Cafe caters to veterans with meals, as safe spot

MYRTLE BEACH, S.C. - There’s a red-white-and-blue sign in the window of the Veteran’s Cafe and Grille that simply says, “Welcome Home.”

And in the four years that Lou Mascherino and his wife, Rhonda, have operated the cafe it has become a home of sorts for vets - a combination diner, military museum and hangout for those who have served America.

The walls and ceiling are crowded with hundreds of items, from photos and uniforms to military patches and flags. And, if a veteran can’t afford a meal, he eats for free.

“That’s part of our thing. We won’t ever let a veteran go hungry,” said Mascherino, who served in the Army for three years in the 1970s.

The cafe opened on Veterans Day in 2009 at another location nearby in Myrtle Beach, a tourist resort.

A short time later, Rhonda Mascherino put an item on the back of the menu suggesting that people bring in 5-by-7 family photos of those in the military. It started as a trickle, but then over the months, people began almost daily dropping off items from closets and attics.

“Almost every day we get something in. People come in and say I’ve got my grandfather’s uniform from World War II or I’ve got his picture,” said Lou Mascherino - nicknamed Mash.

The cafe opened when the Veterans Welcome Home and Resource Center, an area nonprofit that helps veterans tap into government and other resources, thought a small cafe might be a good fundraising tool.

That idea didn’t work out, but Lou Mascherino, who has worked for decades in the dining industry, decided to go out on his own and take on operations of the cafe. It was touch and-go for a while, but now the cafe has found its niche, moving earlier this year into larger quarters.

“Veterans won’t talk to a lot to people who are not veterans.This place here is like a safe haven,” said George Bontya, who visits the cafe a couple of times a week and served four years in the Air Force, including a tour in Vietnam. “You get a lot of vets who come in here, and they will just sit around and talk.”

The cafe works closely with the Veterans Welcome Home and Resource Center as well as other veterans organizations.

“If a veteran comes in here, Mash will call, and the first thing we find out is what their needs are,” said Kris Tourtellotte, who founded the resource center based in nearby Little River, S.C. “If we get a vet walking in here and needs help, everybody helps.”

The Veteran’s Cafe and Grille also helps the center and other veterans groups stage cookouts and fundraisers.

Mascherino said he has found his calling in cooking and helping those who served. He knows he won’t get rich running the cafe, where he works six 10-hour days a week and comes in on Sundays to clean.

“I know the restaurant business in Myrtle Beach, and I know a mom and pop isn’t going to make a lot of money,” he said. “As long as we can keep a roof over our head and food on the table at home, that’s all I care about.”

And, at 61, he can’t see himself doing anything else.

“I wouldn’t know what to do. I’m here for life,” he said.

Front Section, Pages 8 on 12/26/2013

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