might seem a strange way to promote the service in a restaurant,
but there is a reason for the name, on Friday last week, a curious restaurant popped up in
Tokyo’s Toyosu district, it was called “The Restaurant of Order Mistakes” (注文をまちがえる料理店),
a twist on The Restaurant of Many Orders,
Kenji Miyazawa’s 1924 tale, but why this name for a restaurant?
Because this pop-up restaurant had an inclusively-driven mission, and had hired
waiters with dementia and Alzheimer’s, the premise of the pop-up restaurant, which was in a trial
period from June 2 – June 4, 2017, was that the staff who have dementia may get
your order wrong, but if you go in knowing that, it hopefully changes your perception
about those who suffer from the brain disease and it makes you realise that
with a little bit of understanding on our part dementia patients can be
functioning members of society,
Mizuho Kudo, who
attended the event and tweeted about
her experience, wrote that they went in and ordered the hamburg but got gyoza
dumplings instead, which was really funny, She also noted that the younger
waiters were full of smiles and seemed to be having a lot of fun, the restaurant was the brainchild of several like-minded
folks including Maggie’s Tokyo, the
Japanese reincarnation of U.K.-based Maggie’s Centres, and Maggie’s Tokyo
is also where the pop-up restaurant was hosted, the short trial period has now
ended but organisers are currently planning for another pop-up event in
September to coincide with World Alzheimer’s Day (September 21st) as an aside many years ago at Kingfisheries we employed a young chap who had a brain tumour removed and as a side effect had little memory of current events, but could remember things from years ago, we explained to regular customers that agreed to be served by him what was happening, so there was a steady stream of people going outside to look at their purchases, then walking back inside wanting to exchange the tropical saltwater reef fish for the goldfish they actually wanted! but for him as a fish-keeper he was so happy to be able to do something that he enjoyed.
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