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The US Is the world's second
biggest importer of coffee.
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It is a very labor intensive crop.
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It can take three to four years
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for a plant to bear the kind of fruit
we would roast and grind.
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But the two people
typically paid the least in the chain
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are the farmer and the barista.
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Learning about coffee is about learning
where your dollar goes.
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We follow one of those chains
from Michigan to Yemen.
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CONFLICT COFFEE
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Hello. Hey, how are you?
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What do you recommend today?
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(Alhasbani) You want something
with cream or no cream?
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You can add a little cream,
a little something sweet...
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(Alhasbani) Go with the Mofawar.
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Everything for here, right?
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(customer) Yes, sir.
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(Amel) Ibrahim Alhasbani
is a coffee mogul in the making.
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In 2017, he opened his first shop
in Dearborn,
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and is now branching out
to two locations,
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one across town and another in New York.
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He's not selling your average
American-style filtered coffee, though.
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Alhasbani's coffee beans are from Yemen.
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(Alhasbani) Enjoy, guys.
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(customer) Thank you.
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(Alhasbani) We're going to make
one Sana'ani and one Jubani.
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(Amel) Okay.
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(Alhasbani) For Sana'ani, we're going
to use a medium roast with cardamom.
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For the Jubani, we use a light roast,
medium roast, coffee husks,
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ginger, cinnamon, and cardamom.
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- Got it.
- It's like a special mix.
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(Amel) So, this is like the gateway drug
into Yemen.
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Yes, it's like a bridge.
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It doesn't have sugar.
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Yemeni coffee is famous
because it has natural sweetness in it.
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And I take my coffee with sugar
every morning,
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but I can drink this without sugar.
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Good.
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So you're going to change your mind now.
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(Amel) These coffee beans are sweeter
because they're grown
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in the highest mountainous regions
of the country.
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Why is coffee so important for Yemen?
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For Yemen, first, is our culture.
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We drink coffee every day.
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It has also opened Yemen
to the other countries.
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When they started shipping
to different countries,
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people, they read more about Yemen,
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they want to visit Yemen,
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they want to see
what's different about Yemen.
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(Amel) How old were you
when you had your first cup of coffee?
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(Alhasbani) My mom, she told me when I was a kid,
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I had two things,
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coffee and a spicy.
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She thought there's something wrong
with this baby. (laughter)
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(Amel) Yemen may have been the first
to drink coffee
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nearly a thousand years ago
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when it exported it out of a famous port
called Mocha.
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But colonialism,
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conflict,
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and the rising popularity
of coffee crops elsewhere,
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overtook it.
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Alhasbani left home in 2011,
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but his brother still back in Haraz
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running the family's coffee farm.
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Hello?
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Hello.
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How are you?
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All is good. Thank God.
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Okay. And how's everything there?
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Everything's great.
The coffee beans are great.
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Make sure you don't roast it
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except with the right amount of time
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and at the right time.
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Yes, for sure.
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Let's go... let's go... let's go...
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Let's go, Abadan.
Let's go, Noureddeen.
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Let's go.
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Let's go, it's noon.
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The sun is getting hot.
Hold this.
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Here. Hold this.
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Hold this.
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Watch out for my foot.
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The red and tender ones.
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The red.
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This is one of the best types of coffee.
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Look, they're red.
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Come on, come on.
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For people's livelihoods,
it's the coffee bean tree.
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If you notice, all of the valleys
and empty areas here
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are used to grow coffee beans.
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All riches here are gone.
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Everyone here grows coffee beans.
There's nothing else left.
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(Amel) For five years, a rebel militia
based in the north, the Houthis,
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has been fighting with a coalition
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backed by the Saudis for control.
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The coalition blocked
most imports from coming in,
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and the fighting has made life
in the region's poorest country hell.
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More than 100,000 people have died so far.
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From airstrikes, famine,
and rampant disease.
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And exporting anything
amid all of this chaos
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is sometimes impossible.
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It's cheaper to attempt this
only once a year,
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and the only way to keep the beans fresh
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is to roast and grind them in the US.
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You must really believe
in this Yemeni coffee.
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Yes.
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First, I believe in our brand.
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I believe in our Yemeni coffee beans
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as one of the best coffee beans
in the world.
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I also believe in myself.
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I didn't listen to anyone.
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I just spent all the savings I have,
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401K, I took it down and used it,
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I used all my credit cards,
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I used all the money I have.
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Everybody said, "You're crazy."
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(Amel) When people
first hear the word Yemen,
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they think of the current war,
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bloodshed...
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But to you, Yemen,
signifies something else.
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It's my life, it's my birthplace.
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I stopped watching news, actually,
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especially when it comes to Yemen,
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it's just sad.
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I'm far right here,
and I can't do nothing.
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It's just... I can't control my emotion,
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I can't control myself.
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It's bothering me from inside.
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All my family is still there.
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I have my sister, she was sick,
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and because there was
no hospital in Yemen,
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there's no doctors, there's no medicine,
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she passed away in the way.
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They took her to the hospital
they didn't do nothing for her,
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so they sent her back home,
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and she got worse.
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They took her back to the hospital
and she didn't make it.
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Do you ever feel guilty that you're here
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and they're there back in a war zone?
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(Alhasbani) Sometimes I feel guilty
because I'm not next to them.
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Family is very important.
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On the other side, I feel not guilty
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because at least I'm here
to support them, to help them.
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If all of us are stuck there,
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you don't know what's going to happen.
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What are your hopes for a better Yemen?
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This war has to end.
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This is first.
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Second, we have to be
all Yemeni together...
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Ah...
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What are you thinking about?
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I'm just going to get emotional,
that's why...
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Yeah...
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It's just... I was crazy about...
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When I remember those people is not...
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When they fight...
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it's really bad.
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Okay.
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If we're not going to do anything,
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nothing is going to change.