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Sisters are the last of Sarkies clan in Singapore

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  • Sisters are the last of Sarkies clan in Singapore

    The Malaysian Insider
    July 19 2009



    Sisters are the last of Sarkies clan in Singapore


    SINGAPORE, July 19 ' They share the same surname as the folks
    behind the iconic Raffles Hotel, but few Singaporeans today seem to
    know who the Sarkies are.

    `They will ask me: `Where are you from? Are you
    Indian?'' said Loretta Sarkies, 68, a psychic.

    The Sarkies clan here is now down to two sisters ' she and her younger
    sister Jessie, 62.

    Their grandfather, Arathoon Martin Sarkies, was the cousin of the
    three Armenian Sarkies brothers who founded the Beach Road hotel in
    1887.

    Last week, The Sunday Times reported on a dispute over who built the
    hotel, which is now owned by Fairmont Raffles Hotels International.

    A descendant of the prominent Alsagoff family, Syed Muhammad Ghadaffi
    Alsagoff, 35, had come out to say that it was his great-great-great
    grandfather Syed Ahmed who owned the building, and not the Sarkies, as
    some books and newspaper articles have routinely reported.

    Prompted by the article, Jessie Sarkies contacted The Sunday Times to
    say that she and her sister are the last remaining Sarkies here.

    Their names appear in New Zealand author Nadia Wright's 2003 book,
    Respected Citizens: The History Of Armenians In Singapore And
    Malaysia. In the book, Wright said two of the Sarkies brothers'
    cousins ' including Arathoon ' also came to Singapore. But only
    Arathoon Sarkies made it his home.

    Jessie Sarkies, a home-based food caterer, said she does not know much
    about her family's involvement in the hotel. The sisters' granduncles
    ' the Sarkies brothers behind the hotel ' and grandfather Arathoon
    Sarkies had died way before they were born. `My father would tell us
    his uncles were behind Raffles Hotel but that was about it,' said
    Jessie Sarkies. Her father was the only son of Arathoon Sarkies, who
    also had four daughters.

    The sisters, however, have a set of postcards of the hotel from their
    grandfather. It is now being exhibited in the Raffles Hotel Museum.

    Arathoon Sarkies was himself a prominent Armenian figure in
    Singapore's early history.

    His firm ' Sarkies, Johannes & Company ' which he founded with his
    brother Lucas and a Eleazar Johannes, was also in the hotel trade.

    It took over the Adelphi Hotel in 1903 and made it one of the major
    hotels here in the 1900s.

    Things ran smoothly for Arathoon Sarkies' company until it collapsed
    suddenly in 1908. He was declared a bankrupt.

    After he was discharged from bankruptcy in 1910, he swore off the
    hotel trade and went into the rubber plantation business. He ran a
    385ha plantation on one of the Rhio islands before he became bankrupt
    again in 1929. He died in 1932.

    Incidentally, the Adelphi Hotel ' which had been sold to another
    company ' closed in 1973. The Adelphi building now occupies the site.

    Arathoon Sarkies had five children from two marriages. Loretta Sarkies
    and her sister Jessie are the children of his only son, James, who
    served as vice-president of the Armenian Church of St Gregory's board
    of trustees in the 1960s and 1970s. He and his wife, Mae Didier, a
    French woman, also have two adopted daughters, Ruby and Susan, who are
    Chinese.

    Sarkies Road in Bukit Timah was named after Regina Sarkies, Arathoon
    Sarkies' wife, in 1923.

    She owned the family's 1.2ha property along that road. It has since
    been sold.

    In their 30s, the sisters became more involved in the Armenian
    community and were invited to lunch and dinner parties hosted at the
    Raffles Hotel.

    One of the more memorable ones was a lunch party to celebrate the
    150th anniversary of the Armenian Church of St Gregory.

    `It was exciting because Armenians from all over the world were
    invited to the event,' said Jessie Sarkies. `We met our father's
    cousin, also a Sarkies, who is now based in Washington.' There are
    about 30 Armenians left in Singapore now.

    Although the sisters are married, they insist on keeping the Sarkies
    surname.

    `We are very proud of our name because there aren't any other Sarkies
    left in Singapore now,' said Loretta Sarkies, who was the first
    runner-up of the Mrs Senior Singapore pageant in 2001.

    She has three daughters from her first marriage to a Dutch-Eurasian
    man, Simon Aroozoo, who died in 1991. She is now married to Michael
    Tan, who is retired.

    Her sister Jessie, who was president of the Armenian Church of St
    Gregory's board of trustees in 1987, is married to Patrick Theseira, a
    Eurasian who is currently unemployed. They have no children. ' The
    Straits Times

    http://www.themalaysianinsider.com/index.ph p/features/32713-sisters-are-the-last-of-sarkies-c lan-in-singapore
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