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Home » Homeless But Not Hopeless: Hakki Akdeniz (Transcript)

Homeless But Not Hopeless: Hakki Akdeniz (Transcript)

Here is the full transcript of Hakki Akdeniz’s talk titled “Homeless But Not Hopeless” at TEDxRutgers conference.

In this talk, Hakki Akdeniz shares his personal journey from being a homeless immigrant to a successful pizza chain owner. Born in a small village in Turkey, Hakki moved to Canada and later to New York City, where he faced homelessness and language barriers. Despite these challenges, he found aid in a homeless shelter and gradually secured employment in a pizza shop.

Hakki’s resilience led him to save money and eventually open his own pizza store, Champion Pizza, in Manhattan. Throughout his talk, he emphasizes the importance of kindness and giving back, sharing stories of hiring and transforming the lives of other homeless individuals. He advocates for business owners to offer employment opportunities to the homeless, stressing that a small act of kindness can significantly impact.

Hakki’s story is a testament to the power of perseverance, compassion, and the human spirit in overcoming adversity.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

Early Life and Journey to America

Homelessness is everywhere in this country. We see this, but we really act as if we don’t see it. Where they came from, and where they become homeless, we don’t know too much about them. Today, I would like to remind you that they’re all human, and they have a unique story like we do.

Let me start with mine. I was born in a very small village in Turkey. I was working at age nine to support my family financially. That’s why I didn’t go to even elementary school. I wish I would have gone to college like you guys, but I didn’t.

Years later, I moved to Canada, working with my brothers at his pizza shop. I was so happy, but things didn’t go well, and I moved out to New York City. The reason I came to New York was that I had a friend of mine, we were talking on the phone, and he told me, “Hakki, if you come to New York, the American dream is big.”

Struggles in New York

I told him, “But I don’t speak English, if I come over there, do you think it’s okay?” He said, “Yes. You come over here, you stay at my house, and I will help you with a job.” And on January 28, 2001, I came to New York City.

I called my friend, and I will go fast forward. He made me wait two and a half days at Port Authority. He didn’t come, he didn’t help me, he didn’t show up. I didn’t know anyone else, and I didn’t speak a word of English. I had $240 in my pocket. I went out, and in Times Square, I saw those big buildings. I said, “Wow, this is America, it’s big, this is true, it’s big.” So, what was I going to do? I found a cheap motel and slept there a couple of days; my money finished.

And weeks later, I became homeless. To be homeless is, I mean, I was not homeless, but still, you know, like in this country or any other country, to be homeless is harder than anything, harder than a virus. You know, like, to not have a place to stay, to not take a shower, and to not eat, and if you don’t have any friends, it’s just, you’re lost. I met one guy, his name was Ronnie; he’s from Senegal.

Finding Hope and Employment

He helped me, he took me to Bowery Mission as a homeless shelter. I stayed there for 96 days, and homeless shelters, they helped me a lot. They gave me a place to sleep, take a shower, and share food with other homeless people. I’ll be honest, if I said it was easy, it was not, it was hard, but still, you know, no choice.

And one lady, she helped me to find a job for me in Hoboken. She expected me to get to Hoboken in 30 seconds, but it took me 10 hours to get there. As I got to Hoboken, I went re-hawking, and I got lost. When you don’t know things, it’s for other people so easy, but when you don’t know, it’s so hard for me.

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I took a bus, another bus, another bus, and I went to Hoboken, and I met a guy, his name was Jumali. He’s from [Al-Raheer], I think. So, he’s a very mean guy, but I’m going to talk; no really, he doesn’t smile. And actually, he never smiles; I never saw his teeth. “Could you take your mask off, please, let people see your teeth?” Okay, he does have teeth, okay. So, I met him, and he asked me, “What do you know?” I said, “I’m a pizza man.” He said, “Okay, now wash your hands, make one pie, put it in the oven.” I messed it up.

I asked, “Can I make another one?” “Go ahead.” And I made another one, that pie stuck, and it didn’t come out. He said, “Take that out, get angry.” And I took it out, so, I thought he fired me. He said, “You know what, I’m giving you a job as a dishwasher.” I worked over there, and I couldn’t come to New York. He didn’t know that I was sleeping in a park, crushed.

And two weeks later, he paid me; when I got my first paycheck, I went to the bathroom, and I cried for hours. I cried like a little baby, “Please, God, forgive me, okay?” When you go through things, it’s just too emotional in life. So, the guy caught me crying in the bathroom, he came to me, he said, “What happened?”

Overcoming Obstacles and Achieving Success

I told him my situation, and he went, told Jumali, he said, “You know, like, do you know this guy is homeless, he doesn’t have a place to stay?” And then he came to me, he said, “Is it true?” I said, “Yes.” So he took me to his house, I slept at his house for like, I don’t know, like three weeks or months.

One day he made a joke, he said, “Hey, this is not a homeless shelter, okay?