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George Feldenkreis arrived in the U.S. in 1961 with
$700, a pregnant wife and a toddler. But, he says,
“There was always a plan.”
Born in 1935 in Havana, Cuba, to Polish
immigrants, Mr. Feldenkreis began his import company
in Miami selling Japanese automobile and motorcycle
parts. This led him to form his first company,
Carfel, Inc., which put him in on the ground floor
of the Japanese-made auto parts industry long before
Toyota and Honda became household words in the
United States.
In the late 1960s, he and his brother Isaac
started Supreme International, importing guayabera
shirts—the pleated, four-pocket shirts favored by
Hispanic men—and earning him the nickname,
“Guayabera King.” In 1980 his son, Oscar, joined
Supreme International and pushed his father to
expand the company's scope beyond private-label
distribution. The two have aggressively grown the
company over the past decade. Their biggest
acquisition came in 1999 with the purchase of the
rights to the Perry Ellis trademark.
Today, Supreme International is one division of
the publicly traded Perry Ellis International. “We
have grown from a small private label manufacturer
of the Latin Guayabera shirt to the highest levels
of fashion, swimwear and active wear,” he states.
The company features a stable of leading brands
including Perry Ellis, Perry Ellis America, Nike
swimwear, Tommy Hilfiger ladies swimwear, and PING
collection. Recent acquisitions include such major
brands as Munsingwear, John Henry, Manhattan, and
Jantzen swimwear.
For his entrepreneurial savvy and business
successes, Mr. Feldenkreis was awarded Business Man
of the Year in 1998 by Ernst & Young. And according
to Forbes magazine, Perry Ellis International ranks
among the 200 best small companies in America.
While it is his accomplishments as a businessman
that have brought him public recognition, his
biggest achievement has been as a dedicated husband,
father, grandfather, friend and community leader. He
supports numerous organizations, including the
Jewish Federation; he received the Lincoln-Marti
award for his role in the Cuban Refugee Program; and
he has been honored with the David Ben-Gurion Award,
sponsored by the State of Israel and Temple Beth El.
A member of the University of Miami’s Board of
Trustees since 1997, he has supported such efforts
as Project: New Born, Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer
Center, and scholarships for student-athletes.
In 2001, he established the George Feldenkreis
Endowment Fund, which created the George Feldenkreis
Distinguished Scholar, a permanent professorship in
the Sue and Leonard Miller Center for Contemporary
Judaic Studies. The first Feldenkreis Distinguished
Scholar will be Professor Yaffa Eliach, a pioneering
scholar in Holocaust studies who will teach at the
University of Miami during the spring 2004 semester.
Established in 1998, the Sue and Leonard Miller
Center for Contemporary Judaic Studies is the only
university-located academic and research center in
the United States to focus primarily on twentieth
and twenty-first century Jewish studies as well as
trends affecting the future of the Jewish people.
Through its academic and research activities, the
Miller Center provides an objective, in-depth
exploration of the issues which have affected the
Jewish people over the last one hundred years. It
also aims to provide a relevant interdisciplinary
educational experience to students of all faiths and
the South Florida community.
“George is certainly among a handful of top
leaders in fostering and leading a community among
the Cuban Jews who came to Miami after Castro came
to power,” says Maxine Schwartz, Director of
Development and Outreach for the Miller Center. “He
has one of the most prodigious memories I have ever
encountered. When he tells stories about his life in
Cuba, he not only remembers everyone's first and
last name, he remembers their exact address!”
Mr. Feldenkreis’s support of the Miller Center
strengthens its position as a leading center for the
study of modern Jewish society and culture, ensuring
that the momentous events of twentieth century
Jewish experience are not forgotten.
- D'Ann Tollett
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