What’s this all about?

In 1991, George Emile Berouti, son of Victoria Fi’ani and Emile Nicolas Berouti, undertook the significant task of building the first Berouti family tree. A decade later, in 2001, Antoine Elias Gelat, nephew of George Emile Berouti and son of Catherine Berouti and Elias Thomas Gelat, took up the mantle and expanded upon his uncle’s work. The resulting Berouti family tree traced the descendants of one man: Nicolas Yacoub. Originally from Beirut, Nicolas moved with his wife, Marie Regina Farajallah, to Jaffa in the mid-1800s. “As was customary back then, he was called Nicolas the Beyrouthy, which eventually became Berouti,” Antoine Gelat explained in the cover letter accompanying the family tree, which he mailed to all descendants in 2001.

In Jaffa, Nicolas and Marie Regina had 5 children: Marie, Michel, Gabriel, Negib, and Emile. Marie, the first-born, died at 14 months, while the four boys grew up, married, and each entered the famous Jaffa orange trade, building lives and families of their own. This story unfolded across four generations, until 1948, when, like the majority of Palestinians, the Beroutis of Jaffa were uprooted and scattered across the middle East during the Nakba.

Berouti Family Tree - one generation

The children of Nicolas Ya‘coub Berouti and Marie Regina Farajallah — all born in Jaffa, Palestine — along with their spouses.

This project began as an effort to update the Berouti family tree with new marriages, births, and deaths. However, what started as a straightforward update quickly evolved. A chance discovery of the genealogy website FamilySearch.org and a collection of old photographs and documents shared by many cousins helped uncover fragments of the family’s history. Each new discovery raised more questions, prompting further research and leading to revelations that deepened our understanding of the Berouti family’s past.

The goal of this project is to reconstitute and preserve, to the greatest extent possible, a piece of what was lost — to remember and honor the Beroutis who once called Jaffa home.

The archives of Saint Anthony of Padua Latin Church in Jaffa, accessible online through FamilySearch.org, along with numerous other historical documents and records (included on this website under the “Archives” section in the main menu), have provided critical insight into the lives of various Berouti family members and their interconnected relationships. These sources have also led to surprising discoveries — ones I will share in future posts.

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