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MIDDLE EASTERN AFFAIR – ELLIS DOUEK

A MIDDLE EASTERN AFFAIR
Ellis Douek
Hardback, October 2004
£18.99, 224pp, 1 870015 87 8

“
wherever
I have found myself has seemed the proper place for me to be. I have never
been an exile.
”
When Ellis Douek was nine years old, his mother
insisted that he take up embroidery – in case he decided to be a surgeon
when he grew up. Of course she was right, as she always was, for he became
Consultant ENT Surgeon at Guy’s Hospital in
London. The Douek parents had the unerring quality of
belonging in whichever country they lived and yet they never stayed long
in one place –
Egypt, the
Sudan
,
Columbia
and, finally,
England, moving either out of political necessity or
out of impetuosity. In 1940 they took the extraordinary decision, for a
Jewish family, to cross the
Atlantic
from
Columbia
to
Italy, on their way back to Egypt
.
Ellis
Douek describes this work as strands of memory. These strands weave
between remembrance of the dawn across the Nile and the silence of the
feloukas, summers in Alexandria by the beach, and the seeming security and
hedonism of it all – between Nasser and the Suez War which disrupted
their lives and uprooted them and Bradford in Yorkshire in the 1950s where
Ellis finished his schooling, an austere place after the prosperity and
warmth of their life in Egypt.
Ellis,
his sister Claudia who would become Claudia Roden the cookery writer, and
their younger brother Zaki all spent time together in Paris, largely
unsupervised by adults. Ellis began his medical training there and tried
to live the life of a left-wing intellectual, which was perhaps what led
his mother to arrange for him to begin medicine all over again, this time
in London, during a time of smog, digs and landladies, fish and chips, and
the start of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament. It was also the time of
conscription and Ellis became an army medic with the Black Watch in
Scotland, during the final days of National Service. Marvelling
at the way his life turned out he says, ‘wherever I have found myself
has seemed the proper place for me to be. I have never been an exile.’
Born in Cairo
in the 1930s, Ellis Douek’s paternal family had come
from Aleppo, whilst his mother, a Sassoon, was more distantly from
Iraq
.He left
Egypt
to finish his studies in Paris
and London, during which time the Suez War broke out forcing the
family to leave forever. He has recently retired as Consultant ENT surgeon
at Guy’s Hospital, London.
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