| It’s
10:30 on a Tuesday night in Karachi. The KFC outlet on Main
University Road in Gulshan-e-Iqbal is not too busy. There are
four groups of customers scattered around the clean restaurant.
If it wasn’t for an overhead sign that greets customers
on entering, there would be little hint that this KFC is any
different from the others across the city: music is blaring
overhead, the menu up high behind the counter looks the same
and the staff move around in the standard red and black uniforms.
But
there is a difference. A powerful difference. And the sign says
it all: “Proudly operated by hearing and speech impaired
team members.”
At
this KFC, 27 deaf staff take orders, cook and clean over two
shifts, covering every minute of the restaurant’s operation,
seven days a week. Open since April 18, it was the first restaurant
of its kind in Pakistan. There is now a similarly run KFC in
Lahore, and there are plans for another in Rawalpindi.
But
this difference doesn’t make ordering difficult. Illustrative
mini-menus are fixed to the counters, so customers can easily
point out their orders. The more adventurous can try signing
their orders. It may sound daunting, but is surprisingly easy.
Large posters display the hand gestures for each menu item.
The signs for fries, chicken, tea and even corn on the cob are
all intuitive. To order corn, for example, with your index finger
pointing out, raise your right hand to your mouth, touching
your jutting index finger to your lips.
And
don’t worry. If you get stuck, there are hearing-abled
communicators to bridge the communication gap. So far, however,
in the almost seven months of operations there have been few
problems with the public. “One out of 100 customers complain,”
says Amjad Ghani, manager at the Gulshan outlet, explaining
there are people who are not accepting of the changes in the
ordering process.
Efficiency
in the restaurant remains unaffected, though. Around the kitchen,
bells have been replaced with light bulbs to indicate when orders
are ready. And the staff move around competently and confidently.
The opportunity to work and prove themselves has meant a lot
to the employees.
“This
is my first job,” says Salman, 22, in sign language. He’s
been at the restaurant since day one. He had a few problems
at first, adjusting to the new environment and interacting with
the public, but now he says he’s “comfortable and
happy.”
And that’s
exactly the vibe the restaurant emits: comfortable and happy.
In the end, the differences at this KFC are minor, and if anything,
they add to the dining experience..
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