Who We Are: a sutin Family History Update


b.1.6.1.2.1.1 Sarah Faith Fischbein



Yüklə 2,8 Mb.
səhifə19/26
tarix12.01.2019
ölçüsü2,8 Mb.
#95287
1   ...   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   ...   26

1.3.1b.1.6.1.2.1.1 Sarah Faith Fischbein611,613,618

--------------------------------------------------

Birth: 17 Dec 1995
1.3.1b.1.6.1.2.1.2 Brent Andrew Fischbein611,613,618

--------------------------------------------------

Birth: 11 Sep 1997
1.3.1b.1.6.1.2.2 Brian Craig Fischbein611,6,364,613

--------------------------------------------------

Birth: 30 Nov 1977

Occupation: Accountant

Education: Baccalaureate and master’s degrees University of Florida, MBA University of Chicago
Spouse: Hara Rowbrish611
1.3.1b.1.6.1.2.2.1 Brielle Rose Fischbein611,613,618

--------------------------------------------------

Birth: 15 May 2008
1.3.1b.1.6.1.2.2.2 Lawrence Ethan Fischbein611,619,613

--------------------------------------------------

Birth: 10 Dec 2010
1.4 Ancestor 4

--------------------------------------------------


Children: Yossel
1.4.1 Yossel (Sutin?)620

--------------------------------------------------



1.4.1.1 Chaim (Sutin?)620

--------------------------------------------------

Birth: 1798

Death: Unknown


1.4.1.1.1 Yossel/Yaacov Sutin/Soutine620,621

--------------------------------------------------

Birth: 1829

Death: Unknown


1.4.1.1.1.1 Zalman (Solomon) Mendel Sutin622,620,621

--------------------------------------------------

Birth: 1852, Puchowitz, Belarus

Death: 1932


While some sources indicate that Irachmiel was the only child of Areya and Relke, at least one source indicates that both Zalman and Irachmiel were sons of Areya “der Alte” Sutin. If this is the case, Irachmiel was Chaim Soutine’s uncle, and Zalman was either a brother or half-brother of Irachmiel. Michael Sutin’s wife, Janet, indicated that Zalman had a brother who went to Canada; who could have been Irachmiel. However, it should be noted that the evidence of this relationship is limited.
Zalman came from Puchowitz, married, and subsequently lived in Smilovichi with Sarah. They had 11 children. Some of their sons were rabbis in Poland.
Spouse: Sarah Plaks623,620

Birth: 1869

Death: 1932
Sarah was the youngest of three daughters of Meishe and Gisse Plaks, who operated an inn about 30 miles from Smilovichi.
The oldest daughter, Rose, immigrated to the U.S. on the SS Carmania, sailing from Liverpool 11 Sep 1905, arriving at Ellis Island 20 Sep 1905. Her husband, Abraham Plaks, was born 18 May 1859 in Smilovichi, died 23 Oct 1942 in New York NY. In Europe he was a horse dealer or trader, and in the US was a produce dealer. Rose and Abraham had six children: Eva, Morris, Sonia, Charles, Louis, and Samuel. Abraham and son Charles (Kivi) were smuggled out of Russia so that Charles could avoid conscription into the Czar’s army.
The middle daughter, Nachama, married Morris Friedland. They had two sons, Samuel and George, who were founders of the Food Fair supermarket chain. Nachama died in Florida, is buried in a cemetery belonging to Temple Emanuel in Miami.
Other information indicates that Sarah Efraim was Zalman’s wife and the mother of Chaim. Sarah Efraim’s parents were Asher Efraim and Chaya Oscherwitz. Asher lived 1821-1886, Chaya 1822-1896 according to Bob Schwab and to the Efraim Extended family tree.
1.4.1.1.1.1.1 Yankel Sutin620

--------------------------------------------------


1.4.1.1.1.1.2 Hirsh Sutin620

--------------------------------------------------


1.4.1.1.1.1.3 Mary (Merka?) Sutin620,624

--------------------------------------------------


Mary may be the Merka cited by Merka’s grandaughter, Sheila Rann. Merka reportedly was an excellent seamstress as a young woman in Russia. When her brother Chaim left home, she sewed jackets and trousers for him and sent them to him.
1.4.1.1.1.1.4 Yossel Sutin620

--------------------------------------------------


1.4.1.1.1.1.5 Louis Sutin625,620

--------------------------------------------------


1.4.1.1.1.1.6 Julius Sutin625,620

--------------------------------------------------


Julius was an artist who lived in Lithuania. He created a poster “...designed... on the occasion of an exhibition held at Munich to place on record the sufferings of the Jewish victims of Nazism. The design is exceedingly grim and unusual in conception. The Hebrew letters of the word ‘Yiskor (memorial), 1939-1945,’ are made up of distorted bodies of Jewish victims. In the background is the figure of death shown as a skeleton, while an endless procession of victims waiting for slaughter merges into an endless line of bodies and skeletons in their mass graves. Opposite is an old man carrying the scrolls of the law and pointing upward at the inscription ‘Semah Yisroel,’ while in the foreground are faces of the dead and a pyramid of skulls. Despite its grimness the whole design is very impressive.”
1.4.1.1.1.1.7 Frida Sutin620

--------------------------------------------------


1.4.1.1.1.1.8 Araleh Sutin620

--------------------------------------------------


1.4.1.1.1.1.9 Gershen Sutin622,623,626,627,151

--------------------------------------------------

Birth: 1886

Death: 1941


Gershen, his wife, and daughter were killed by German troops. Gershen and his wife also had two or three children in addition to that daughter. The Germans killed all but Yankel.
Spouse: Tamara Gurevich628,629

Birth: 13 Apr 1889, Mogilev

Death: Berezino, Belarus
1.4.1.1.1.1.9.1 Yankel Gershenovich Sutin626,628,133,151,219

--------------------------------------------------

Birth: 20 Apr 1919, Berezino, Belarus

Death: 2 Oct 2004, Skokie IL


Yankel was the only one of Gershen’s four children to survive the Germans during World War II. He did so because he was in Moscow studying engineering when the war broke out. He went from Moscow to Tashkent, Uzbekistan in central Asia, eventually came to the U.S.
When interviewed by his daughter-in-law, Janet Sutin, Yankel indicated that his parents had visited relatives in Smilovichi from time to time but he as a boy had not, so he knew little about his Sutin aunts and uncles. He was 22 when WWII started and they fled the Nazis. He served in the army and later worked at a military plan during WWII. When the war was over he searched for his family. His parents had been killed and his sister and her children were missing. He never found any information about them.
Spouse: Dina Wolfstein626,628

Birth: 10 Jun 1922, Uman, Ukraine


1.4.1.1.1.1.9.1.1 Michael Sutin626,628,627

--------------------------------------------------

Birth: 24 Feb 1953, Tashkent, Uzbekistan
Michael has a second cousin, Lev Shapiro, living in New York City, but has had no contact with him.
Spouse: Janet Strashnov626,628

Birth: 5 Aug 1957, Tashkent, Uzbekistan


1.4.1.1.1.1.9.1.1.1 Ilya Sutin631,633,34

--------------------------------------------------

Birth: 26 Jun 1978, Tashkent, Uzbekistan
Spouse: Polina Demidova631,633

Birth: 11 Apr 1981, St Petersburg, Russia


1.4.1.1.1.1.9.1.1.1.1 Phillip Jacob Sutin633

--------------------------------------------------

Birth: 19 Feb 2009, IL
1.4.1.1.1.1.9.1.1.1.2 Timothy Blake Sutin633

--------------------------------------------------

Birth: 18 Nov 2011, IL
1.4.1.1.1.1.9.1.1.2 Samuel Michael Sutin631,633

--------------------------------------------------

Birth: 30 Sep 1981, Tashkent, Uzbekistan

Marriage: 20 Dec 2008 Harris TX


Spouse: Leslie Nicole Steinberg631,134

Birth: 11 Mar 1982, Harris TX


1.4.1.1.1.1.9.1.1.2.1 Halley Brooke Sutin633

--------------------------------------------------

Birth: 18 Nov 2011, Houston TX
1.4.1.1.1.1.9.1.1.2.2 Jaden Seth Sutin633

--------------------------------------------------

Birth: 27 Nov 2013, Houston TX
1.4.1.1.1.1.9.1.1.3 Alla Sutin631,633

--------------------------------------------------

Birth: 11 Jan 1988, Tashkent, Uzbekistan
Spouse: Christopher Randolph Hanson Hale631,633
1.4.1.1.1.1.9.1.1.3.1 Emil Raymond Hale635

--------------------------------------------------

Birth: 5 Jun 2015, Burlingame CA
1.4.1.1.1.1.9.1.2 Gregory Sutin626,628

--------------------------------------------------

Birth: 18 Nov 1948, Tashkent, Uzbekistan
Spouse: Nataliya Konopleva626,628

Birth: 10 May 1949, Tashkent, Uzbekistan

Death: 30 Mar 2000, Chicago IL
1.4.1.1.1.1.9.1.2.1 Tatyana Sutin631,632

--------------------------------------------------

Birth: 1973
Spouse: Vladimir Zaslavskiy633
1.4.1.1.1.1.9.1.2.1.1 Michael Zaslavskiy631,633

--------------------------------------------------

Birth: 20 Jun 2003, Buffalo Grove IL
1.4.1.1.1.1.9.1.2.1.2 Natalie Zaslavskiy631,633

--------------------------------------------------

Birth: 24 Jan 2006, Buffalo Grove IL
1.4.1.1.1.1.9.2 Sofiya (Sonya) Sutin628,627

--------------------------------------------------

Birth: 1916, Belarus

Death: Unknown


Sofiya was missing during World War II with her three daughters.
Spouse: Daniil Shpilman628

Death: 26 Nov 1942


1.4.1.1.1.1.9.2.1 Manya Shpilman628

--------------------------------------------------

Birth: 1937, Belarus

Death: Unknown


1.4.1.1.1.1.9.2.2 Fira Shpilman628

--------------------------------------------------

Birth: 1939, Belarus

Death: Unknown


1.4.1.1.1.1.9.2.3 Nina Shpilman628

--------------------------------------------------

Birth: 1941, Belarus

Death: Unknown


1.4.1.1.1.1.9.3 Unknown Sutin627

--------------------------------------------------


Died as a child, killed by Germans.

Unknown Sutin children of Gershen and Tamara were twins.


1.4.1.1.1.1.9.4 Unknown Sutin627

--------------------------------------------------


Died as a child, killed by Germans.

Unknown Sutin children of Gershen and Tamara were twins.


1.4.1.1.1.1.10 Chaim Sutin/Soutine623,622,630,631,632,633,634,635,636

--------------------------------------------------

Birth: 13 Jan 1893, Smilovichi, Belarus

Death: 9 Aug 1943, Paris, France



Occupation: Expressionist/postimpresssionist painter
Chaim, about 5’8” tall with brown eyes and dark brown hair, was the 10th of 11 children. He was described as a “...wild child...” (who) left all the day, “... only returned in the evenings to eat.” His father, a poor mender of clothes (a professional notch below that of tailor) wanted him to become a cobbler.
Even as a young child Chaim, from a Hasidic family, liked to draw, which was forbidden by Jewish doctrine. His parents and brothers reprimanded him for drawing, saying a Jew should not draw. However, he continued drawing, and at one point drew a portrait of Smilovichi’s rabbi. The rabbi’s son beat him for violating the Second Commandment, reportedly stabbing him in the thigh. Chaim’s mother was so angry that she threatened to take the rabbi’s son to court, settled for 25 rubles compensation, which Chaim used to leave Smilovichi at age 16 to study art.
He went first to Minsk, then Vilna, and moved to Paris, arriving 3 Feb 1913. There his name changed to Soutine; conflicting information indicates that he changed it to sound more French, and that the French changed it. He became a world famous expressionist painter, and in 1916 he settled in Montparnasse.
Soutine’s work has been described as addressing the existential anxiety of everyday life and defying certain orthodox Jewish proscriptions (e.g., making of images, inspecting and painting bloody carcasses, insisting on visual sensation in conflict with the religious injunction against seeing). His immersion in Smilovichi’s death rituals was reflected in his paintings. Kandel described his work as dwelling “… on the tragic, lonely, and melancholy anxiety of the Jewish experience in the Diaspora.”
A family story was that his Aunt Rose’s son Charles Plaks visited Chaim Soutine was visited in Paris in the mid 1920s. Chaim was in dirty old clothes and lived in a shabby studio. Charlie invited his "poor" cousin Chaim out to dinner, so that he could have a good meal. When they walked into the restaurant Charlie was very surprised that everyone got up to applaud and greet Chaim, who even at that time was quite famous and respected for his art.
Chaim, at age 17, met Débora Melnick in 1910 in Vilno. She was learning to sing, wanted to become an opera singer. They parted, came together again in 1924 in Vilno, when she was Mme. Vera Débora Leipouner (Lejpuner?). Some sources indicate that they had a Russian church wedding, but apparently if they were married it was not legally recognized. They lived together for some time, separating in 1928, at which time Débora told him she was pregnant. Their daughter, Aimee, was born 10 June 1929 in Paris. “Guard” Zborowski told him of the child’s birth, required him to help Débora. Débora remained in Paris with Aimee, with M. Leipouner (Lejpuner?).
A related story from the Barnes Foundation reported on Chaim Soutine: 1923.  “It's the miracle of his life.  An American multimillionaire, Albert C. Barnes, enters a private gallery, Rue de Seine, in the Latin Quarter.  His eye is caught by a dusty canvas, which is torn in places. ‘Here is what I have been looking for for years!  Who painted this?  Bring me this genius right away!’ 

“Overnight, Soutine will become famous.  Barnes sets him up in a lovely house with a full bathroom, he has his beard shaved off.  From then on, he dresses in Barclay clothing, acquires silk ties and, when he walks through the streets of Paris, he spins his cane.  And, as one’s happiness never comes along on its own, he falls in love.  He reunites with a childhood friend, Deborah (sic) Melnik, whom he marries at City Hall and at the Synagogue.  From this union, in 1925, little Aimée will be born....”


In 1937 Chaim met and developed a friendship with Gerda Groth, a German Jew who proposed to serve as his “sick guard,” thus was nicknamed Miss Garde.

Throughout his adult life Chaim suffered from stomach ulcers, which became aggravated. On 31 Jul 1943 Chaim, who had been forced to hide in the countryside of wartime France to elude Nazi occupiers, was admitted to the Chinon hospital under the name Charles Soutine. He was in critical condition, underwent emergency surgery on August 8, and died at 6 a.m August 9 at age 50. He is buried in Paris, Ile-de-France, France.


Pablo Picasso attended his funeral and followed the coffin to the burial site. This action by Picasso required considerable courage because Paris was still under control of Nazi Germany and Soutine was Jewish.
Spouse: Débora Melnick (Melnik)622,637

Birth: 18 Apr 1896, Vilno, Russia

Death: 1971, Paris, France
At some point Débora married M. Leipouner. According to at least one source Débora also was known as Véra Leipouner. This name is reflected in Embassy of France certification of Aimée's birth.
1.4.1.1.1.1.10.1 Aimée Sutin/Soutine638,637,639

--------------------------------------------------

Birth: 25 Jun 1925, Paris, France
In his Soutine biography, Nicoidski quoted Aimée as saying, “Mummy said to me it was a true love story but he didn’t want it (sic) become a consecrated union.”
Consular Service of the Embassy of France certifies, “Mis Aimée SOUTINE born in Paris on June 10, 1929, is the legitimate daughter of Mr Chaîm SOUTINE and Véra will Débora SOUTINE LEIPOUNER born MELNIK.” 
1.4.1.1.1.1.11 Etel Sutin623

--------------------------------------------------

Birth: 1900

Death: 1936


Spouse: Mordochi Zuckerman623
1.4.1.2 Nachum (Sutin?)620

--------------------------------------------------

Birth: 1802

Death: Unknown


Spouse: Rosa620

Birth: 1799


1.4.1.2.1 Rochale (Sutin?)620

--------------------------------------------------

Birth: 1830

Death: Unknown


1.4.1.2.2 (C)haim (Sutin?)620

--------------------------------------------------

Birth: 1831

Death: Unknown


1.4.1.2.3 Abraham (Sutin?)620

--------------------------------------------------

Death: Unknown

Birth: 1839


1.4.1.2.4 Malka (Sutin?)620

--------------------------------------------------

Birth: 1840

Death: Unknown


Spouse: Goal620
1.4.1.3 Zelig (Sutin?)620

--------------------------------------------------

Birth: 1804

Death: Unknown


1.5 Ancestor 5

--------------------------------------------------


Children: Arka (Aron) (1873-1943)
1.5.1 Arka (Aron) Sutin640,641

--------------------------------------------------

Birth: 1873, Puchovitz, Belarus

Death: 1943, Minsk, Belarus

Occupation: Melamed
Arka, a melamed (teacher), in his home had a cheder, a traditional elementary school teaching the basics of Judaism and the Hebrew language. When Germany attacked the Soviet Union, Arka and Reizel; Rachel with her husband and three children; and Milya with her husband Yefim Aishenskiy and daughter Tamara, Sofia, and Judith were living in Minsk. In June 1941, Arka and the family tried to leave Minsk. Having no transportation they had to travel on foot with small children and a few personal possessions. Milya managed to escape when a passing army truck picked up her and Tamara. German troops captured the rest of the family (except Mylia’s husband Yefim Aishenskiy), moving them back to Minsk and putting them in the ghetto. They lived there until the Germans killed them in 1943.
Spouse: Reizel640

Birth: 1873, Puchovitz, Belarus

Death: 1943, Minsk, Belarus
Arka and Reizel moved to Minsk at the end of the 19th century.
1.5.1.1 Tzilya (Celia) Aaron Sutin640,640

--------------------------------------------------

Birth: 1895, Minsk, Belarus

Death: 1990, Kharkov, Ukraine

Occupation: High school math teacher, Moscow

Education: Moscow University 1920


She served as a member of the Moscow district council, and was awarded the medal of Lenin as an outstanding teacher.
1.5.1.2 Ilya Aron Sutin640,641,642

--------------------------------------------------

Birth: 19 Sep 1897, Minsk, Belarus

Death: 1979, Dzerzhinsk, Russia

Occupation: Professor of microbiology

Education: Moscow University1922

Marriage: 20 Jun 1919, Minsk, Belarus
After Ilya finished elementary school he entered the Real Uchiliche (secondary school) and began work at age 13 as a tutor for children from wealthy Jewish families. He wanted to continue his education in Moscow University but the university had a quota on Jewish students. During World War I, a Tsar’s decree allowed Jewish children of disabled veterans who had been awarded a medal of St. George to go to the University without limitations, an opportunity Ilya seized. His uncle, who had no children, returned from the war without a leg and with a medal, took custody of his nephew Ilya, and in 1915 Ilya entered Moscow University. Because of the 1917 Revolution he interrupted his studies and returned to Minsk, but returned to Moscow University in 1919 and graduated in 1922. Ilya spoke Yiddish, Hebrew, Belarusian and Russian fluently, read German, French and Polish, and spoke some English. After getting a medical degree specializing in microbiology, Ilya worked in the Minsk Pasteur Station for almost nine years, becoming head of the bacteriological department (1922-1931). While working at the Pasteur station he also was an assistant professor of microbiology at Belarusian University.
The new wave of repressions started in the Soviet Union in 1927-28, directed against various experts and scholars who were accused of falsified work. Most of them were arrested and sent to work camps, others were killed. In early 1931 Professor Elbert, chair of Ilya’s department, was arrested and sent to the work camp. On March 5, 1931 Ilya was arrested "as a member of the subversive organization," and in 1932 he was exiled for five years to Kazakhstan. The Trial Chamber of the Supreme Court of the Belarus reinstated him 27 July 1956. Ilya became an assistant professor of microbiology at Kazakh State Medical University and was named department head, and later became head of the department in the regional sanitary-bacteriological institute and the department of microbiology of the Kazakh Veterinary Institute. In August 1937, Ilya was transferred to the Stalingrad (later Volgograd) State Medical University, where he was department head of microbiology.
In 1953 a new wave of repressions began in Russia, directed against Jewish doctors. Ilya was suspended from work as a head of the department of microbiology and began to work as supervisor in the sanitary-bacteriological institute. For the last few last years of his career he worked in the bacteriological laboratory of the regional hospital in Volgograd.
Spouse: Anna Mordukhai Lyubich640

Birth: 1899, Grondo, Poland

Death: 1959, Volgograd (Stalingrad), Russia
1.5.1.2.1 Mark Ilya Sutin640,641,29

--------------------------------------------------

Birth: 1920, Minsk Belarus

Death: 1 Dec 2002, Los Angeles CA

Occupation: Ear, nose, and throat physician

Education: Stalingrad Medical School 1942, PhD otolaryngology


Mark joined the army as a surgeon during the war in the summer of 1942. He served in the army until 1946 and after demobilization did his residency in otolaryngology in Stalingrad. There Mark met Natalia Zelenina who also was working as an ear, nose, and throat doctor. They married and moved to the Dzerzhinsk/Nizhny Novgorod area of Russia where Mark headed the ENT department. A few years later he received his PhD in otolaryngology. In 1998 Mark and Natalia moved to Los Angeles CA in the U.S. On December 1, 2002, Mark was killed in a car accident and Natalia went back to Russia where she died ten months later.
Spouse: Natalia Alexander Zelenina640,641,643,528,32

Birth: 1922, Nizhny Novgorod, Russia

Death: 2003, Dzerzhinsk, Russia
1.5.1.2.1.1 Alexander Sutin640

--------------------------------------------------

Birth: 1949, Volgograd (Stalingrad), Russia

Occupation: Research professor, Center for Maritime Systems, Stevens Institute of Technology

Education: DSc Acoustical Institute Moscow; BS, MS, PhD Gorky State University, Gorky Russia
In Nov 2011 Alexander was elected a fellow of the Acoustical Society of America
Spouse: Olga Zorina643


Yüklə 2,8 Mb.

Dostları ilə paylaş:
1   ...   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   ...   26




Verilənlər bazası müəlliflik hüququ ilə müdafiə olunur ©muhaz.org 2024
rəhbərliyinə müraciət

gir | qeydiyyatdan keç
    Ana səhifə


yükləyin