Preface -- In Time: Canada's Jews & Their History; Jews & New France; Jewish beginnings under the British (eighteenth century); Jews in British North America (nineteenth century); Eastern European Jewish immigration & its impact: Farming Colonies & the West; Eastern European Jewish immigration & its impact: Quebec & Ontario; Jewish Labour; Jews & the Political & Social Life of Canada (to 1945): anti-Semitism; Zionism; Canadian Jewish Congress; Jews in Post-war Canada: Holocaust survivors, Sephardim, Russians & Israelis, Federations & Communal Governance; Part II: In Space: a Survey of Jews in Contemporary Canada -- Toronto; Montreal; Vancouver; Winnipeg; Maritimes; Central Canada (not including Toronto & Montreal ); Prairies (not including Winnipeg ); West & North (not including Vancouver); Part III. In Spirit: the Religious & Cultural Expressions of Canadian Jews -- Ashkenazic Orthodox: Hasidic, Modern, Kashrut; Sephardic; Non-Orthodox: Conservative, Reconstructionist & Reform; Languages, Literatures & Cultures -- Yiddish; Jews in Canadian literature; Jews in Quebec literature; Canadian Jewish Studies; Conclusion; Index.
Ira Robinson is Professor of Judaic studies in the Department of Religion of Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec. He is President of the Canadian Society for Jewish Studies. His latest books are: Rabbis and Their Community: Studies in the Eastern European Orthodox Rabbinate in Montreal, 1896-1930 (2007) and Translating a Tradition: Studies in American Jewish History (2009).
“This collection of 26 essays offers a comprehensive snapshot of
the history of Jews in Canada, their contemporary situation, their
spiritual/cultural life, and their representation in Canadian
literature. . . . The essays are written in a clear style largely
by experts in their respective fields. . . . This book would serve
equally well as a University text book on Canadian Jewish Studies
for the uninitiated and as an introduction to the topic for the
curious lay person.”
*The Association of Jewish Libraries Reviews, September/October
2014, Volume IV, No. 3*
“Canada’s Jews has the potential to be a “go-to” resource for
Canadian Jewish studies, to be used as a textbook and reference
book. It is up to those in the field to promote and encourage its
use.”
*The American Jewish Archives Journal (Vol. LXVI, Nos. 1 & 2)*
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