The restaurant features tables scattered around real coffins (As pictured right above), around a dozen graves lay inside the restaurant, and have been sealed off by iron grills.
The owner Krishan Kutti says the graves are great for business as he reveals that the real coffins are key to his flourishing business.
"The graveyard brings good luck. Our business has been flourishing because of these graves. It gives people a unique experience."
"We have maintained the graves as they were. Our customers don't seem to mind."
Every morning, when the shutters of the restaurant are pulled up, waiters spend some time wiping the gravestones and decorating them with fresh flowers.
"We begin our day by paying respects to the graves. We wipe them and cover them with cloth and also shower flowers on them. It is important to respect the dead," said Kutti.
Customers, on the other hand, don't seem to concerned about the presence of the dead. They just come to relish tea and butter rolls.
Despite the ghoulish interior, the restaurant has become a popular hang-out though Kutti has little idea who the graves belong to. Some locals claim they contain the remains of followers of a 16th-century Sufi saint whose tomb lies nearby.
Source: Mirror
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