Incredible things lurk in the gateways of Jaffa Street. This machine is called Sushita and was produced in Israel, in Haifa and later in the Haifa suburb of Tirat Carmel. In 1953, a Jewish businessman from Haifa, originally from Slovenia, Ladislav Schneller received a concession for the production of a small one-seater car from the British company Reliant. Later, the famous Haifa financier and entrepreneur Yitzhak Shovinsky joined him and together they created the Otokars company, which began to produce cars with a fiberglass body. At first, these were sheets of fiberglass, which were connected using planks. The bottom was wooden, the chassis came from England. It was an Israeli Zaporozhets of pure water. By the way, the model in front of us was produced in the largest circulation of several thousand units and received the popular nickname Cubia - a cube, thanks to its square shapes. After the bankruptcy of the company in the early seventies, Susita became a popular legend, although cars have been on the road since the early nineties. Translated with Google Translate
A mixture of former English colonial grandeur, long desolation and modern revival. Jaffa Street, the old port area and the current update in a good mix of stories and adventures that can only happen in a port city, where Germans, British, illegal immigrants and underground fighters left their mark. It will not do without the mythological Israeli car Susit, daring attacks by underground fighters, tragic flooding of ships, pubs, bars and restaurants, from traditional Mediterranean cuisine to a classic English pub or French restaurant. Let's go for a walk. Translated with Google Translate