Good morning!
A cheerful greeting meets me from the back room of the La Famiglia restaurant in Helsinki. Staff from Finland, the Philippines, Nepal, Turkey and Ethiopia wish one another good morning in English. English is also the working language of the restaurant.
In the dining area, the servers mainly serve in Finnish. Kiran Aryal, 44, who moved to Finland from Nepal, learned the new language in two years. Aryal's Finnish is fluent enough for customers to understand.
This is not always the case. For some Finns, a server’s poor Finnish is a problem. Sometimes it is a question of attitude, sometimes the customer may be worried that they will not get their message across in a foreign language.
Seija Flink, 57, and Raili Välikauppi, 69, from Helsinki, who are having lunch at La Famiglia, are happy to be served in English. But they also understand those who wish to be served in Finnish. They think there should be at least one person who speaks Finnish working in every shift.
"This is also a safety issue, as people have a lot of allergies nowadays. QR codes could be added to the menus so that customers could read more about the ingredients," says Välikauppi.