Author Archives: Ezra Doueck

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About Ezra Doueck

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Elie Sutton: Man of Strength

At the tender age of 19, Elie Sutton was instructed to leave his family, his community, and his dream of becoming a doctor. In a matter of days, he was on his way to a new world, in Shanghai, China. “Whatever sacrifices my father had to make to protect our futures and shield us from danger,” Mr. Sutton whispered in an interview, “he would do at all costs.” Elie said goodbye to his family, and started the harrowing journey to spend the rest of his immediate future alone, a virtual orphan in an unknown land.

Born in Aleppo, Syria in December of 1925, Elie was raised in a deeply religious, insular and remarkably prosperous Jewish community in the Muslim world. A thriving center for trade, commerce and industry, Aleppo offered young Elie a world of exploration as he ran through the covered bazaars, smelling the spices and haggling with peddlers over goods.

However at the time, following the Balfour Declaration of 1917, a wave of sharp anti-Zionist and anti-Semitic movement flooded the community. Law authorities were inefficient and corrupt, suspected criminals were executed in public without a trial, and as a youth Elie witnessed brutal stabbings directly outside his home. His father, Selim Menashe Sutton, a stoic and respected man, announced one day to his family that each of his six sons, upon reaching a suitable age, would be sent off to a different country, away from the dangers of Syria.

The day arrived. With a Syrian passport and a few U.S dollars in his pocket, Elie Sutton travelled alone to Cairo, Egypt. He remained in the dirty and overpopulated city for weeks, desperately trying to obtain a visa to Iraq to continue his path to Shanghai despite his Jewish status. After finally succeeding, he journeyed to Iraq, then Pakistan, and then to a community in India ravaged by poverty. Months later from when he had left his home in Syria, he landed in China in 1947.

After an anxious first few weeks, Mr. Sutton completed his transition into his home at the YMCA of the vibrant and modern International Settlement. Originally introverted and serious in Aleppo, Elie now shed his insecurities and strict religious obligations to become a new man. Over the next four years, Elie’s social life and self-confidence soared as he interacted with people of many different backgrounds, and created a thriving manufacturing business.

“In Shanghai,” Sutton reminisced, “I was in control and responsible for myself. I experienced both the wonders of becoming a successful businessman at such a young age and the pleasures of an active social life with many friends. I grew tremendously over those four years. Shanghai was a special place, a place impossible to duplicate anywhere else.”

However, by 1948, the Chinese Nationalist government of Chiang Kai-shek collapsed and the country was overrun by a communist regime. The government monopolized entire industries, while strict regulations and penalties were enforced on businesses. It would be impossible for Sutton to continue his perfect life in Shanghai. After much deliberation, he reluctantly closed his successful business and made arrangements to voyage to America, to join his brother Mike who had travelled to a Jewish community in Brooklyn, New York.

On Monday, October 2nd, 1950, Elie Sutton landed on American soil for the first time at the age of 24. Here, in the southern part of Brooklyn, was an incredibly strong and tight-knit Syrian Jewish community. Sutton was elated. In this new home were not only immediate uncles and cousins, but also an entire population of people who were from the same place, and had the exact same language, heritage and traditions.

“It was the continuation of Aleppo,” Sutton said, “I went to a place where I knew I would be comfortable with people I can connect with. But now we had the great atmosphere, the opportunities, and the freedom to practice our religion.”

By spring of 1951, while Elie was struggling to find a consistent job, he went out with a nice young Syrian girl named Tunie Sultan. Immediately, Elie fell in love with her beauty, intuition and outgoing personality, and the two married on November 4th, 1951. At times, Sutton admitted to dreaming of his fantasy life in Shanghai, and questioned his devotion to the community. Yet, he quickly suppressed his feelings.

“To remain in America,” Elie remarked, “And to take Tunie as a wife, I had to absorb the community and allow myself to be swathed into it. I could not return to my Shanghai ways.”

With the help of his new father in law Abe Sultan, Elie conscientiously worked to construct an effective retail business, E.S Sutton Inc. Finally, the income started coming in just in time for the couple to welcome the birth of their first daughter, Adele. With a new baby, a loving wife, and a new large extended family, Elie’s life in Brooklyn had taken root.

While in America, Elie finally learned the fate of his family that had remained in Syria all those years. His father, with his business crumbling and his family in constant danger, was diagnosed with a brain tumor and was sent to Beirut for immediate medical care. In Aleppo, new anti-Jewish laws were enforced. Jews would not be allowed to buy or sell property, and repaying debts to Jews was now optional, while Jewish businesses were forced to close. In the end, the Sutton family was forced to flee as a Muslim mob ravaged their neighborhood, and torched their home.

Amazingly, his mother and some children were able to escape to Brooklyn. However, his father Selim Menashe Sutton passed away in an Israeli nursing home, all alone as his son Joe was forced to leave the country out of fear of being drafted to the army. Elie now discovered that years earlier, his brother Saleh had passed away in Syria after a battle with tuberculosis, and his youngest brother Edgar tragically died at the age of 14 due to kidney failure, and due to an erroneous medical diagnosis.

After grieving over the losses in his family, Elie Sutton began to establish himself in his new community. Over the years his wife gave birth to another boy and two girls. Together, the couple traveled the world, visiting places such as Hong Kong, Russia, Italy, Brazil, Greece and Kenya. The two immediately made an impact on the Syrian community, starting a social club for couples and promoting membership for the now wonderfully successful Sephardic Community Center. Adele Sultan, the mother of Elie’s wife Tunie, had been diagnosed with dementia and was placed in a nursing home for 20 years, enduring progressively worsening mental instability. Tunie did research and started a support group for caregivers of loved ones with Dementia and Alzheimer’s disease.

Elie took it upon himself to become a member of many synagogue committees, most notably Bet Torah Congregation. With the help of Mr. Sutton, the synagogue has grown from once struggling to get the ten men required to have a daily prayer service, to now attracting hundreds of congregants on a weekly basis. Mr. Sutton also joined a prestigious group of benefactors for Mt. Sinai Hospital, and sponsored fundraising events for Senator Bill Bradley. He spoke at schools, events, and synagogues, telling his life story, raising money for local charities, and lecturing about running successful business enterprises. When Elie elected to move to Florida for the winters he was one of the few founders of the beautiful Safra Synagogue in Aventura. He was the first designated president and served the role for three consecutive years. He also single handedly established a branch of ECHO, an organization specializing in medical referrals, in the Brooklyn community.

“Elie is an incredibly well respected man in the community,” daughter in law Mary Sutton praised, “He is constantly giving advice to community members and counseling businessmen.”

All went well for Elie Sutton until the fall of 1993, when his beloved wife Tunie was diagnosed with ovarian cancer. After an extremely long and painful process of chemotherapy, invasive surgeries and exhausting side effects, Tunie Sutton passed away in 1996 at the age of 64. The loss pushed Elie into a spiral of depression, as he neglected his business and mourned for weeks on end. Eventually, he restarted his life and remarried a lovely woman, ironically, named Tunie.

The interview is now over, and Elie Sutton walks outside to sit on his porch. Calmly enjoying the warm breeze, he listens to the sounds of local residents socializing and a construction crew at work, as a smile slowly spreads across his face. Today he is a proud, serene, and humble man who embodies the grand strength of human determination and resilience. His gentle and calm disposition hide the man who once experienced such enormous hardships and deep conflicts.

Elie Sutton

 

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Gravesend Backgrounder

In the words of Joe DiFiore, a Century 21 Real Estate broker and long time resident , the neighborhood of Gravesend is a “minestrone soup- a jumbled-up mix of ingredients that somehow fit together.” From when the town was originally founded by a London widow named Lady Deborah Moody in the 1600’s, the southern section of Brooklyn had largely been occupied by Dutch and English settlers tending to huge areas of farmland. Yet, in the beginning of the 20th century the town developed three race tracks, built the central Ocean Parkway, and established electric rail service. From then on and specifically in the 1990’s, a tidal wave of middle class immigrants flooded the area, bringing incredible residential development and ethnic diversity. Within the mile and a half square layout, there exists an expanding Russian, Asian, and Mexican immigrant population, as well as established Italian, Irish, and Middle Eastern Sephardic Jewish communities, hailing from Syria, Egypt, Lebanon and Iraq.

Belonging to the Community Board number 11, Gravesend is a dense and rapidly growing area with a population of 71,578 according to the 2012 census. The neighborhood stretches from Shore Parkway in the south to Kings Highway in the north, and from Stillwell Avenue in the west to Coney Island Avenue in the east. The public transportation is conveniently offered in the form of the three local subway lines and various bus routes that blanket the town.

The large majority of the area is family households, totaling 68.4%. Especially in the Sephardic Jewish community, there is a huge emphasis placed on remaining within the tightly-knit neighborhood. Because of this the demand for housing units has skyrocketed, with only 10% of the 22,600 units left unoccupied. The real estate value of the area remains a mixed bag however, where one can find prices ranging from $600,000 or all the way to multi-million dollar single family homes on Ocean Parkway, strategically placed within walking distance of schools, restaurants, and places of worship. The neighborhood is a collection of one and two family brick houses, and seven or eight story condominium buildings.

 

The area is host to over 10 public schools, including standouts Lafayette and Abraham Lincoln High School. There are also religious private schools, such as Our Lady of Grace School, and about a dozen religious Yeshivahs, a few with enrollment totals just under 100o students. Nearby are two institutions, Touro College and Brooklyn College. The major religions in the neighborhood are accommodated with numerous churches and over 35 Syrian- Lebanese Synagogues.

Within minutes, a local in Gravesend can quench any type of shopping thirst in the main streets of Kings Highway and Coney Island Avenue. On about 14 blocks of Kings Highway, more than 225 stores line both sides of this busily packed street. While searching for an elusive parking spot down the stretch of businesses, a variety of languages can be heard as the great diversity of the neighborhood shines through in the form of specialty stores and small culturally specific shops. The street contains everything a shopping enthusiast might crave, from bargain shoe stores to lavishly expensive Versace gowns with prices in the thousands. On both Kings Highway and Coney Island Avenue, residents have found a niche opening groceries, electronic stores, laundromats, and a huge selection of quality restaurants. The streets also contain larger chain stores including Duane Reade, Rite Aid, and Walgreens.

The neighborhood of Gravesend had faced an enormous influx of immigrants in the 1990’s, and as the population size continues to expand, adequate space for residents to live is continually in need. While some have resorted to moving out of the community to find more modest real estate prices, others have undertaken large condominium construction to fill this need, which is undoubtedly a source of conflict among locals. It is clear that the area is a strong, vibrant, and attractive haven for immigrants of all kinds to flock to, and the progress is expected to continue for years to come.

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Elie Sutton; Gravesend

Elie Sutton, now in his mid 80’s, is a community legend. Born in Aleppo, Syria, Mr. Sutton was instructed to leave his home at the age of 19 by his father, when at the time Syrian Jews under the control of the Ottoman Empire were facing a severe economic decline and a wave of sharp anti-Semitism following the declaration of the state of Israel in 1948.

In the next 5 years, Sutton found himself traveling from Egypt to Lebanon, from Iran to Shanghai, in a perpetual state of homelessness. At the age of 24 he finally crossed the continent and found a home in Brooklyn, NY, and established himself into the Sephardic Jewish community in Gravesend. From then on, Elie Sutton was on the forefront of nearly all the major changes and progressive advancements of the community. He took a leading role on community committees, helping to create new infrastructure, schools, and religious institutions.

When I get a chance to meet Mr. Sutton, I hope to ask him firsthand of his incredible journey from Syria to Brooklyn, which is documented in a book called Alien at Home: Divine Intervention, written by Bahia Abrams. I also would like to ask him in detail about the start of my community, and through what conflicts and challenges it had to go through to become what it is today. He has been described as brilliant, clear-minded, vibrant, personable, and extremely loving and generous. I am excited to see what I could learn from such an incredible man.

In addition to Mr. Sutton, I hope to also interview my Great Grandmother Virginia Sultan, who has lived in Brooklyn all her amazing 97 years, and has truly become a longstanding pillar in the community.

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Amanda Burden

Q: Do you think that this lengthy profile of Amanda Burden is fair and/or unbiased? Does the writer (Julie Satow) reveal her own point-of-view?

Q: What image are we left with of Burden?

Although author Julie Satow clearly intended for her profile of Amanda Burden to be unbiased and neutral, I could not help but get a message of critical discontent that the author has for the Director of City Planning. The title itself, “Amanda Burden Wants to Remake New York. She Has 19 Months Left.”, assumes that Ms. Burden is merely a inexperienced newcomer with no prior accomplishment in the industry and has an unattainable goal, which the author sarcastically states has the short time limit of 19 months.

The profile opens with a brief description of Burden’s distinct appearance. It is one, according to the author, that is incredibly different than her surroundings. While she had a “…sheath dress, impossibly thin, and with a blonde bob reminiscent of the “Mad Men” 60’s…” assumes that Burden is an outsider, whose overly outlandish demeanor, dress, and ideas are simply part of a glamorous and idealistic television show, rendering her incapable of making pragmatic decisions aligned with the public’s interests, and making her blind to the consequences of said decisions.

Throughout the profile we are introduced to Ms. Burdens many accomplishments, and then immediately reminded of her critics’ disapproval in every strategy and project that she had carried out. She had created a huge development of parkland and waterfront in her tenure, yet the critics said her ambitions leave no place for working-class New Yorkers. She had always been very keen on paying attention to the fine details of projects, yet that had led to criticism and unrest among those needing that have to deal with her frustrating micromanaging.

I believe Satow included the section of her affluent upbringing and socialite past to emphasize that the control of New York’s planning and infrastructure should not lie in a woman who has come from such a foreign world than the many working-class New Yorkers who will inevitably be affected by her ambitious decision making. Yet, luckily for all of us, there are a mere 19 months left in this experiment.

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Gravesend

Gravesend, a southern neighborhood of Brooklyn, was founded in 1645 by an English settler named Deborah Moody. Despite its name, it offers the many perks of a functioning New York borough. The area is extremely diverse, evolving from a simple Dutch farming community to a region including Italians, Mexicans, Chinese, Haitian, and Russian populations. The neighborhood is also home to one of the largest Sephardic Jewish communities in the world, with numbers close to 75,000.

Largely a suburban town decades ago, Gravesend is now a vibrant urban collection of many cultures and ethnicities. A population explosion of middle class immigrants and local expansion has vaulted the area into a busy hive of progress and excitement. Large retail stores, small specialty shops and restaurants line Kings Highway and Coney Island Avenue, where movement is incessant and parking spots come at a premium. Subway lines and busses weave through the town, while handball courts, paved baseball diamonds and charming kiddie parks dot the active streets of McDonald Avenue and Ocean Parkway.

Growing up in this area all my life, my neighborhood has always been a source of pride and worthy of tribute and publicity. I also feel obligated to write about the Sephardic Jewish community which I belong to, an incredibly tightly-knit haven deeply entrenched in the traditions brought from the Middle East in the early 1900’s. I intend to highlight the customs, culture, and legacy of my community as only someone who has lived in it all their life would be able to do.

The area is a unique combination of enduring small business owners and historic landmarks, combined with and new modern attractions and development. I plan to focus on the people and places that have lasted all these years in Brooklyn, and hopefully gain a window to the history and foundation that anchors this town today. Of course, along with progression comes inevitable conflict,and I am therefore anticipating having plenty of material to investigate about how the town came to be what it is today.

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