• About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
Tuesday, June 23, 2026
Visit Mawphor
Highland Post
Govt. of Meghalaya
  • Home
  • Meghalaya
    • All
    • East Garo Hills
    • East Jaintia Hills
    • East Khasi Hills
    • Eastern West Khasi Hills
    • North Garo Hills
    • Ri Bhoi
    • South Garo Hills
    • South West Garo Hills
    • South West Khasi Hills
    • Statewide
    • West Garo Hills
    • West Jaintia Hills
    • West Khasi Hills
    No quick fix to Shillong-Dawki Road collapse

    No quick fix to Shillong-Dawki Road collapse

    Large chunk of Shillong-Dawki Road washed away

    Pynursla BDO warns of further landslides

    Biam ends hunger strike; warns fight for coal mining will intensify

    Biam ends hunger strike; warns fight for coal mining will intensify

    Titos stands behind UDP cabinet musical chairs

    Members come & go but UDP remains strong: Titos

    Government appoints inquiry officer into GHADC issue

    Bernard calls for restoration of autonomy in GHADC

    Bigger Megh House in Vellore to replace current dilapidated facility

    Bigger Megh House in Vellore to replace current dilapidated facility

    College of Community Science transfers food processing technologies to Prime Meghalaya

    College of Community Science transfers food processing technologies to Prime Meghalaya

    Upper Shillong headmen oppose land grant to non-tribal

    NGOs ask for permanent SDO in Dadenggre

    DPDC reviews development initiatives in SWGH

    DPDC reviews development initiatives in SWGH

    Trending Tags

    • North East
    • National
      At least 15 dead as fire rips through Lucknow building, students among victims

      At least 15 dead as fire rips through Lucknow building, students among victims

      Day 3 of CJP sit-in at Jantar Mantar: Dipke steps up attack over NEET row; protesters stay put

      Day 3 of CJP sit-in at Jantar Mantar: Dipke steps up attack over NEET row; protesters stay put

      30 arrested for attempting irregularities in NEET-UG re-exam in Bihar

      30 arrested for attempting irregularities in NEET-UG re-exam in Bihar

    • Health
    • Editorial
    • Sports
    • Writer’s Column
    • Letters to the Editor
    No Result
    View All Result
    • Home
    • Meghalaya
      • All
      • East Garo Hills
      • East Jaintia Hills
      • East Khasi Hills
      • Eastern West Khasi Hills
      • North Garo Hills
      • Ri Bhoi
      • South Garo Hills
      • South West Garo Hills
      • South West Khasi Hills
      • Statewide
      • West Garo Hills
      • West Jaintia Hills
      • West Khasi Hills
      No quick fix to Shillong-Dawki Road collapse

      No quick fix to Shillong-Dawki Road collapse

      Large chunk of Shillong-Dawki Road washed away

      Pynursla BDO warns of further landslides

      Biam ends hunger strike; warns fight for coal mining will intensify

      Biam ends hunger strike; warns fight for coal mining will intensify

      Titos stands behind UDP cabinet musical chairs

      Members come & go but UDP remains strong: Titos

      Government appoints inquiry officer into GHADC issue

      Bernard calls for restoration of autonomy in GHADC

      Bigger Megh House in Vellore to replace current dilapidated facility

      Bigger Megh House in Vellore to replace current dilapidated facility

      College of Community Science transfers food processing technologies to Prime Meghalaya

      College of Community Science transfers food processing technologies to Prime Meghalaya

      Upper Shillong headmen oppose land grant to non-tribal

      NGOs ask for permanent SDO in Dadenggre

      DPDC reviews development initiatives in SWGH

      DPDC reviews development initiatives in SWGH

      Trending Tags

      • North East
      • National
        At least 15 dead as fire rips through Lucknow building, students among victims

        At least 15 dead as fire rips through Lucknow building, students among victims

        Day 3 of CJP sit-in at Jantar Mantar: Dipke steps up attack over NEET row; protesters stay put

        Day 3 of CJP sit-in at Jantar Mantar: Dipke steps up attack over NEET row; protesters stay put

        30 arrested for attempting irregularities in NEET-UG re-exam in Bihar

        30 arrested for attempting irregularities in NEET-UG re-exam in Bihar

      • Health
      • Editorial
      • Sports
      • Writer’s Column
      • Letters to the Editor
      No Result
      View All Result
      Highland Post
      No Result
      View All Result
      Home Writer's Column

      Kamai da ka Hok (Earn with Righteousness)

      Supporting Local Businesses Should Not Mean Paying Any Price

      HP News Service by HP News Service
      June 23, 2026
      in Writer's Column
      0
      The battle for ballot in the North-East
      0
      SHARES
      12
      VIEWS

      By Balakmen Suting

      At the entrance of Iewduh known as Shillong’s great beating heart of commerce, the oldest and most beloved bazaar (Iew) of the Khasi people, there is an archway that every trader, every vendor, every customer passes beneath. Carved into that archway, above the bustle of vendors and the scent of fresh produce and smoked meat, are four words in the Khasi language: “Kamai da ka Hok” which means “Earn with righteousness”.

      It is not merely a decorative inscription. It is a covenant, a promise made by a trading community to itself, across generations. It says: “we will sell, yes, but we will sell fairly. We will earn, yes, but we will earn with honour. Every shopkeeper who ducks beneath that archway to open their stall inherits that promise. Every customer who passes under it trusts that it will be kept.

      I thought about those four words for a long time after an afternoon that left me quietly troubled.

      I had gone to a small bistro in the Mawkhar area of Shillong, the kind of modest local eatery that I have always been glad to support. My purpose was simple and sincere. In a city where money can easily slip away to large chains and outside enterprises, I wanted my rupees to stay local. I wanted them to pay a neighbour’s rent, a cousin’s school fees, and a family’s grocery bill. I wanted to be part of what economists call the “circulation of wealth”which means money moving through the hands of our own people, building our own community from within.

      I ordered what I love most in all of Shillong’s rich culinary world: ‘Ja stem’ – steamed rice, clean and fragrant, served with Dohneiiong, that deep, dark, slow-cooked pork dish that carries the soul of the Khasi kitchen in every bite, and Sohbaingon Dieng chutney, sharp and alive on the tongue. A plate of two small pieces of meat. A small portion of rice. The kind of humble, honest meal that has nourished generations.

      After eating, I asked how much I needed to pay for two plates of Ja stem, chutney, and two pieces of meat. I listened carefully, wondering if I had heard correctly.

      “Two hundred rupees.”

      I asked the shopkeeper gently, without argument to confirm. Yes, they said. Two hundred rupees.

      I paid. I left. And I walked through the afternoon street of Mot Phran, Shillong carrying something heavier than a full stomach: the quiet, uncomfortable feeling of a trust that had not quite been honoured.

      I want to be very careful here, because this piece is not written in anger, and it is not meant to shame any individual or establishment. The people who run small food businesses in Shillong work hard. Prices of chicken, pork, fish, rice, firewood, cooking gas all have climbed steeply in recent months and years. A shop owner carries costs that a customer never fully sees: rent, staff, early mornings at the market, long hours over a hot stove. I respect all of that, and I say it sincerely.

      But there is a difference — thin, yet important between pricing that reflects real costs and pricing that leaves a customer feeling taken advantage of. That difference is not just about money. It is about the relationship between a seller and a buyer. It is about whether commerce in our city is built on trust or on surprise.

      And it is about whether the words inscribed on Iewduh’s archway,“Kamai da ka Hok” are still alive in the practice of our daily trade

      There is another dimension to this that troubles me equally: customer relations.

      When I asked the shopkeeper to confirm the price, there was no warmth in the exchange. No explanation. No acknowledgement that ₹200 for a small bistro plate might seem unexpected to a customer. Just a flat confirmation, and silence. Keep in mind, this is my personal experience, hopefully others customers do not have the similar experience.

      I understand that not everyone is born with the gift of easy conversation. But in a small food business, the way a customer is spoken to, or not spoken to, is part of what is being sold. A smile costs nothing. A brief, honest explanation, “Our meat prices have gone up this season” or “This is our special recipe, so our pricing reflects that”can completely change how a customer receives a bill that surprises them.

      People will pay more for food when they feel respected. People will not return even for food they enjoyed when they feel dismissed.

      As the old bazaar wisdom says: ‘a customer who leaves happy will return with ten more. A customer who leaves hurt will warn a hundred.’

      Shillong stands today at a genuinely exciting moment. Local cuisine likeJa stem, Dohneiiong, Jadoh, Pumaloi, Tungrymbai, is drawing interest not just from across India but from around the world. Travellers come to our city hungry not just for food but for culture, for authenticity, for the particular warmth that only a small local kitchen can offer. This is an extraordinary opportunity for our food entrepreneurs.

      But that opportunity is built on a foundation of trust. And trust, in commerce as in friendship, must be tended carefully.

      If visitors leave Shillong’s bistros and local eateries feeling uncertain, wondering whether they paid fairly, whether the experience matched the cost, they will not return. Worse, in the age of social media, they will say so loudly, and the whole world will hear them. Conversely, a restaurant that makes every customer feel genuinely welcomed and fairly treated becomes, in time, an institution. A legend. The kind of place people travel back to, year after year, and bring their friends to.

      That is the choice before our local food business community right now.

      For local food businesses, a few thoughts offered with respect:

      Show your prices clearly. A handwritten menu board, even a simple one removes uncertainty before it begins. Customers who know the price before they order feel respected. Customers who discover it only at the end feel ambushed, even when the price itself is reasonable.

      Price fairly and explain proudly. If your Dohneiiong costs more because you use better-quality pork, say so. If your portions are smaller because ingredient prices have risen, tell your customers. People understand hardship. What they do not easily forgive is silence in the face of a bill they did not expect.

      Train in hospitality, not just cooking. The best food in the world is diminished by a cold or dismissive interaction. Warmth, eye contact, a genuine welcome these are skills that can be learned, and they are worth learning.

      Think long-term. A customer who feels well-treated today may return thirty times over the next year and send twenty of their friends. A customer who feels overcharged once may never return at all. The arithmetic of loyalty always favours fairness.

      Remember: supporting locals is a partnership.When a customer walks past a global chain to eat at a neighbourhood bistro, they are making a statement about what they believe in. That statement deserves to be honoured.

      And to us as customers, a word as well. Choosing local means choosing to invest in our own community and investment requires patience and grace. Quality ingredients cost money. Running a small business is hard. We should not expect local food to be cheap simply because it is local. We should expect it to be fairly priced and that is a different thing entirely.

      One uncomfortable afternoon will not change my belief in local commerce. I will return to our neighbourhood bistros and our market stalls. I will keep choosing Jastem and Dohneiiong over fast food and franchise restaurants. That choice is not naïve, it is deliberate, because I have seen what our local economy can become when it is built with care.

      The archway at Iewduh does not say earn as much as you can. It does not say charge whatever the customer will bear.It says something simpler, and harder, and more beautiful:Kamai da ka Hok (Earn with righteousness).

      May every plate of food served in our city be seasoned with that spirit. May every bill presented across a counter in Shillong carry the quiet pride of fair dealing. And may our local economy grow not only in size, but in the trust and warmth that make a community truly worth belonging to.

      HP News Service

      HP News Service

      An English daily newspaper from Shillong published by Readington Marwein, proprietor of Mawphor Khasi Daily Newspaper, who established the first Khasi daily in 1989.

      Related Posts

      The battle for ballot in the North-East
      Writer's Column

      PM placing NE on a new high

      June 22, 2026
      The battle for ballot in the North-East
      Writer's Column

      Right To Walk On Safe, Demarcated Footpaths A Fundamental Right

      June 21, 2026
      The battle for ballot in the North-East
      Writer's Column

      Voidance of the Post of Pro Vice Chancellor: To Raze Retirement & Upper Age Limit, Advertisement Appointment Quagmires

      June 20, 2026
      The battle for ballot in the North-East
      Writer's Column

      NEP 2020: Bridging the Theoretical gap between the Practical approach to Entrepreneurship

      June 20, 2026
      The battle for ballot in the North-East
      Writer's Column

      Urja Atmanirbharta: India’s CBG Revolution Must Accelerate

      June 19, 2026
      The battle for ballot in the North-East
      Writer's Column

      National Modification in Maintenance Law for Daughters

      June 18, 2026
      Load More
      Next Post
      Government appoints inquiry officer into GHADC issue

      Bernard calls for restoration of autonomy in GHADC

      Leave a Reply Cancel reply

      Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

      We’re on Facebook

      Advertisement

      • Trending
      • Comments
      • Latest
      Sonam & Raja were with 3 other tourists on day they vanished, says tour guide

      Sonam & Raja were with 3 other tourists on day they vanished, says tour guide

      June 7, 2025
      Tourist taxi association launches agitation against outside vehicles

      Tourist taxi association launches agitation against outside vehicles

      September 17, 2025
      Residents of 44 localities in Shillong drink unsafe water

      Residents of 44 localities in Shillong drink unsafe water

      October 3, 2023
      Bike taxi drivers ask Govt for offline option

      Rapido captains caught off guard by DTO, hired and fined

      July 7, 2024
      Local cabbies disagree with disruption of tourists’ entry

      Assam taxi operators warn of dire effects of ban from tourist sites

      1

      Illegal sand, boulder mining along Umiam River banned

      0

      WINS project launched at Loreto School

      0
      No quick fix to Shillong-Dawki Road collapse

      No quick fix to Shillong-Dawki Road collapse

      0
      No quick fix to Shillong-Dawki Road collapse

      No quick fix to Shillong-Dawki Road collapse

      June 23, 2026
      Large chunk of Shillong-Dawki Road washed away

      Pynursla BDO warns of further landslides

      June 23, 2026
      Biam ends hunger strike; warns fight for coal mining will intensify

      Biam ends hunger strike; warns fight for coal mining will intensify

      June 23, 2026
      Titos stands behind UDP cabinet musical chairs

      Members come & go but UDP remains strong: Titos

      June 23, 2026

      Recommended

      No quick fix to Shillong-Dawki Road collapse

      No quick fix to Shillong-Dawki Road collapse

      June 23, 2026
      Large chunk of Shillong-Dawki Road washed away

      Pynursla BDO warns of further landslides

      June 23, 2026
      Biam ends hunger strike; warns fight for coal mining will intensify

      Biam ends hunger strike; warns fight for coal mining will intensify

      June 23, 2026
      Titos stands behind UDP cabinet musical chairs

      Members come & go but UDP remains strong: Titos

      June 23, 2026

      About Highland Post

      You’re visiting the official website of Highland Post, a leading and most circulated English daily of Meghalaya published by the Mawphor Group. Stay updated with our e-edition for latest updates from Meghalaya, North Eastern India and World as a whole.

      Registered office:
      Mavis Dunn Road, Mawkhar,
      Shillong-793001, Meghalaya
      Phone no: 0364-2545423
      Email: highlandpost.shg@gmail.com, editorhp2019@gmail.com

      Like Us on Facebook

      Follow Us on Twitter

      Tweets by HP

      © 2021 Highland Post – All Rights Reserved.

      • About
      • Advertise
      • Privacy & Policy
      • Contact
      No Result
      View All Result
      • Home
      • Meghalaya
        • East Garo Hills
        • East Jaintia Hills
        • East Khasi Hills
        • North Garo Hills
        • Ri Bhoi
        • South Garo Hills
        • South West Garo Hills
        • South West Khasi Hills
        • Statewide
        • West Garo Hills
        • West Jaintia Hills
        • West Khasi Hills
      • North East
      • National
      • International
      • Health
      • Editorial
      • Musey Toons
      • Sports
      • Writer’s Column
      • Letters to the Editor

      © 2021 Highland Post - All Rights Reserved.