MalayMail/AFP-Nov 22
In what claims to be the only woman-run cafe in the capital of Indonesia’s most conservative province, owner Qurrata Ayuni says she and her baristas provide an alternative to rowdy, smoke-filled male haunts. The 28-year-old opened Morning Mama last year to create a space that caters to women in Banda Aceh, known as the city of 1,001 coffee shops. “I thought why not open a place that is comfortable for women?” she said. While the province has long been known as the site of the world’s deadliest tsunami and a decades-long separatist insurgency, Aceh’s draw for visitors is often the coffee. The traditional “sanger” latte, mixed with condensed milk, is a popular staple. Aceh’s strong connection to coffee started hundreds of years ago with Dutch colonial rulers. Now, its farmers cultivate world-renowned beans in lush highlands. Aceh still catches attention for its ultraconservative values, including by-laws that require Muslim women to wear hijabs. While women are not banned from working in the only region in Muslim-majority Indonesia to impose Islamic law, running a coffee shop is seen as a man’s job. Independent career paths are mostly viewed as out of reach for Aceh’s young women, but Qurrata was undeterred. Qurrata, who owns her cafe without a business partner, saw a demand for a space for women to work or meet friends. She and her team of baristas pour fresh coffee to mostly hijab-wearing customers, with children’s books and menstruation pads available for use nearby. “It’s a statement that women can own businesses, make decisions and lead,” she said. “Now is the time for change.” The entrepreneur says women are stepping up, pointing to at least 1,000 applying for a barista job. “I want to offer them the chance to change the course of their lives,” she said. Revenue fluctuates, but Qurrata says her ultimate aim is to inspire other women. “So don’t just sit back. Don’t be afraid.” Read more at: https://www.malaymail.com/news/life/2024/11/22/in-conservative-aceh-sole-woman-run-cafe-morning-mama-challenges-traditional-norms-to-create-safe-space-for-others/157578