Shoppers packed a local supermarket on a recent Sunday afternoon. This supermarket, however, is not your usual suburban market. Patel Brothers in Hicksville, Long Island, carries Indian groceries, spices, snacks and household items, the kind which nearby Waldbaum's, Pathmark or Stop & Shop stores do not.
Customers pack the aisles as they taste test the fried snacks known as samosas, or search for rice or flour, basic staples of the Indian meal, amongst the shelves stocked with shiny boxes of spices and flavorings.
This large supermarket opened up as the biggest store in the Patel Brothers Plaza last year, a plaza which also features a Habib American Bank. The plaza is not just a center of commerce for the large number of Indians and other South Asians living in the area, it serves as a symbol of a prolific presence over the past two decades and one that is here to remain and flourish.
Asians on Long Island have been increasing at a rapid pace. More than doubling since 1990 when Asians only made up 2.4% of the population was, the group which now includes 16 different census categorizations, makes up 5.3% of the population according to a recent 2006 count.
Indians in Nassau numbered only 11,875 in 1990 but have also more than doubled over the course of a decade. The 2000 census revealed that the group had grown to 23,793. Including Pakistanis and Bangladeshis, who are also from South Asia, the number would be just shy of 30,000 for Indians living in Nassau County.
The growing South Asian community in Nassau eventually led to the rise of a vibrant residential and commercial area in Hicksville; the heart of Nassau County. A wide array of Indian businesses have set up shop along Route 107.
This central location makes a trip to the Patel Brothers shop an easy one for people from further out on Long Island and feasible for those who travel from as far away as Brooklyn and Queens.
Older Indian hubs in Queens, such as those in Jackson Heights and Flushing were the usual destinations for Indian residents of Long Island who needed Indian goods such Shan masala or tandoori naan, and for those who sought a temporary reprieve into their culture. Now however, many upper-class Indians make the trip out to Hicksville where they can find much of the same Indian fashion boutiques, beauty salons, grocery stores, jewelers, travel agencies, movie theatres and restaurants without the crowds and traffics of Jackson Heights and Flushing, areas where middle-class Indians continue to live and shop.
Indian Business owners have also realized the potential of this suburban clientèle which may be much smaller, but wealthier. Ginni Jaggi of Habib’s Beauty Salon explains that Habib’s is a brand in urban areas of India that sought to attract an urban and upper-class clientele which would recognize the brand name from India. “Hicksville was the right place to open up this salon because people come from all over Long Island and recognize our brand.”
Transcribed interview
A map showing the distance between HIcksville and Jackson Heights - the first Indian commercial and cultural center in Queens:
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