The fare strangers decided to cover
June 21, 2026 · 7:38 AM

The fare strangers decided to cover

After a New York cab driver’s taxi was wrecked during post-game celebrations, a taxi workers union, French Montana, Zachery Dereniowski and more than 2,000 donors helped turn a viral humiliation into a repair fund. The story is less about celebrity rescue than about the practical shape care can take when a working person is left with the damage.

By the time the public fundraiser showed $77,068 from 2,145 donors, the thing being paid for was bigger than a windshield. It was a way for strangers to say that Noureddine Bitat should not be left alone with the bill for a city's bad night. 1
Bitat is a 59-year-old New York City cab driver. The City Reporter wrote that he was driving a leased 2026 Toyota Sienna near Madison Square Garden when a post-game crowd pulled him from the taxi, punched him, and damaged the vehicle after a Knicks finals win. 2 He had been a cabbie for two years, and after the attack he told the outlet, "I have bills to pay. I'm wondering how I am going to make it." 2
I do not like the viral economy that makes a frightened working person's worst hour travel first as spectacle. But this story bent back toward the man in the cab.

What was broken

The taxi's windshield was smashed, its hood and roof were stomped on, and its meter was ripped out, according to The City Reporter. 2 The Independent, which also covered the fundraiser, said photos on the GoFundMe page showed the cab's front windshield completely broken in. 3
A smashed yellow taxi windshield at night in New York
The damaged windshield became one of the clearest images of what Bitat lost that night. 3
The money matters here because a cab is not just a prop in a city celebration. For Bitat, it was the place where he earned. The GoFundMe page described him as a driver who had spent years behind the wheel, helping people get where they needed to go while supporting himself and his family. 1
The City Reporter added another ordinary detail that stuck with me: Bitat planned to see an eye doctor to replace glasses broken during the commotion. 2 The story is about a crowd, a rapper, a fundraiser, a union. It is also about a man needing his glasses back.

What people chose to repair

The repair effort started after rapper French Montana saw a video and posted that someone should find the driver so "we can help him get back on his feet," according to The City Reporter. 2 Montana then teamed with Canadian creator Zachery Dereniowski and the New York Taxi Workers Alliance; the GoFundMe page lists Dereniowski and the taxi workers alliance as organizers. 1
The campaign's purpose was plain: help restore Bitat's business and get him back to work. 1 Good News Network reported on June 19 that the fundraiser had reached $76,000 from more than 2,000 donors; the live fundraiser page later showed $77,068 raised toward a $75,000 goal. 4 1
Noureddine Bitat sits inside the damaged cab
The fundraiser page used images from the damaged taxi to explain why Bitat needed help getting back to work. 1
There is a version of this story that would make it all about celebrity rescue. I think the better version is about the chain: a union knew the driver, an online creator knew how to move attention, a musician used his reach, and thousands of people converted a bad clip into actual cash.
Bitat's own reaction kept the scale human. "I am so overwhelmed by the care of people," he told The City Reporter through a translator. "I'm very thankful." 2 When asked about French Montana, he joked that the rapper's music was not his style, but "I'm going to start loving it." 2

The part that should last

One generous fundraiser does not fix the fact that a working driver could become collateral damage in a celebration. The City Reporter said the New York Taxi Workers Alliance could help Bitat consider another direction if he decides not to return to cab driving. 2 That matters. Care is not only the first burst of money; it is the slower work of giving someone options after fear has narrowed them.
Signal Taxi, where Bitat leased the Toyota, paid him a full week's worth of pay for the week of the attack and the following week, according to The City Reporter. 2 He also told the outlet that unknown women checked on him while the taxi was being vandalized. 2
That is the line I keep coming back to. Before the famous name, before the public total, somebody near the cab looked at him as a person and checked on him.
"The most meaningful gesture has been a show of care," Bitat said. "The fact that they are praying for me and caring for me is what has meant the world to me." 2

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