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Indian eatery dishes up priceless food

Singapore’s Annalakshmi Indian restaurant has all the hallmarks of an expensive night out, the lights and the artwork on the walls authentic.

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Annalakshmi’s philosophy is ‘eat to your heart’s content, give as you feel’

SINGAPORE: Singapore’s Annalakshmi Indian restaurant has all the hallmarks of an expensive night out: the lights are dim, the artwork on the walls authentic, the doors ornately carved and antique.

But, instead of a hefty bill, prepare to be greeted by smiling staff who urge you to pay as much as you want and remind you that it’s all for charity.

Named after the Hindu goddess of nourishment, Annalakshmi’s philosophy is “eat to your heart’s content, give as you feel.”

The vegetarian restaurant, part of a welfare organisation, is run largely by volunteers, most of them devotees of Hindu monk Swami Shantanand who preached love for God through service to mankind.

“Businesses usually wait until they’ve made a profit to think about giving to society, but we started giving from the start,” Suresh Krishnan, who manages the restaurants, said.

“There are tables who can pay, and those who can’t, so what we provide is a form of table-to-table charity. And the people who work with us do so for the satisfaction, not the reward.” Annalakshmi has three outlets in Singapore, and eateries in Malaysia, Australia and India. Staff range from retired civil servants to women from broken homes to executives and doctors who believe serving and preparing food is the ultimate blessing.

Any money left after covering costs is donated to the Temple of Fine Arts, a religious and cultural organisation set up by the monk, who believed music, art and dance are a form of the divine.

The organisation also runs free medical clinics in Malaysia and India and raises funds through “pay as you want” artistic performances and the sale of the Indian handicrafts and paintings that adorn the interiors of the restaurants.

The monk’s devotees are known as the Shiva family, and as expected, they don’t like to talk about their finances. But unlike most families which only take care of their own, everybody gets special service at Annalakshmi.

The flavoursome food — and unique concept — attracts hundreds of tourists, expatriates and Singaporeans every day. The restaurants serve north and south Indian specialities such as tamarind soup, chickpea curry and savoury lady’s fingers.

Lunch is served buffet-style at the Chinatown bistro or at the stall in the bustling Lau Pa Sat downtown food centre. The main restaurant offers the most choice with a dinner menu that changes with the seasons.

Suresh Kumar Kannan, a former mechanical engineer who quit his job to become as a full-time chef at Annalakshmi says, “The joy

you get watching people eat your food is the biggest blessing ever, better than anything money can buy.”

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