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Jaratz, Enrique

Male 1924 - 2018  (93 years)


Personal Information    |    Notes    |    Sources    |    All    |    PDF

  • Name Jaratz, Enrique  [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8
    Born 6 Sep 1924  Medanos, Buenos Aires, Argentina Find all individuals with events at this location  [1, 4, 5, 6, 7
    Gender Male 
    Died 9 Aug 2018  Buenos Aires, Argentina Find all individuals with events at this location  [6
    Buried Cementerio Comunitario de Tablada, Buenos Aires, , Argentina Find all individuals with events at this location  [6
    Person ID I21796  Our Family
    Last Modified 29 Aug 2024 

    Father Jaratz, Iza,   b. Abt 1901, Ukraine Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 25 Aug 1975  (Age ~ 74 years) 
    Relationship natural 
    Mother Gutman, Clara,   b. Abt 1906, Medanos, Buenos Aires, Argentina Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 23 Dec 1996, Bahia Blanca, Argentina Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age ~ 90 years) 
    Relationship natural 
    Married Abt 1920  Medanos, Buenos Aires, Argentina Find all individuals with events at this location  [7
    Family ID F8274  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family Priluk, Emma 
    Children 
     1. Jaratz, Ricardo Abel
     2. Jaratz, Sonia Ruth
     3. Jaratz, Oscar Saul
    Last Modified 29 Aug 2024 
    Family ID F8279  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Notes 
    • Argentina, the Promised Land Tribute to the Promised Land: Argentina
      Médanos, Bahía Blanca and Buenos Aires frame the majority of the 80 years of Enrique Jaratz, who began as a warehouse dealer and became president of a bank. Identified for his contributions to important charitable works and flamboyant "Citizen Solidario", he says that this type of attitude is a family property and a way of thanking the hospitality that the country provided to his ancestors.
      09:00 | 04/24/2005Argentina, the promised land Tribute to the promised land: Argentina. The new one. White Bay. The newspaper of the Argentine south. News from the city, region, country, world

      Médanos, Bahía Blanca and Buenos Aires frame the majority of the 80 years of Enrique Jaratz, who began as a warehouse dealer and became president of a bank. Identified for his contributions to important charitable works and flamboyant "Citizen Solidario", he says that this type of attitude is a family property and a way of thanking the hospitality that the country provided to his ancestors.

      Between the earth that the wind rises a small house of adobe appears of three pieces. The bathroom is 20 meters and to find water in the mill you have to walk almost a block.
      The boy who wakes up at dawn to bring his horses closer to his father, now plays ball. But he does not dream of wearing Boca's shirt: his future is shaping up for trade, far enough away from the dusty fields of Nicolás Levalle.

      * * *

      From the impeccable fifth floor of the Brasilia building, one hundred meters from Rivadavia Square, Enrique Jaratz has his eyes fixed on time. A few hours ago he has returned to Bahía Blanca and also to his yesterday, from a present that says to live with tranquility and gratitude, above all for the brand new distinction of "Citizen Solidario" that on Thursday granted him the Deliberative Council.
      --To this homage that the city has given me I want to transform it into an act of gratitude to the country that a century ago received my maternal grandfather. Because this land, so far from his native Russia, gave him every opportunity to live in freedom, to work, to educate his children and to prosper in family. The distinction, moreover, coincides with the Jewish Passover, which began yesterday, and which rightly represents the Freedom Festival - says Jaratz, Medan of vital eight decades and neighbor of Buenos Aires for 15 years.
      Their footprints appear in most of the solidarity projects of Bahía Blanca and a large region; even in other provinces, such as Rio Negro.
      - Why?
      - Because it responds to a spirit of solidarity that comes from family and that I have been able to continue thanks to the great support of my wife and my children. Also from my friends and my partners. For example, when I turned 70, they wanted to make me a great gift. I knew it and then I asked for cash with which we bought a big house in the Northwest neighborhood, where today there are low-income children. The message of John Paul II also served to strengthen my work for the humble. But I will not go into detail about what we have done.

      * * *

      Enrique Jaratz was born on September 6, 1924, in Médanos. He grew up there: he went to sixth grade in School No. 1, worked in the field with his father and later, in a car, he was a delivery agent for his grandfather's store.
      In 1945 he left for San Carlos de Bariloche, where he served in the Artillery Regiment.
      "I was the assistant to Captain Robustiano Patron Costas, a member of a family well known for his northern wits. When Juan Domingo Perón came, he asked for the discharge. I had to hatch all the time, because with the cold there was no firewood that reached. On July 9, when I swore the flag, it was 20 degrees below zero.
      After that experience in Bariloche, Jaratz returned to Medanos. He opened a store, in 1949 he married Emma Priluk and had two sons and a woman.

      * * *

      A silent film of Carlitos Chaplin, in Médanos, was the first thing that Enrique Jaratz saw in the cinema. From those times he remembers the effort and a worthy poverty.
      "There was never a plate missing at my house." But of course, my father worked from sunrise to sunset.
      In not many years, the boy who dreamed of being someone in the commercial world was fulfilling his objectives. For example, it took advantage of the great development of the garlic in the district of Villarino and was dedicated to the hacienda and the export.
      "That progress, in 1955, allowed me to reach Bahia Blanca and engage in new activities. We live in Casanova 434, until I built, in 1966, the Brasilia building. For a special circumstance, I was invited to become a shareholder in Banco Mutual del Sud, then converted into a corporation. Over time we drive through all of Patagonia. We started with Médanos, of course. I was president until 1989, when it was sold, something that later was repeated several times. I continued as a director until a few years ago.
      - What is silver?
      "An instrument for doing positive things." But for a good quality of life it does not take much.
      - How is the world of money?
      - Difficult for the inflationary processes suffered by the country, where the more aggressive the better.
      - Did you move away from the Jewish religion?
      --Do not. I am very respectful of the legacy of my ancestors. I also try to help in Buenos Aires. In 2002, there were some 30,000 Jewish families below the poverty line.
      - Are you happy?
      --Yes.
      - What?
      - Being able to do things for others, even if they are "aspirins".
      - Do you feel guilty?
      --Do not. I have always sought to work with honesty and enthusiasm.
      - At this time, with so much corruption on the surface, what do you tell the young people?
      - That they devote themselves to study and to work for the right, that this country offers its fertile land throughout the territory.
      - You thought to leave?
      "I do not change Argentina for anything." Not even for Israel, the United States or Australia. This country has been providing possibilities for a long time, as it was given to my grandfather and all those who want to do.
      - What advice do you give your grandchildren?
      - That they do not look beyond our borders, that they stay here, that there is place for 100 million inhabitants.
      - What has life given you?
      --Great joys, such as my marriage and my children, and ... also the worst thing that can happen to a human being: the loss of a child.
      -Will you write your story?
      "Several have proposed to me, but I believe it is already written with facts.

      Today

      * For 15 years he lives in the neighborhood of La Recoleta, in Buenos Aires. He is engaged in farming and livestock farming in Coronel Pringles, where he travels twice a month.
      * Strange Bay, for his affections and for all the works he undertook. Also Monte Hermoso.
      * He says he left a few friends from his childhood and names only two: Alberto Benito Casas and Moses Guernstein, both Class 1924.
      * We still love football. He is always following the campaigns of Boca and is now very enthusiastic about the appearance of the Bahian Rodrigo Palacio.
      * At age 80, he believes that God will determine the path he must follow after this life.

      "Beto" Cabrera

      Jaratz was head of Banco del Sud when he decided to take a very special employee: Alberto Pedro Cabrera, one of the great glories of bahiense sport.
      "Through him I became a fan of Students. He worked with current accounts and had everything very fresh in his memory. It was sufficient to mention the name of the client to Beto, immediately, saying the number. A phenomenon as a player and professional."

      * Grandfather
      Santiago Guitman arrived in the Medanos area in 1905. He came from Russia, alone and escaping from hunger and persecution. It was Kiev, about 300 kilometers from what is now Ukraine.
      He found a job as a laborer in a farm in the south of the Villarino party, owned by the Viale-Rizzo firm, which in turn owns all the railroad restaurants.
      Three years passed before he was able to bring his wife and three children. In these lands two more were born.
      Then settled in Médanos, where he opened a small business. In 1910 he dedicated himself to dismantling about 20 thousand hectares of piquillines, in the area of ??Nicholas Levalle, to convert them into fertile fields.

      * His parents
      Iza Jaratz also came from Russia, but Carlos Casares, Buenos Aires province. Then he went to Bernasconi. He worked in the salinas of Anzoátegui and in 1920, in Médanos, he met his wife, Clara Guitman. They had five children.
      Argentina, the Promised Land Tribute to the Promised Land: Argentina
      Médanos, Bahía Blanca and Buenos Aires frame the majority of the 80 years of Enrique Jaratz, who began as a warehouse dealer and became president of a bank. Identified for his contributions to important charitable works and flamboyant "Citizen Solidario", he says that this type of attitude is a family property and a way of thanking the hospitality that the country provided to his ancestors.
      09:00 | 04/24/2005Argentina, the promised land Tribute to the promised land: Argentina. The new one. White Bay. The newspaper of the Argentine south. News from the city, region, country, world

      Médanos, Bahía Blanca and Buenos Aires frame the majority of the 80 years of Enrique Jaratz, who began as a warehouse dealer and became president of a bank. Identified for his contributions to important charitable works and flamboyant "Citizen Solidario", he says that this type of attitude is a family property and a way of thanking the hospitality that the country provided to his ancestors.

      Between the earth that the wind rises a small house of adobe appears of three pieces. The bathroom is 20 meters and to find water in the mill you have to walk almost a block.
      The boy who wakes up at dawn to bring his horses closer to his father, now plays ball. But he does not dream of wearing Boca's shirt: his future is shaping up for trade, far enough away from the dusty fields of Nicolás Levalle.

      * * *

      From the impeccable fifth floor of the Brasilia building, one hundred meters from Rivadavia Square, Enrique Jaratz has his eyes fixed on time. A few hours ago he has returned to Bahía Blanca and also to his yesterday, from a present that says to live with tranquility and gratitude, above all for the brand new distinction of "Citizen Solidario" that on Thursday granted him the Deliberative Council.
      --To this homage that the city has given me I want to transform it into an act of gratitude to the country that a century ago received my maternal grandfather. Because this land, so far from his native Russia, gave him every opportunity to live in freedom, to work, to educate his children and to prosper in family. The distinction, moreover, coincides with the Jewish Passover, which began yesterday, and which rightly represents the Freedom Festival - says Jaratz, Medan of vital eight decades and neighbor of Buenos Aires for 15 years.
      Their footprints appear in most of the solidarity projects of Bahía Blanca and a large region; even in other provinces, such as Rio Negro.
      - Why?
      - Because it responds to a spirit of solidarity that comes from family and that I have been able to continue thanks to the great support of my wife and my children. Also from my friends and my partners. For example, when I turned 70, they wanted to make me a great gift. I knew it and then I asked for cash with which we bought a big house in the Northwest neighborhood, where today there are low-income children. The message of John Paul II also served to strengthen my work for the humble. But I will not go into detail about what we have done.

      * * *

      Enrique Jaratz was born on September 6, 1924, in Médanos. He grew up there: he went to sixth grade in School No. 1, worked in the field with his father and later, in a car, he was a delivery agent for his grandfather's store.
      In 1945 he left for San Carlos de Bariloche, where he served in the Artillery Regiment.
      "I was the assistant to Captain Robustiano Patron Costas, a member of a family well known for his northern wits. When Juan Domingo Perón came, he asked for the discharge. I had to hatch all the time, because with the cold there was no firewood that reached. On July 9, when I swore the flag, it was 20 degrees below zero.
      After that experience in Bariloche, Jaratz returned to Medanos. He opened a store, in 1949 he married Emma Priluk and had two sons and a woman.

      * * *

      A silent film of Carlitos Chaplin, in Médanos, was the first thing that Enrique Jaratz saw in the cinema. From those times he remembers the effort and a worthy poverty.
      "There was never a plate missing at my house." But of course, my father worked from sunrise to sunset.
      In not many years, the boy who dreamed of being someone in the commercial world was fulfilling his objectives. For example, it took advantage of the great development of the garlic in the district of Villarino and was dedicated to the hacienda and the export.
      "That progress, in 1955, allowed me to reach Bahia Blanca and engage in new activities. We live in Casanova 434, until I built, in 1966, the Brasilia building. For a special circumstance, I was invited to become a shareholder in Banco Mutual del Sud, then converted into a corporation. Over time we drive through all of Patagonia. We started with Médanos, of course. I was president until 1989, when it was sold, something that later was repeated several times. I continued as a director until a few years ago.
      - What is silver?
      "An instrument for doing positive things." But for a good quality of life it does not take much.
      - How is the world of money?
      - Difficult for the inflationary processes suffered by the country, where the more aggressive the better.
      - Did you move away from the Jewish religion?
      --Do not. I am very respectful of the legacy of my ancestors. I also try to help in Buenos Aires. In 2002, there were some 30,000 Jewish families below the poverty line.
      - Are you happy?
      --Yes.
      - What?
      - Being able to do things for others, even if they are "aspirins".
      - Do you feel guilty?
      --Do not. I have always sought to work with honesty and enthusiasm.
      - At this time, with so much corruption on the surface, what do you tell the young people?
      - That they devote themselves to study and to work for the right, that this country offers its fertile land throughout the territory.
      - You thought to leave?
      "I do not change Argentina for anything." Not even for Israel, the United States or Australia. This country has been providing possibilities for a long time, as it was given to my grandfather and all those who want to do.
      - What advice do you give your grandchildren?
      - That they do not look beyond our borders, that they stay here, that there is place for 100 million inhabitants.
      - What has life given you?
      --Great joys, such as my marriage and my children, and ... also the worst thing that can happen to a human being: the loss of a child.
      -Will you write your story?
      "Several have proposed to me, but I believe it is already written with facts.

      Today

      * For 15 years he lives in the neighborhood of La Recoleta, in Buenos Aires. He is engaged in farming and livestock farming in Coronel Pringles, where he travels twice a month.
      * Strange Bay, for his affections and for all the works he undertook. Also Monte Hermoso.
      * He says he left a few friends from his childhood and names only two: Alberto Benito Casas and Moses Guernstein, both Class 1924.
      * We still love football. He is always following the campaigns of Boca and is now very enthusiastic about the appearance of the Bahian Rodrigo Palacio.
      * At age 80, he believes that God will determine the path he must follow after this life.

      "Beto" Cabrera

      Jaratz was head of Banco del Sud when he decided to take a very special employee: Alberto Pedro Cabrera, one of the great glories of bahiense sport.
      "Through him I became a fan of Students. He worked with current accounts and had everything very fresh in his memory. It was sufficient to mention the name of the client to Beto, immediately, saying the number. A phenomenon as a player and professional."

      * Grandfather
      Santiago Guitman arrived in the Medanos area in 1905. He came from Russia, alone and escaping from hunger and persecution. It was Kiev, about 300 kilometers from what is now Ukraine.
      He found a job as a laborer in a farm in the south of the Villarino party, owned by the Viale-Rizzo firm, which in turn owns all the railroad restaurants.
      Three years passed before he was able to bring his wife and three children. In these lands two more were born.
      Then settled in Médanos, where he opened a small business. In 1910 he dedicated himself to dismantling about 20 thousand hectares of piquillines, in the area of ??Nicholas Levalle, to convert them into fertile fields.

      * His parents
      Iza Jaratz also came from Russia, but Carlos Casares, Buenos Aires province. Then he went to Bernasconi. He worked in the salinas of Anzoátegui and in 1920, in Médanos, he met his wife, Clara Guitman. They had five children.
      Argentina, the Promised Land Tribute to the Promised Land: Argentina
      Médanos, Bahía Blanca and Buenos Aires frame the majority of the 80 years of Enrique Jaratz, who began as a warehouse dealer and became president of a bank. Identified for his contributions to important charitable works and flamboyant "Citizen Solidario", he says that this type of attitude is a family property and a way of thanking the hospitality that the country provided to his ancestors.
      09:00 | 04/24/2005Argentina, the promised land Tribute to the promised land: Argentina. The new one. White Bay. The newspaper of the Argentine south. News from the city, region, country, world

      Médanos, Bahía Blanca and Buenos Aires frame the majority of the 80 years of Enrique Jaratz, who began as a warehouse dealer and became president of a bank. Identified for his contributions to important charitable works and flamboyant "Citizen Solidario", he says that this type of attitude is a family property and a way of thanking the hospitality that the country provided to his ancestors.

      Between the earth that the wind rises a small house of adobe appears of three pieces. The bathroom is 20 meters and to find water in the mill you have to walk almost a block.
      The boy who wakes up at dawn to bring his horses closer to his father, now plays ball. But he does not dream of wearing Boca's shirt: his future is shaping up for trade, far enough away from the dusty fields of Nicolás Levalle.

      * * *

      From the impeccable fifth floor of the Brasilia building, one hundred meters from Rivadavia Square, Enrique Jaratz has his eyes fixed on time. A few hours ago he has returned to Bahía Blanca and also to his yesterday, from a present that says to live with tranquility and gratitude, above all for the brand new distinction of "Citizen Solidario" that on Thursday granted him the Deliberative Council.
      --To this homage that the city has given me I want to transform it into an act of gratitude to the country that a century ago received my maternal grandfather. Because this land, so far from his native Russia, gave him every opportunity to live in freedom, to work, to educate his children and to prosper in family. The distinction, moreover, coincides with the Jewish Passover, which began yesterday, and which rightly represents the Freedom Festival - says Jaratz, Medan of vital eight decades and neighbor of Buenos Aires for 15 years.
      Their footprints appear in most of the solidarity projects of Bahía Blanca and a large region; even in other provinces, such as Rio Negro.
      - Why?
      - Because it responds to a spirit of solidarity that comes from family and that I have been able to continue thanks to the great support of my wife and my children. Also from my friends and my partners. For example, when I turned 70, they wanted to make me a great gift. I knew it and then I asked for cash with which we bought a big house in the Northwest neighborhood, where today there are low-income children. The message of John Paul II also served to strengthen my work for the humble. But I will not go into detail about what we have done.

      * * *

      Enrique Jaratz was born on September 6, 1924, in Médanos. He grew up there: he went to sixth grade in School No. 1, worked in the field with his father and later, in a car, he was a delivery agent for his grandfather's store.
      In 1945 he left for San Carlos de Bariloche, where he served in the Artillery Regiment.
      "I was the assistant to Captain Robustiano Patron Costas, a member of a family well known for his northern wits. When Juan Domingo Perón came, he asked for the discharge. I had to hatch all the time, because with the cold there was no firewood that reached. On July 9, when I swore the flag, it was 20 degrees below zero.
      After that experience in Bariloche, Jaratz returned to Medanos. He opened a store, in 1949 he married Emma Priluk and had two sons and a woman.

      * * *

      A silent film of Carlitos Chaplin, in Médanos, was the first thing that Enrique Jaratz saw in the cinema. From those times he remembers the effort and a worthy poverty.
      "There was never a plate missing at my house." But of course, my father worked from sunrise to sunset.
      In not many years, the boy who dreamed of being someone in the commercial world was fulfilling his objectives. For example, it took advantage of the great development of the garlic in the district of Villarino and was dedicated to the hacienda and the export.
      "That progress, in 1955, allowed me to reach Bahia Blanca and engage in new activities. We live in Casanova 434, until I built, in 1966, the Brasilia building. For a special circumstance, I was invited to become a shareholder in Banco Mutual del Sud, then converted into a corporation. Over time we drive through all of Patagonia. We started with Médanos, of course. I was president until 1989, when it was sold, something that later was repeated several times. I continued as a director until a few years ago.
      - What is silver?
      "An instrument for doing positive things." But for a good quality of life it does not take much.
      - How is the world of money?
      - Difficult for the inflationary processes suffered by the country, where the more aggressive the better.
      - Did you move away from the Jewish religion?
      --Do not. I am very respectful of the legacy of my ancestors. I also try to help in Buenos Aires. In 2002, there were some 30,000 Jewish families below the poverty line.
      - Are you happy?
      --Yes.
      - What?
      - Being able to do things for others, even if they are "aspirins".
      - Do you feel guilty?
      --Do not. I have always sought to work with honesty and enthusiasm.
      - At this time, with so much corruption on the surface, what do you tell the young people?
      - That they devote themselves to study and to work for the right, that this country offers its fertile land throughout the territory.
      - You thought to leave?
      "I do not change Argentina for anything." Not even for Israel, the United States or Australia. This country has been providing possibilities for a long time, as it was given to my grandfather and all those who want to do.
      - What advice do you give your grandchildren?
      - That they do not look beyond our borders, that they stay here, that there is place for 100 million inhabitants.
      - What has life given you?
      --Great joys, such as my marriage and my children, and ... also the worst thing that can happen to a human being: the loss of a child.
      -Will you write your story?
      "Several have proposed to me, but I believe it is already written with facts.

      Today

      * For 15 years he lives in the neighborhood of La Recoleta, in Buenos Aires. He is engaged in farming and livestock farming in Coronel Pringles, where he travels twice a month.
      * Strange Bay, for his affections and for all the works he undertook. Also Monte Hermoso.
      * He says he left a few friends from his childhood and names only two: Alberto Benito Casas and Moses Guernstein, both Class 1924.
      * We still love football. He is always following the campaigns of Boca and is now very enthusiastic about the appearance of the Bahian Rodrigo Palacio.
      * At age 80, he believes that God will determine the path he must follow after this life.

      "Beto" Cabrera

      Jaratz was head of Banco del Sud when he decided to take a very special employee: Alberto Pedro Cabrera, one of the great glories of bahiense sport.
      "Through him I became a fan of Students. He worked with current accounts and had everything very fresh in his memory. It was sufficient to mention the name of the client to Beto, immediately, saying the number. A phenomenon as a player and professional."

      * Grandfather
      Santiago Guitman arrived in the Medanos area in 1905. He came from Russia, alone and escaping from hunger and persecution. It was Kiev, about 300 kilometers from what is now Ukraine.
      He found a job as a laborer in a farm in the south of the Villarino party, owned by the Viale-Rizzo firm, which in turn owns all the railroad restaurants.
      Three years passed before he was able to bring his wife and three children. In these lands two more were born.
      Then settled in Médanos, where he opened a small business. In 1910 he dedicated himself to dismantling about 20 thousand hectares of piquillines, in the area of ??Nicholas Levalle, to convert them into fertile fields.

      * His parents
      Iza Jaratz also came from Russia, but Carlos Casares, Buenos Aires province. Then he went to Bernasconi. He worked in the salinas of Anzoátegui and in 1920, in Médanos, he met his wife, Clara Guitman. They had five children.

  • Sources 
    1. [S251] Online Bio, for Enrique.

    2. [S1589] jarast.fdb - 12/2017.

    3. [S32] Online Tree, http://www.patriciaminuchin.com.ar.

    4. [S447] Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Immigration Cards, 1900-1965, Ancestry.com, (Name: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.;).
      Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Immigration Cards, 1900-1965
      Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Immigration Cards, 1900-1965


    5. [S447] Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Immigration Cards, 1900-1965, Ancestry.com, (Name: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.;).
      Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Immigration Cards, 1900-1965
      Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Immigration Cards, 1900-1965


    6. [S13] My Heritage.com, Family of Mordechai from Zuntersbach.

    7. [S251] Online Bio, for Enrique (Reliability: 3).

    8. [S32] Online Tree, http://www.patriciaminuchin.com.ar (Reliability: 3).