And Cuban who has a pizzeria in Miami He remembered how different it was to do that same job in his country, where if he wanted to have ingredients to prepare his dishes he had to buy stolen merchandise.
The young man spoke with him tiktoker Dairon Cano, who reported that his interviewee gets up early every day to work, with a lot of discipline and sacrifice to provide good service.
"A year ago I was selling pizza there in Cuba, I had my business, but I had to wait for the merchandise to be stolen to buy it so I could work. Here you work because everything is easy," he said.
Dairon stressed that this entrepreneur is his own boss and no one forces him to do anything, he demands himself. His food truck (food truck) is located at 1475 Palm Ave Hialeah 33010.
In a message to the young people who are now arriving in the United States, the pizza maker expressed that in that country everything is fine, you just have to fight and fight to get ahead.
"The only thing you have to have is desire and desire, you know, to keep going," he stressed.
This emigrant is one of the founders of Aries Pizza, a small restaurant on wheels where delicious pizzas are prepared Cuban accompanied by other snacks or drinks.
Like many Cubans in Hialeah, he fights every day to build his own path in that competitive city, taking advantage of the experience he brought from his land and the investment and loan advantages that capitalism offers.
A similar story is that of another Cuban migrant who also set up a food truck in Miami, with the idea of one day having his own company of food trucks.
Yosbani Bello Roque, born in Rodas, Cienfuegos, started a family business with his uncle and works from 6:00 am to 5:00 pm.
"I get up at four or so in the morning. I have quite a few clients, I'm doing well, thank God," he assured journalist Javier Díaz, from Univision 23.
"I want to make a line of food trucks and have several, we already have and one trailer, there are three; it means that we are doing quite well. And nothing, keep moving forward to see how far I can go and start my own company," he stressed.
Last September, the story of a marriage of Cubans who had just arrived in the United States who set up a small mobile stand selling guarapo in Florida.
The couple established a small guarapera in Lehigh Acres, a place located in Lee County, where they located in a trailer with a simple "Guarapo cold" sign.
Dozens of Cubans congratulated them and wished them success and prosperity. Some even regretted that they were not in Miami to go and have a delicious cold guarapo.
What do you think?
COMMENTFiled in: