Fatuma Halal Cafe began with an immigrant family's recipes, a deep faith, and a door left open on Dickinson Street in Springfield's Forest Park. Come hungry — and stay a while.
The journey here
Mohamed's family crossed an ocean and opened on Dickinson Street in Forest Park — putting down roots by sharing the flavors and cooking traditions they carried from East Africa.
Recipes from the family
The Somali rice, goat stew, and chicken injera weren't developed for a restaurant — they were passed down. Each dish is seasoned the way it's always been.
Halal, without compromise
Every item at Fatuma is fully halal — not a filtered section, but the whole menu. For Muslim diners in Springfield, that's a rare and meaningful trust.
Mohamed at the door
Guests describe the same moment: Mohamed greets them before they've found a seat, hands them something to try, and makes them feel expected. That's not a service style — it's just how he is.
A table for Springfield
Fatuma has become a gathering place — for the East African community that finds home here, and curious neighbors discovering injera and sambuus for the first time.