This Restaurant Gives A 50 Percent Discount If You Turn Off Your Phone
By ARON HELLER 11/20/13 03:20 PM ET EST 
ABU
GHOSH, Israel (AP) — A restaurant owner in an Arab village outside of
Jerusalem says he is on a mission to save culinary culture by making
diners a simple offer: Turn off your cellphone and get a 50 percent
discount.
Jawdat
Ibrahim says smartphones have destroyed the modern dining experience.
He hopes the generous discount will bring back a more innocent time when
going to a restaurant was about companionship, conversation and
appreciating the food, rather than surfing, texting or talking to the
office.
"I'm
changing something. It might be something small, but maybe in some
small way I'll be changing the culture of eating," said Ibrahim, 49.
Ibrahim
is the owner of Abu Ghosh, a well-known restaurant named after its
hometown, located about 10 kilometers (six miles) outside of Jerusalem.
The town is known as a symbol of coexistence, and its restaurants,
serving up platters of creamy hummus and grilled meat, are popular with
Arab and Jewish visitors alike.
Ibrahim,
who opened the restaurant in 1993 with winnings from an Illinois
lottery, said mealtime conversations have long been a staple in this
cellphone-obsessed country. But the situation has worsened in recent
years as smartphones have become more sophisticated. He said he became
dismayed as he saw groups of friends or married couples sitting in
silence, staring at
their screens and ultimately asking him to reheat their food.
"Technology
is very good. But just when you eat, just especially when you are with
your family and your friends, you can just wait for half an hour and
enjoy the food and enjoy the company," he said. "A lot of people, they
sit down and they don't enjoy their food, their company."
Ibrahim
is in a better position than most to offer steep discounts. While
living in the U.S. in the 1980s, he won some $23 million in an Illinois
state lottery.
He
also is no stranger to publicity. Since returning to his homeland, he
has used his status to promote coexistence between Arabs and Jews.
In
2010, his restaurant briefly captured the Guinness World Record for the
largest plate of hummus — a whopping four-ton concoction served up on a
satellite dish. The entrance to his restaurant is covered with articles
about him. A framed letter from Chicago's former mayor, Richard M.
Daley, hangs, thanking Ibrahim for a meal during a visit to Israel.
Carleton
English of Belus Capital Advisors, a New York financial research firm
that tracks the restaurant industry, said the proliferation of
cellphones in restaurants is not all bad. Diners can share photos of
their meals and provide recommendations to friends, while restaurants
can connect with their customers.
"For
groups of friends casually dining, mobile phones can be an enhancement.
For someone hoping to gaze into their lover's eyes over candlelight
during dinner instead of seeing their companion's forehead bent over the
glare of an iPhone, it's definitely a hindrance," she said.
Even
so, a Zagat survey last year found most respondents disapproved of
texting, tweeting and emailing when eating out, though a majority
accepted picture taking. According to the 2012 State of Mobile Etiquette
Survey for Intel Corp., about one in five U.S. adults say they share
online when eating a meal with others, and more than a third of teens do
the same.
Ibrahim
is not the first restaurateur to take aim at these trends. Eateries
around the world have begun to offer discounts — generally far lower
than Ibrahim's — to diners who turn off their phones. Some have even
banned cellphone use altogether.
Samer
Korban, co-owner of the Bedivere Eatery and Tavern in Beirut, said that
since opening a year ago, he has given a 10 percent discount to people
who hand over their cellphones.
"We
want people to socialize, instead of sitting with their phones," he
said, adding that at least 40 percent of his customers take advantage of
the offer.
By
offering half off the bill, Ibrahim appears to have taken the art of
the discount to a whole new level. He admitted that he is taking a
financial hit in the short term. But he believes in the long run, the
move will pay off by
attracting new customers.
Hagit Netzer, a 63-year-old tourist from northern Israel, stopped by the restaurant Wednesday after spending the day in nearby Jerusalem.
"What's
the big deal not to use your phone for half an hour?" she said. "I
wanted to see if this was really true." Her daughter was more
circumspect, calling her husband to tell him that she was turning off
her phone and would be out of touch.
As
they
received the bill, the original price, 158 shekels, or roughly $45, was
scribbled out. Scribbled next to it was the sum of 79 shekels. "I
wonder what's in it for them. I can't believe they really do it for 50
percent," Netzer exclaimed.
Ibrahim
said virtually every customer who has entered the restaurant since he
began the promotion this week has taken advantage of the offer. The lone
exception, he said, was a TV crew member who stopped in and needed his
phone for work purposes. He would not say how long the offer would last.
"I
have a lot of new customers," he said. "People come from
Jerusalem. People come from Tel Aviv, and they all have one thing in
common: This telephone is not good for me when I am eating."
Ibrahim
said initially he tried to collect phones at the door but that proved
too cumbersome, leaving instead a deal bound by honor. The phones must
truly be turned off, not just on silent, he said, since texting is
prohibited.
___

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