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GreekReporter.comGreek NewsA Bottle of Ouzo—and Its Connection to Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla

A Bottle of Ouzo—and Its Connection to Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla

Ouzo Covid
One of the ouzo bottles from the Jewish distillery in Thessaloniki. Credit: AMNA

How does ouzo, the anise-flavored aperitif that is widely consumed in Greece and Cyprus, relate to Albert Bourla and the COVID-19 vaccine?

It has emerged that Albert Bourla’s ancestors among the Jewish community in Thessaloniki were big producers—and consumers—of high-quality ouzo or raki.

The forebears of the CEO of the American pharmaceutical giant, Pfizer, had a Jewish distillery. An ouzo bottle from their company recently emerged—complete with address and a kosher label.

This led to the rediscovery of the family of business owners.

Historian Leon Saltiel recounts an invitation to dinner by his aunt in Geneva that led to the discovery of a little-known part of Thessaloniki.

Saltiel narrates the story himself on a Facebook post.

In the Facebook post, he says of his discovery of the ouzo producers: “During one of my travels, I was invited to a distant aunt for dinner. To please me, as I am from Greece, she asked me, ‘Would you like some ouzo?’ Not to be rude, I agreed, and here came the strangest bottle of ouzo I had ever seen.”

Exceptional Ouzo by the “Distillery of A. Bourla Brothers”

“The label was written in Greek, stuck on an old glass bottle,” explains Saltiel. “It read: ‘Exceptional Ouzo ‘Into’—Double Distilled—Distillery of A. Bourla Brothers, Victor Hugo 3 Street, Thessaloniki.'”

Saltiel says the upper label was even more surprising, as in Hebrew letters, it said that the product was “Kosher for Pessach,” that is, it fulfilled the dietary rules of the Jewish Passover holiday. There was also a tassel hanging from the top, with a Star of David stamped on a lead circle.

“I was surprised,” reveals Saltiel. “I had never seen anything like it before—a bottle of this famous drink that came from a Jewish distillery in Thessaloniki! I was not aware of a Jewish company in Thessaloniki that produced ouzo after the war.”

“I narrated the story to my grandmother, who of course knew of this brand, and directed me to the daughter of one of the two Bourla brothers,” Saltiel explained further. “She confirmed that it was a product of her father’s store, and was very moved, as she had not seen such a bottle for a long time. In fact, the bottle could have been a gift from my grandfather to my aunt’s father when he visited them decades ago.”

According to Saltiel, the story of this company begins in pre-war Thessaloniki, where Into Bourla owned the liquor shop bearing his first name at Athonos Square in the city center, together with his partner Simon Mordoch.

Big producers and consumers of ouzo

Of the Jews of Thessaloniki, Saltiel explains that they were big producers and consumers of ouzo or raki, which was known for its high quality and was enjoyed by lower and upper classes alike.

A rare photo, shared by Bourla’s granddaughter, informs us that the shop would sell ouzo, cognac, liqueurs, different types of wine—such as retsina, Samos, Muscat, and kokkineli— but also vinegar.

During the German occupation of Thessaloniki, Into’s family, including his father, Abraham Bourla; his mother, Rachel; his sister, Graciela; and his younger brother, David, were all deported and eventually perished in the Auschwitz-Birkenau death camp along with 50,000 other Jews of the city.

“Into and his elder brother Mois managed to survive the war,” says Saltiel, “by fleeing from Thessaloniki and hiding in Athens, which was at the time under Italian control. Most probably, the shop was passed on to Christian custodians.”

The story goes that after the war, the two brothers returned to Thessaloniki to find that they had lost most members of their family and that all their property and belongings had been stolen or sold. They started a new life from scratch and opened the liquor shop again as partners under the same name but in a new location—on Victor Hugo street. They ran this successful business together until they both retired.

The history of Mois Bourla, however, does not end here. His son, Albert, who was born in Thessaloniki and trained as a veterinarian, rose in the ranks of a pharmaceutical giant to become CEO of Pfizer, the first company to produce a vaccine against COVID-19.

The bottle that led to this history and its connections has been since donated to the Jewish Museum of Thessaloniki, and all visitors can see it and learn about its history. For more information about visiting, when coronavirus restrictions allow, see www.jmth.gr.

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