“I’ve done it both ways. I used to be really friendly, I gave people credit, food. And then I did it like, ‘Hi, thank you, bye.’ I don’t want to know your name, I don’t want you to know my name,” said Inshashi. “Sometimes it feels like the more someone knows about you, the easier it is to break into the store.”
Chicago’s Arab American store owners face reckoning in wake of George Floyd killing

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