Sukenik was born on August 12, 1889, in the town of Belostok,
Grodno Governorate,
Russian Empire (today
Białystok in
Poland). In 1912, he immigrated to Ottoman-ruled
Palestine where he worked as a school teacher and tour guide. He studied archaeology at the Hebrew Teachers Seminary in Jerusalem. He obtained a degree from the
University of Berlin in 1923 and in 1926 his Doctorate from
Dropsie College in
Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania. He served in the British army in World War I in the 40th Battalion of the
Royal Fusiliers, which became known as the
Jewish Legion. He was married to . They had three sons: General, politician and archaeologist
Yigael Yadin, the actor (born Joseph Sukenik, 1920–2001), and Mati Sukenik, one of the first pilots of the
Israeli Air Force, killed in action during the
1948 Arab-Israeli War. Eleazar Sukenik was the brother of a pharmacist who lived in the United States, who in the 1950s was convicted for selling amphetamines without prescriptions and whose son, Herbert Sukenik, was a physicist who lived the second half of his life as a recluse in
New York City. Eleazar Sukenik and his wife, Hasya, were buried in the
Sanhedria Cemetery near the
Tombs of the Sanhedrin which he researched. Unlike the other graves in the cemetery, which are covered by uniform limestone blocks, the couple's gravestones are uniquely decorated with carvings and motifs of the
Second Temple era. He was an
atheist. ==Career==