at the signs. “I think this specific establishm­ent needs to be shut down.”

The furor erupted Tuesday afternoon after Oma Holloway and Michael Catlyn, both members of Community Board 3, stopped in to the cafe for a tea and coffee.

The pair were waiting online when they saw the lone cafe worker turn away three different sets of costumed black children out trick-or-treating with adults, Catlyn said.

But a pair of white kids, with an older woman, received a much different response. The man behind the counter pulled out a glass jar of individual­ly-wrapped cookies and eagerly doled them out, Catlyn said.

“I couldn’t believe what I was seeing,” said Catlyn, 54, who’s lived in the neighborho­od for 32 years. “I was thinking there is no way this is happening right now.”

Catlyn said he and Holloway immediatel­y called out the worker who tried to apologize in broken English.

The pair weren’t having it and walked out without their beverages.

Holloway posted a brief account of the incident on Facebook, prompting a wave of angry replies.

Soon the Strand’s Yelp page was inundated with one-star reviews and scathing comments.

“Get your coffee with a side of racism, apparently,” one poster wrote.

A man who identified himself as the owner eventually posted a message on Yelp, describing the incident as a misunderst­anding.

The man said the cafe had nothing on-hand to give to trick-ortreaters. “If a child received an item, it was because it was purchased by a parent, not because we favor children over others,” he said. “That would be completely inappropri­ate as well as against our core values of decency.”

Catlyn said members of the community board had a productive Saturday meeting with the owner who told them the worker had since apologetic­ally admitted to the act. “We’re trying to use this as a teachable moment and get a positive outcome,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States