The McKenzie Banner Features

 

 

FEATURE FOR WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2001 

  JIMMY SINIS: Owner of McKenzie's Catfish Restaurant  
  By Deborah Turner  
  


Jimmy and Phyllis Sinis
   

 
  Jimmy Sinis, owner of the Catfish Restaurant and, more recently, the Chick-n-More Restaurant located facing each other on Highway 79 in McKenzie, has come a long way in his 46 years, in more ways than one.

Jimmy hails originally from the country of Greece, whose capital, Athens, is the Mother of Democracy. In ancient times, Athens, along with Sparta and Corinth among others, was one of the most powerful of the Greek "city-states".

As Jimmy explains it, the cities governed themselves as independent states, even having wars between the city-states, "But usually they were together fighting someone else," he says.

In contrast with the relative newness of the United States, Greece has been in existence through about 5000 years. Ancient Greek culture is known for having been the basis of Western civilization. Greece is the location of the Parthenon - an exact replica of which stands in Nashville - and is the country that produced great thinkers such as Socrates, Plato and Aristotle. Greek architecture has also been a major influence in the West as can be seen in their various types of columns and in the harmony and symmetry of their buildings. The Greeks gave the world great sculpture, art and literature, as well as the Olympics.

"The Greeks are proud of their country," Jimmy says, understandably.

Years of adversity in the country meant that, growing up in Greece, Jimmy's family lived much like the rural farming families in the United States in the early 1920's, with no electricity or refrigeration.

"Every household had goats, pigs, chickens and so forth," he says. The families grew crops common to America like tomatoes and cucumbers with olive trees and grapes being another source of food and wine. The fields were worked with mules; there were no cars or tractors.

"The man from the gin would come pick up wheat and bring back flour, keeping so much percentage for his part," Jimmy explains. From the fruit of the grapevines, families made their own wine.

For Easter, families ate lamb while during the winter months a pig was slaughtered to provide meat for the family, the cold weather allowing the meat to be safely hung, much as was done on farms in the United States many years ago. The weather is much the same as it is in West Tennessee, says Jimmy, though like many people here he remembers more snow when he was young, plus the mountains in Greece mean more snow in the higher altitudes. "There may be more snow but weather about the same," he says.

Children came together to play soccer and there were plenty of children to play with in the villages of 500-600 people each. Elementary school was close at hand, but when Jimmy, called Demetrios in his home country, was of age to attend high school, he road a horse eight miles away to the nearest school.

After high school, Jimmy learned the craft of ship building, a trade that was interrupted when he reached the age that all male citizens in Greece are required to serve their country in military service.

For two and one half years, he worked in the army, inspecting bridges and roads, working his way up to sergeant.

Before returning to his former job, Jimmy decided to travel to the United States where his brother, Tom, had settled in Dyersburg, Tennessee. Tom was the owner of the Olympic Restaurant in Dyersburg at the time.

"Then came the idea to stay here," says Jimmy, smiling. He met his wife, Phyllis Baker of Bolivar, at his brother's restaurant in Dyersburg where he remained for two years before moving to Brownsville where he set up his own successful restaurant business as owner of the Olympia Steakhouse. He and Phyllis lived there some 12 to 13 years before selling the restaurant, during which time they had two daughters Patricia, who is now in her first year at Bethel College where she is studying psychology, and Vickie, a sophomore at McKenzie High School.

Jimmy traveled across the United States to Arizona where he quickly learned he preferred to be in West Tennessee.

"They were robbing me three times a day!" he exclaimed. Coming back home, he says, "When I came across the bridge in Memphis I was wanting to get out and kiss the ground. That's when I know I became a West Tennessean and didn't know it. I like McKenzie, I hope to move never from here - I was thinking today how lucky we are - I always enjoy to live in these little towns."

Jimmy's accent means that he will always be recognized as a relative newcomer to the melting pot of America, a fact that has become true in his home country as well.

"You always look at yourself as a foreigner here, I don't care how long you stay," he says, "and then you start to love another country and still love the old country, always there is a desire to go back where you came from."

With a brother and sister still in Greece, Jimmy and his family travel to Greece for visits from time to time, where he is recognized as "foreign" not by his accent but by the changes in the way he thinks about certain things.

After all, he says, "It is like I lived in two different worlds, people here to experience what I have would have to live in the 1900's and now all of a sudden we're in the computer age. I have seen so much in my life."

"You change," he says in explaining how one becomes an American. "Your way of thinking changes in a lot of things; in the beginning you come here and think (American ideas) are wrong, then after a lot of years you realize they are right, on some things."
  

As an example he cited the way American cities and town have changed from the downtown setting where stores are congregated around a town square, to various shopping districts outside the center. In Greece, he indicated the populace is resistant to the idea, resulting in a situation where cars are parked "one on top of the other, on sidewalks," Jimmy says with a touch of exasperation at their refusal to seek other solutions to changing times.

Having once become Americanized, it is difficult to go back to stay. "All my friends who have tried to go back, it didn't work," he says, "The way of living is different and they're coming back always."

Even his own attempt to stay for a month on one visit turned out "too long," he says. Even so, the Greek way of life is changing, and has come a long way very quickly from the way of life of Greek citizens when he was a child.

Still, the Greek way of life has also changed tremendously in the many years since Jimmy first came to America. In 1981, Greece joined the European Economic Community which was created to eliminate trade barriers between member countries.

Improvements have also been made in roads and bridges as efforts have been made to increase the standard of living in the country.

"The economy is growing, (they have) good trades, and a very stable government," Jimmy says.

With its beautiful mountains, oceans and rich historical sites, modern Greece is "ideal for tourism."

"Now if you go to Greece you not see any difference than America, things have changed drastically," Jimmy says, then laughs as he recalls the reaction of his children, "So now my kids go and they say 'Dad, where's the mules and the goats you're talking about? We didn't see any; we think you're telling us a story!"

Jimmy's lament mirrors that of many Americans as he considers the effect the changes have made on families: "The way families used to be, there was more morality, more closeness. They didn't have a lot of cars or a lot of money but they were close; the same thing has happened in America also."

The Sinis family attends worship services in one of Memphis' Greek Orthodox churches. That the United States is home to so many different Christian denominations was a surprise to Jimmy upon entering the country.

"I didn't know (there were) so many different denominations," he says, "In Greece it is 99.9% one dogma, Orthodox Christian. I came here and found many different denominations."

The orthodox churches are derived from the original Eastern Church which is recognized as one of the two "great branches of the Christian Church." The branches came about naturally because of Greek-speaking church in east and the Latin-speaking church in the west.

A unique feature of Greek Orthodoxy is the many monasteries where Monks live away from civilization in mountains. Anyone can visit the monasteries, and even live there if they choose, according to Jimmy.

"They are very peaceful places and you can stay if you want to," Jimmy related. "They feed you, they keep and you go to church with them." England's Prince Charles has been one visitor to the tranquil retreats.

Mount Athos is a self-governed part of the Greece similar to Rome in Italy. Some 20 monasteries occupy the mountain. The monasteries are repositories of many artifacts and monuments of historical significance and are also sites where current artists practice religions arts and crafts in a spiritual setting.

That the Greek Orthodox church exists as one of the many choices of Christian worship in Tennessee is as American as it gets, with Freedom of Religion one of the basic precepts upon which the United States was founded, with history warning of religious persecution when only one religion is allowed by law in some countries.

Jimmy could have remained in the United States legally as a "permanent resident" but there were inherent disadvantages to that role, most importantly to Jimmy being the inability to vote.

He decided last year to apply to become an American citizen. In order to attain his goal, he was required to pass a test regarding the branches of government in the United States along with many other types of questions, had to be able to read and write, and could not have a criminal record.

He was sworn in along with around 400 other new citizens in a ceremony that took place in Memphis in May, 2001.

It was the culmination of his love for what had truly become his country.

"I never felt like I was an outsider here," he says earnestly, "Ever since I was first here I was welcomed and loved by Americans."

His goal for the future is to "make (the Catfish Restaurant) a better restaurant for McKenzie; remodel and make a whole lot better place for the town," he says. He and Phyllis have owned the restaurant for about six years.

As for the Chick-n-more Restaurant, after getting a successful start on the new business he and Phyllis have decided to pass it on to others to complete the job they started, having their handles full with a booming business at the Catfish Restaurant.

Starting the Chick-n-More enterprise was just too tempting not to start.

"I was sitting here all these years looking at this nice building and I thought, 'It's good for something.' A friend in Missouri gave me the recipe; I didn't come up with that, it was given to me. He's been there for years and sells a whole lot more chicken than Kentucky Fried Chicken. We've started a good business here."
 

 
 
 
archives:   06-13-01 - Desert Storm 10-year Reunion
06-20-01 - Ida Hughes
06-27-01 - Chuck Slaughter
07-04-01 - Vernon Bobo
07-11-01 - Dixie Carter Reunion
07-18-01 - Jackie Burchum
07-25-01 - Dr. A.D. Marshall
08-01-01 - Dr. C.E. Pipkin
08-08-01 - Jeff Gaia
08-15-01 - James "Bird Dog" Reed
08-22-01 - Habitat for Humanity
08-29-01 - Brown Foster turns 96
09-05-01 - It's Time for FOOTBALL!
09-12-01 - The Webb High School Story
 

    

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