Dear Guest: You made Small Business Marketplace a great event by visiting our exhibit, thank you for stopping by. We want to provide world class solutions at affordable prices to organizations and professionals like you. But we need your feedback and an in-depth understanding of your needs in order to exceed your expectation. For that reason we have prepared this detailed survey that will allow us to understand your needs and help us ensure that you save time in our first meeting. Your invaluable responses will also help us to put together the best solution for you. Please allow 20-25 minutes for completing the needs assessment. Please scroll to complete the Feedback and Needs Assessment Survey below. We thank you in advance for sharing.
We’d love to hear how badly you need to get your natural handmade soaps from Heaven Scent of Dominica here in Canada and in the USA.
Tell us if you would love to get your Heaven Scent of Dominica Handmade Soaps here in Canada or in the USA?
Travelled to Dominica and is now back in the US or Canada and just can’t get enough of your favorite natural handmade soap from Heaven Scent of Dominica?
Gloricida Cleanse
Are you from the Commonwealth of Dominica and is dying to get your regular supply of luxury, beauty, vigor, and healing from Heaven Scent of Dominica?
Have you been looking around for a natural alternative for treating eczema, acne, aging skin and black spots?
Would you love to try soaps by Heaven Scent of Dominica?
Many say soaps from Heaven Scent of Dominica cleanse and heal like no other can. What do you say?
Need the perfect soaps for tightening pores and regulating oily skin?
Sulphur WASH
We know the touch of the Nature Isle and the healing touch of the powder from the volcanic rocks that could come to you in the Sulphur soap by Heaven Scent of Dominica. But if you have used the Sulphur soap we would love to hear your feedback.
If you miss these wonderful soaps and would love to get some soon please use the comment box below to tell let us how much you love and want them.
Listed below are the names of familiar soaps by Heaven Scent of Dominica. Pease rank your top three soaps by copying and pasting the name of each in the comments box in the order of preference, starting with your favourite.
Herb Garden Cleanse
Patchouli Wash
Cinnamon Scrub
Oatmeal Scrub
Oatmeal & Spice Scrub
Gloricida Cleanse
Coconut Wash
Noni Wash
Sulphur Wash
Bay leaf Cleanse
Aloe Cleanse
Oatmeal Scrub
Noni Wash
Herb Garden Cleanse
Patchouli Wash
Let us know what you would love to see added to the line?
Is there anything that you would love to see improved?
Thank you in advance for your invaluable feedback.
Heaven Scent of Dominica
hand crafted • all natural • herbal soap
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Looking forward to bringing your favourite soaps to you soon.
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Caribbean Connection Point is the in-country market development brand for Caribbean exports by Magate Wildhorse.
Glory of India Roti Cuisine thanks all guests and patrons for their business.
They want to make sure that they provide the best dining experience; the best value for your money; and the best roti cuisine menu. But, without your feedback and suggestions they will not be able to exceed your expectations.
Glory of India wants you to tell it like it is, so they have asked us to collect your input which they will use to guide them as they work to give you the very best.
For this we thank you for 10-15 minutes of your time to complete the customer satisfaction survey at the link below. Your invaluable contribution will go a long way towards ensuring that you get the best value for money and the best dining experience when you visit or purchase from Glory of India Roti Cuisine.
Please click on the link below or copy and paste the link into your browser to complete the survey.
Fish dishes and soups make great rainy day comfort foods.
Glory of India Roti Cuisine offers a variety of soups and fish dishes that will warm you up, fill you up, and keep your spirits high in spite of the grey and gloom outside.
On a cold and gloomy Monday the Daal Curry makes the perfect pick for soup lovers. It makes an even better pick if you are not a soup lover but need something to warm you up.
Last week, I tried the Daal Curry (Mild), I just loved it. Hot, flavorful, rich in colors and aroma―the turmeric yellow soup, rich with yellow split peas, green curry leaves, mustard seeds, and a variety of other herbs and spices is just what you need to arouse and satisfy your appetite. The rich glossy sheen together with the favours will lift your spirit and wake up your taste buds. For just $5.99, warmth, comfort, and a healthy dish Glory of India gives value for money.
But, if like me you prefer to have something to munch on along with your soup, then try the veggie, fish, chicken, or butter chicken combo. All combos come with Daal Curry Soup, rice, roti, vegetable pakora and rice pudding; prices start at $8.99.
You might even prefer to grab a wrap with your soup. Glory of India will make you the wrap of your choice from items on their menu.
No soup, just a hot delicious and healthy fish lunch or dinner please!
My first choice is the Malabar Fish Curry, a strong rival to the Restaurant’s signature dish―Butter Chicken. I will tell you straight up that I like small bony fishes that are rich in flavor and without thick chunks of flesh. But, the Malabar styled Fish Curry made with salmon, coconut milk and South Indian herbs & spices was finger licking great! Or should I say, finger licking awesome!
Like the Butter Chicken, favours just burst forth from the succulent fish dish. There was no smell of fish, the flesh was fresh and pinky orange; the orange tint from the orange brown curry sauce, this is definitely the fish lovers’ choice. I had both plain roti and basmati rice with my Malabar Fish Curry. The aroma of the basmati rice will waft up from the serving bowl to meet and delight your senses. Ben, Chef at Glory of India, knows how to make roti that is light, filling, somewhat papery and pleasant to touch. But the subtle buttery flavor of the roti is what has me hooked.
Besides the Malabar Fish Curry, there is the Salmon Curry, and Fish Tikka Masala.
If you’re not in the mood for vegetarian, fish, chicken, or shrimp you are sure to find something absolutely delicious in lamb, beef, or goat.
It would be mean of me not to tell you about the vegetable samosa, served with sweet and sour tamarind sauce. But, I won’t spoil the fun on this one, simply go and try it for yourself.
At Glory of India, meals are fresh, flavorful, colorful, and the portions are very large, they’ll wrap the extras for you too. You definitely get the taste and satisfaction of home cooked care, dine out class, and authentic Indian Cuisine.
Glory of India Roti Cuisine (Take out & Dine In) is located at: 1407 Queen Street West. Phone them at: (647) 349-5679 to order lunch or dinner for you, the family, or the entire team at work. They also deliver. See what others say about them on Yelp or Facebook. They are open today from 11: 30 am to 10:30 pm.
I was forced to revisit my commentary about Harlem Restaurant ―its brand, the names of dishes on its menu and the overall service offered as a result of a recent conversation with a black conscious friend. Once again the Restaurant serves as a positive example for the Jamaican Canadian, Caribbean, Jamaican, Black, and Canadian community in general. My first commentary may have seemed to be a simple recognition of the “must visit” Restaurant and a salute to two Jamaicans who have excelled in Canada―namely Carl Cassell and Sharon Barnes Simmonds, but there is much more to it. For me there is much more in the Restaurant and its menu, even if what I see is not a view shared by or the intent of Harlem.
Beyond excelling in the two functions of business: marketing and innovation. I see the language and messaging used by the restaurant as well as its excellent offer as a reference for Jamaicans and other members of the black community who are black conscious and who seek to free themselves from the shackles of the past as well as the present. It is a symbol for those who have already takentheir freedom and who have no apologies for having done so.
I view the use of language by Harlem Restaurant as an example of black consciousness and true liberation combined; a rejection and throwing off of all shackles. I have noticed that in recent times many in our community have checked themselves into self-imposed therapy in the quest for freedom and or in embracing or celebrating their blackness. In so doing many have imposed shackles of their own, they can no longer use certain words or enjoy the beauty of language (And I do not include the derogatory use of the word Nigger or any other related terms in my remark, those must go!). There is an obsession with the spoken word and how it may bring into being the negative: the obsession is such that many cannot tease or poke healthy fun at themselves or appreciate those who are in love and unison with self; and who can have fun with self. I would encourage one and all to reflect on how and when the concept of the spoken word and the negative coming into being is relevant. You dare not poke fun at self these days before a patient in therapy makes a 911 dash to administer the counselling, therapy and the treatment on their personal care plan to you.
The new shackles are so strong that it deprives of us of the ability to explore, enjoy, celebrate and use language, both the Jamaican Creole and the English Language. When I speak of Jamaican Creole I do not refer to dancehall lingua; I refer to the language that articulated and fueled individual and national pride; that drove success, love and caring for each other, that brought laughter and provided vivid imagery like no other can. By Jamaican Creole I refer to a language that is liberating, music, art, passion, pride, ambition, independence, rhythm, imagery, self-sufficiency, motivation and inspiration combined. I speak of the Language that the Jamaican Folksingers and Louise Bennett Coverley used to give great pride, joy, and entertainment. I speak of the language used to confuse and beat the plantation master or any other “Babylon” at their own game.
I encourage the black conscious to remember that the use of language can and has been liberating. The Jamaican Patios, the Jamaican English and the British English on which I grew up was rich in the use of literary devices― onomatopoeia, Alliteration, metaphor, Euphemism, hyperbole, oxymoron and more. We learnt the beauty and power of language very early at home and in school.
The Jamaican National Pledge; poems such as Song of the Banana Man by Evan Jones; Market Women by Daisy Myrie; Road to Lacovia by A. L. Hendricks contain rich examples of the use of the language. I choose not to reference the popular freedom poems but others that were also popular in most Jamaican schools. Revisit the music of Buju Banton and you will find that early grounding in literature and the use of language even by the working class. We also knew how to use the language to give love and as a weapon of destruction. Let us not be afraid to enjoy the Language, let us not add shackles to ourselves, let us not take the music, the imagery and the sounds from the language by being afraid of using certain words or by failure to understand and appreciate context. One of the beauty of the Jamaican Creole and the English language is the range of meaning that a single word might have; example the word “mad”, generally used to describe mental illness, anger, and in the Jamaican context it could be used to describe a humorous person for his or her wit and antics.
If you are whole please do not check yourself into therapy, you will become broken if you do. If someone wishes you a warm and genuine good morning and asks “How are you doing?” and you can only regurgitate “I’m blessed”, were you responding to the person or trying to reassure yourself that you are blessed? I figure if you drew breath that morning you are blessed and the person you are speaking with can see that.
Freedom is the ability to embrace your roots, embrace what is wholesome about today and your current base for growing additional roots. Therapy might be a path to freedom but it is not freedom, it does not correct social skills or liberation beliefs that are out of harmony with social skills or other related behaviour. And to the many Canadians who have misunderstood the true meaning of what it is to be multicultural; and who believe that one must reject one’s roots in order to be a committed and outstanding Canadian, be aware that it is the uprooted that will cause social chaos. It is the uprooted that will not see commonness in humanity and who will not be able to join and commit to the quest for the improving the condition of the human race or to being a great citizen of any country.
In closing I must also note that Dancehall lingua did draw heavily on the Creole in the past and inspired many Jamaican youths to excel academically, to be good citizens even as they were full of life, entertainers and just great people. It gave us medical doctors, lawyers, great athletes, teachers, business leaders etc. who are also dancehall stars, models, actors and entertainers in their own rights. The fun and entertainment made University studies and life fun; drug use and other social ills were not seen as a rite of passage of from youth to adulthood; it is not, it is just an excuse and only acceptable for some social groups and some countries.
In parting I will encourage you to embrace and love the language, go back to poetry, stories, Jamaican folks songs, mento, reggae, soul and other genres of music―Eric Donaldson (Nation building, “If dem a bald head run dem mek them come, if them a natty dread run dem mek them come); Culture: “Natty Neva Get Weary” , Miss Lou and many others. Don’t keep it only Jamaican there is more to learn from our brothers and sisters across the globe, we got that global perspective growing up in Jamaica.
Resources
The following Video by Louise Bennett (Miss Lou) is useful for those who wish to understand the Jamaican English as derived from English, African, Asian and other European languages.
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