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Reem Assil: From Activism to Arab Bakery Pioneer and Worker-Owner Visionary

Chef Reem Assil uniquely blends her passions for food, community, and social justice.

Reem Assil

Chef Reem Assil uniquely blends her passions for food, community, and social justice. Born to Palestinian and Syrian immigrant parents and raised in a Boston suburb, she grew up immersed in vibrant Arab household traditions while navigating the complexities of American identity.

For over a decade, Assil worked as a community and labor organizer, championing living wages, affordable housing, and workers’ rights. In 2010, a transformative trip through Lebanon and Syria inspired her to channel her heritage into food—particularly the communal energy she witnessed in Arab street-corner bakeries.

She trained in baking and pastry at Laney College, worked at Arizmendi Bakery & Pizzeria and Grace Street Catering, and completed La Cocina’s women-of-color food business incubator program. This journey culminated in opening Reem’s California, a bakery-restaurant rooted in Arab street hospitality, first in Oakland and later in San Francisco’s Mission District.

Reem’s California, a bakery-restaurant rooted in Arab street hospitality, first in Oakland and later in San Francisco’s Mission District.

Recognition & Awards

Assil’s culinary voice quickly resonated with critics and diners alike:

Food, Identity & Storytelling

Reem’s California serves Arab street food with a California touch. Warm, fresh-baked pita, mana’eesh, dips, and pastries evoke the bakery life of Damascus or Beirut—spaces where community and comfort thrive amid turmoil.

In 2022, she released Arabiyya: Recipes from the Life of an Arab in Diaspora, a cookbook infused with personal essays and over 100 recipes that honor her diasporic identity and culinary heritage.

Meet Reem Assil, a Palestinian-Syrian chef and activist based in Oakland

Visionary Leadership & Worker-Ownership

Assil’s vision extends beyond the plate. Drawing on her activist roots, she is pioneering a worker-owned cooperative model for her business. Through Sumoud—a 15-month apprenticeship program—she prepares her staff to transition Reem’s into an employee-run co-op, a rare structure among U.S. restaurants.

In mid-2025, she announced plans to reopen Reem’s in Oakland’s Jack London Square as a worker-owned central commissary and café, supporting wholesale operations and future kiosk-style outposts across the Bay Area .

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