VPM News Focal Point
Taste of Home: Immigrant-owned restaurants in Harrisonburg
Clip: Season 2 Episode 5 | 4m 14sVideo has Closed Captions
Harrisonburg restaurant owners from Kurdistan, Mexico and Malaysia share their stories.
Harrisonburg, VA is home to immigrants from all over the world who bring their culture and cuisine to the community. Restaurant owners from Kurdistan, Mexico and Malaysia share their stories about how food brings a taste of home as they make a new life in America. With over 70 international restaurants, groceries and food trucks, Harrisonburg hosts an annual international festival.
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
VPM News Focal Point is a local public television program presented by VPM
The Estate of Mrs. Ann Lee Saunders Brown
VPM News Focal Point
Taste of Home: Immigrant-owned restaurants in Harrisonburg
Clip: Season 2 Episode 5 | 4m 14sVideo has Closed Captions
Harrisonburg, VA is home to immigrants from all over the world who bring their culture and cuisine to the community. Restaurant owners from Kurdistan, Mexico and Malaysia share their stories about how food brings a taste of home as they make a new life in America. With over 70 international restaurants, groceries and food trucks, Harrisonburg hosts an annual international festival.
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
How to Watch VPM News Focal Point
VPM News Focal Point is available to stream on pbs.org and the free PBS App, available on iPhone, Apple TV, Android TV, Android smartphones, Amazon Fire TV, Amazon Fire Tablet, Roku, Samsung Smart TV, and Vizio.
Providing Support for PBS.org
Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship(tool clanging) PARWAR SOFY: We have a grilled fish in the tandoor.
It took an hour about it to cook on there, and on charcoal, and you just smell and taste like youre back home.
DENNIS TING: It's the lunch hour rush at Pasha Rest & Cafe, and the heat is on in the kitchen to live up to its reputation.
PARWAR SOFY: You want authentic Middle Eastern food?
You want authentic Kurdish food?
The best cuisine in Virginia?
And that's guaranteed.
DENNIS TING: Parwar Sofy, the co-owner of Pasha, opened his restaurant in 2020, bringing his family recipes from Kurdistan to what has now become his new home.
PARWAR SOFY: Man, that kebab is still here to this day.
Just like back home.
You grab that meat, it just falls off just like back home.
DENNIS TING: Parwar isn't alone.
Within a few miles you can find other restaurant owners and chefs, also offering a wide range of cuisine from their homelands.
But this isn't New York City or the DC area.
Harrisonburg isn't a big city.
In fact, there are only about 54,000 people who live here.
But it is one of the most diverse cities in the state of Virginia, and that diversity is reflected in its food.
EMILY BENDER: Harrisonburg has one public high school and there are over 60 languages that are spoken in that high school.
DENNIS TING: Emily Bender is the Associate Director of Development with Church World Service in Harrisonburg, which helps refugees and asylum seekers settle into their new life in the Shenandoah Valley.
EMILY BENDER: Syrians, Afghans, Ukrainians, Congolese, Sudanese, Ethiopians, Eritreans.
DENNIS TING: That includes helping people find a taste of home.
EMILY BENDER: Okay, we know where the halal place is and we know, you know, where to point people if they're looking for certain foods.
DENNIS TING: Parwar and other restaurant owners can remember how difficult it was finding authentic food when they first moved to Harrisonburg.
PARWAR SOFY: It was hard not having those foods.
VERONICA AVILA: It was a little bit depressing because it was like you were missing out of what you were used to.
DENNIS TING: Just ask Veronica Avila.
VERONICA AVILA: Being Mexican and having that background, I was like, oh this is not Mexican.
DENNIS TING: Veronica grew up in Mexico and California.
Thanks to people like her, it's now becoming less of a problem.
VERONICA AVILA: Over 300 variety of food options here.
It's huge.
Humongous.
DENNIS TING: Veronica opened Tacos El Primo in 2006, serving authentic Mexican cuisine in the very first registered food truck in the Shenandoah Valley.
VERONICA AVILA: It kind of brings us back to our culture, to what our heritage is from families, right?
And it's passed along to our kids.
DENNIS TING: For Marina Muan, cooking is also a family affair.
MARINA MUAN: I always loved cooking 'cause when I was little, mom sells noodles in Malaysia, so that's why I love make noodles or satay.
DENNIS TING: Marina, who hails from Malaysia, started working at BoBoKo, an Indonesian restaurant, in 2016 as a chef, before taking over as the owner in January, hoping to continue sharing her culture with the Harrisonburg community.
MARINA MUAN: It's just learning people's culture and to understand them better.
And you just realize that people just, it's nice to know people from everywhere.
PARWAR SOFY: Everyone wants food, everyone needs a haircut, so you'll succeed in life with these, right?
DENNIS TING: Parwar says he learned to cook from his father, who moved his family from Kurdistan more than two decades ago, seeking a better life in the United States.
PARWAR SOFY: He had his own business back home as well.
He had a restaurant and a hookah lounge, you know, he had everything back home.
But his stuff was to have a better future for us.
DENNIS TING: Parwar says his goal for Pasha is not only to introduce Harrisonburg to his Kurdish community, it's also to offer new Kurdish arrivals a place of refuge and familiarity.
PARWAR SOFY: When they walk in and see the flag right there, they're like, “Oh, wow, you know, you're from Kurdistan.
” And they love that.
And I enjoy, you know, I enjoy helping them out.
You know, whatever I can do to help 'em out.
DENNIS TING: Parwar and other restaurateurs hope their kitchens stay busy and their dining rooms stay packed, and that sharing their food can create a more inclusive and tastier community in Virginia.
For VPM News Focal Point, I'm Dennis Ting.
Activists say Marcus Alert System isn’t doing enough
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: S2 Ep5 | 5m 8s | Advocates say the Marcus Alert System isn't protecting people with mental health issues. (5m 8s)
Connecting with ancient traditions through seeds
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: S2 Ep5 | 7m 59s | Native Americans ensure the survival of heirloom seeds that connect them with the past. (7m 59s)
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: S2 Ep5 | 3m | Lynnhaven oysters are known for their size and saltiness. (3m)
People of Virginia | Food and Culture
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: S2 Ep5 | 1m | We talked with people of Virginia about food, we found most have an emotional response. (1m)
Soul food is closely tied to Black cultural identity
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: S2 Ep5 | 8m 21s | Byron Hurt explores Soul Food and its complicated connections to the Black community. (8m 21s)
This doctor says food is, indeed, medicine
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: S2 Ep5 | 1m 39s | For centuries, there have been cultures that treat diet as medicinal. (1m 39s)
Providing Support for PBS.org
Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship- News and Public Affairs
Top journalists deliver compelling original analysis of the hour's headlines.
- News and Public Affairs
FRONTLINE is investigative journalism that questions, explains and changes our world.
Support for PBS provided by:
VPM News Focal Point is a local public television program presented by VPM
The Estate of Mrs. Ann Lee Saunders Brown