When Guy Fieri Saved a Syrian Restaurant in Tennessee

Before Guy Fieri started saving restaurants hit by the pandemic, he saved a Syrian restaurant on the brink of collapse

Jordan Ritter Conn
GEN
Published in
9 min readJul 20, 2020

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Guy Fieri holding and pointing to a small plaque that says “Flavortown”.
Photo: Nathan Congleton/NBC/NBCU Photo Bank/Getty Images

Riyad Alkasem was desperate.

It was 2010, and his restaurant was on the brink of closure, and with it, his dream. Riyad had arrived in America 20 years earlier, pulled from his home in Raqqa, Syria, by the promise of American democracy. Here, he’d built a family and a home, and in 2007, he’d opened a restaurant in Hendersonville, Tennessee, cooking for Southern palates the food his Syrian grandmother used to make. He called it Café Rakka, and he viewed it as a kind of bet. On himself, sure, but also on the limits of human openness and curiosity. His strategy was built on a simple idea. Anywhere on this planet, on any street corner or in any strip mall, you can find people who want food to transport them to undiscovered worlds. By giving people a plate, Riyad believed, he could take them with him to the Syrian desert. Here in Tennessee he would continue the work of his ancestors, providing sustenance for strangers as an invitation to build a common home.

But now that dream was about to crumble. The economy had plunged into recession, entering the worst period for restaurants to that point in modern history…

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Jordan Ritter Conn
GEN
Writer for

Author of The Road From Raqqa: A Story of Brotherhood, Borders, and Belonging. Staff Writer, The Ringer.