Telling Our Own Stories: How Jersey City's Desi Community Is Building a Media and Cultural Legacy
Across New Jersey and the greater metro area, South Asian communities are investing in the institutions — media outlets, beloved shops, and civic networks — that tell their stories and hold them together. For Jersey City's Desi residents, these developments offer both inspiration and a reminder of what is at stake in preserving community memory.
📰 Central Desi Newsletter Fills a Vital Information Gap for New Jersey's South Asians
New Jersey holds the highest concentration of South Asians anywhere in the country, yet dedicated local media covering this population has long been scarce. Central Desi, a newsletter created by and for New Jersey's South Asian communities, is working to fill that gap by delivering a blend of local news, politics, and culture reporting tailored to the Garden State's sprawling Desi population. The outlet represents a growing recognition that community-specific journalism is essential for civic engagement and cultural continuity. For readers in Jersey City and beyond, Central Desi offers a rare source of coverage that speaks directly to their lives and concerns. [1]
🕯️ A Jackson Heights Legend: Remembering the Founder of Butala Emporium
The founder of Butala Emporium, long regarded as a cornerstone of Jackson Heights' South Asian community, has passed away, prompting an outpouring of remembrance from those who knew the store and its guiding spirit. The emporium served for decades as far more than a retail establishment — it was a gathering place, a cultural anchor, and a symbol of the Desi diaspora's enduring presence in the New York metro area. Community members remembered the founder as a dedicated steward who understood that the store's value lay as much in the connections it fostered as in the goods it sold. His passing marks the end of an era for a neighborhood that has been central to South Asian life in the region. [3]
Sources: [1] Nieman Lab · [3] Epicenter NYC
