- 
The orphan, raised by his grandmother, caught in an unusual custody battle that only a bet din can resolve.  
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The 
prosperous businessman building up a family and a community on the quiet
 streets of Bensonhurst, lending money to others so that they can open a
 business that will compete with his own. 
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The generous philanthropist cleaning up the synagogue he helped to build.  
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The indomitable optimist who pulled himself out of poverty, but who always knew where his success really came from.  
 
This is Nouri's story
He was a man of many names:
 Ezra, Nouri (which, appropriately, means "my light"), Isidore, Izzy. He
 was a larger-than-life personality, helping to create a 
larger-than-life community, and it needs a larger-than-life book to tell
 his story. This is Nouri's book.
Nouri: The Story of Isidore
 Dayan, and the growth of a vibrant community in America focuses on one 
of the most intriguing personalities of the modern Jewish world. The 
tale spans almost a century, includes two World Wars, and features a 
panoramic background ranging from Baghdad and Damascus to Brooklyn, from
 Czechoslovakia to Baltimore to tiny Vineland, New Jersey. 
In the pages of this 
biography-that-reads-like-a-novel, you will meet famed gedolim: Hacham 
Murad, Nouri's mentor and eventually his father-in-law; Rav Avraham 
Kalmanowitz, the Mirrer Rosh Yeshiva, whose efforts and care for Klal 
Yisrael included the Sephardim of America; and Rav Yitzchok Hutner, who,
 together with Nouri's daughter and son-in-law, underwent a harrowing 
terrorist plane hijacking.
You will meet men who 
create businesses built on generosity and adherence to Jewish values; 
Sephardic grandmothers filled with the unyielding strength of simple 
devotion; and a new generation of young Sephardim determined to reach - 
and teach - higher levels of Torah learning. And, of course, you will 
meet Nouri, the quiet, unassuming, and friendly man who became a legend 
in his community.
The young, poor orphan 
becomes a wealthy businessman: it's almost a cliche. But in Nouri's 
story there are no cliches. There are only remarkable instances of 
Divine Providence, self-sacrifice, devotion, and an almost extraordinary
 level of chesed and caring - a true life odyssey that reads like a 
novel.