Sunday, December 14, 2025 | 03:28 PM ISTहिंदी में पढें
Business Standard
Notification Icon
userprofile IconSearch

How a Delhi cafe is trying to change how the city views minority ghettos

K-Cafe can host up to 50 people and regularly conducts workshops and talks

K-Cafe in Jamia Nagar offers a comfortable community space for young professionals to work out of
premium

K-Café in Jamia Nagar offers a comfortable community space for young professionals to work out of

Manavi Kapur
Even for those well past their college days, the Delhi University campus still holds a unique charm. One can stroll along tree-lined roads, walk into one of the countless cafes for some inexpensive grub and soak in the general air of youthfulness. At another corner of the city, Jamia Nagar doesn’t feature prominently on the radar of university nostalgists, despite the prestigious Jamia Millia Islamia attracting a large number of students. It isn’t as though it lacks restaurants. Rather it is a marker of how Delhiites view “other” parts of Delhi and, in fact, are largely blind to them. The