Jump to content

History of the Jews in Canada: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Sprayitchyo (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
Tags: nowiki added Visual edit
 
(674 intermediate revisions by more than 100 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Short description|none}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=October 2024}}
{{Infobox ethnic group
{{Infobox ethnic group
|group = Canadian Jews
| group = Canadian Jews
| image = Jewish Distribution in Canada, 2021 CensusB.jpg
|image =
| caption = Population distribution of Jewish Canadians by census division, 2021 census
{{image array|perrow=5|width=60|height=70
| native_name = <sub>Juifs canadiens ([[Canadian French|French]]) </sub><br /><sub>{{Script/Hebrew|יהודים קנדים}} ([[Hebrew language|Hebrew]])</sub>
| image1 = SaulBellowcropped.jpg| caption1 = [[Saul Bellow]]
| population = Canada '''404,015 (as of 2021)'''<ref>{{cite web |url=. https://thecjn.ca/podcasts/canadian-jewish-population/ |title=World Jewish Population, 2013|first=Sergio |last=DellaPergola |author-link=Sergio DellaPergola |editor1-first=Arnold |editor1-last=Dashefsky |editor1-link=Arnold Dashefsky |editor2-first=Ira |editor2-last=Sheskin |date=2013 |work=Current Jewish Population Reports |publisher=North American Jewish Data Bank |location=[[Storrs, Connecticut]] |access-date=2022-10-26 |archive-date=2022-10-26 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221026132356/https://www12.statcan.gc.ca/census-recensement/2021/dp-pd/prof/details/page.cfm?Lang=E&DGUIDList=2021A000011124&GENDERList=1,2,3&STATISTICList=1&HEADERList=0&SearchText=Canada |url-status=dead }}</ref> <br />1.4% of the Canadian population<ref name=Shahar>{{cite web |url= http://www.jewishdatabank.org/Studies/details.cfm?StudyID=743 |title=The Jewish Population of Canada – 2016 National Household Survey |last1= Shahar |first1= Charles |date=2011 |publisher=Berman Jewish Databank |access-date=September 9, 2014}}</ref><ref name=CIJA>{{cite web |url=http://www.cija.ca/issues/basic-demographics-of-the-canadian-jewish-community/ |title=Basic Demographics of the Canadian Jewish Community |date=2011 |publisher=The Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs |access-date=September 9, 2014 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131202223345/http://www.cija.ca/issues/basic-demographics-of-the-canadian-jewish-community/ |archive-date=December 2, 2013 }}</ref><ref name=virtuallibrary>{{cite encyclopedia |url= https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/Judaism/jewpop.html |title=Jewish Population of the World |date=2012 |encyclopedia=Jewish Virtual Library |access-date=September 9, 2014}}</ref>
| image2 = Naomi Klein Occupy Wall Street 2011 Shankbone.JPG| caption2 = [[Naomi Klein]]
| region1 = {{flag|Ontario}}
| image3 = Barbarafrum.jpg| caption3 = [[Barbara Frum]]
| pop1 = '''272,400'''
| image4 = HowieMandelM07.jpg| caption4 = [[Howie Mandel]]
| region2 = {{flag|Quebec}}
| image5 = William Shatner at Comic-Con 2012 cropped.jpg| caption5 = [[William Shatner]]
| pop2 = '''125,300'''
| image6 = Steven Pinker 2011.jpg| caption6 = [[Stephen Pinker]]
| region3 = {{flag|British Columbia}}
| image7 = Leonard Cohen 2187.jpg| caption7 = [[Leonard Cohen]]
| pop3 = '''62,120'''
| image8 = Drake at Bun-B Concert 2011.jpg| caption8 = [[Drake (entertainer)|Drake]]
| region4 = {{flag|Alberta}}
| image9 = Eugene Levy 2011.jpg| caption9 = [[Eugene Levy]]
| pop4 = '''20,000'''
| image10 = Irwin Cotler.jpg| caption10 = [[Irwin Cotler]]
| region6 = {{flag|Manitoba}}
| image11 = Irving Schwartz hs.jpg| caption11 = [[Irving Schwartz]]
| pop6 = '''18,000'''
| image12 = Seth Rogen TIFF 2011.jpg| caption12 = [[Seth Rogen]]
| langs = [[Canadian English|English]]{{·}} [[Quebec French|French]] (among Québécois){{·}} [[Hebrew language|Hebrew]] (as liturgical language, some as mother tongue){{·}}[[Yiddish language|Yiddish]] (by some as mother tongue and as part of a [[language revival]]){{·}} and other languages like Russian, [[Ukrainian language|Ukrainian]], [[Lithuanian language|Lithuanian]], [[Polish language|Polish]], German, [[Moroccan Arabic]]
| image13 = DavidLewis1944.jpg| caption13 = [[David Lewis (politician)|David Lewis]]
| rels = Judaism
| image14 = Cory Doctorow autographing a book.jpg| caption14 = [[Cory Doctorow]]
| related = [[Anglo-Israelis]] and [[Israeli Canadians]]
| image15 = Shuster1975.jpg| caption15 = [[Joe Shuster]]
}}
|population ={{flag|Canada}} '''358,000''' <br>1.1% of the Canadian population<ref name="statcan2006">{{cite web|url=http://www12.statcan.ca/census-recensement/2006/dp-pd/hlt/97-562/pages/page.cfm?Lang=E&Geo=PR&Code=01&Table=2&Data=Count&StartRec=1&Sort=3&Display=All&CSDFilter=5000 |title=Ethnocultural Portrait of Canada - Data table |publisher=2.statcan.ca |date=2010-06-10 |accessdate=2012-05-02}}</ref>
|region1 = {{flagcountry|Ontario}}
|pop1 = '''212,000'''
|region2 = {{flagcountry|Quebec}}
|pop2 = '''95,000'''
|region3 = {{flagcountry|British Columbia}}
|pop3 = '''21,230'''
|region4 ={{flagcountry|Manitoba}}
|pop4 = '''19,000'''
|region6 ={{flagcountry|Alberta}}
|pop6 = '''14,000''' |
|langs = [[Canadian English|English]] (among Ashkenazis){{·}} [[Quebec French|French]] (among Sephardis){{·}} [[Hebrew language|Hebrew]] (as liturgical language, some as mother tongue){{·}}[[Yiddish language|Yiddish]] (by some as mother tongue and as part of a [[language revival]]){{·}} and other languages like [[Russian language|Russian]]
|rels = [[Judaism]]
}}
}}
{{Contains special characters|Hebrew}}
{{Jews and Judaism sidebar |state=collapsed}}

The '''history of the Jews in Canada''' goes back to the 1700s. Canadian Jews, whether by culture, ethnicity, or religion, form the fourth largest [[Jewish community]] in the world, exceeded only by those [[Israeli Jews|in Israel]], [[American Jews|the United States]] and [[History of the Jews in France|France]].{{Ref|jppistudy}}<ref>{{cite journal |url=http://www.cbs.gov.il/shnaton61/st02_27.pdf |title=JEWISH POPULATION IN THE WORLD AND IN ISRAEL |publisher=CBS |access-date=2011-11-22 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111026202909/http://www.cbs.gov.il/shnaton61/st02_27.pdf |archive-date=2011-10-26 |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref name="autogenerated1975">{{cite web|url=http://www.jcpa.org/dje/books/canch1.htm |title=The Canadian Jewish Experience |publisher=Jcpa.org |date=October 16, 1975 |access-date=2011-11-22}}</ref> In the [[2021 Canadian census|2021 census]], 335,295 people reported their religion as Jewish, accounting for 0.9% of the Canadian population.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Government of Canada |first=Statistics Canada |date=February 9, 2022 |title=Profile table, Census Profile, 2021 Census of Population – Canada [Country] |url=https://www12.statcan.gc.ca/census-recensement/2021/dp-pd/prof/index.cfm?Lang=E |access-date=2022-10-26 |website=www12.statcan.gc.ca}}</ref> Some estimates have placed the enlarged number of Jews, such as those who may be culturally or ethnically Jewish, though not necessarily religiously, at around 400,000 people. This total would account for approximately 1.4% of the Canadian population.

The Jewish community in Canada is composed predominantly of [[Ashkenazi Jews]]. Other Jewish ethnic divisions are also represented and include [[Sephardi Jews]], [[Mizrahi Jews]], and [[Bene Israel]]. A number of converts to Judaism make up the Jewish-Canadian community, which manifests a wide range of Jewish cultural traditions and the [[Jewish religious movements#Ashkenazic movements|full spectrum of Jewish religious observance]]. Though they are a small minority, they have had an open presence in the country since the first Jewish immigrants arrived with Governor [[Edward Cornwallis]] to establish [[Halifax, Nova Scotia]] (1749).<ref>Sheldon Godfrey and Judy Godfrey. Search Out the Land" The Jews and the Growth of Equality in British Colonial America, 1740–1867. McGill Queen's University Press. 1997. pp. 76–77;[[Winthrop Pickard Bell|Bell, Winthrop Pickard]]. The "Foreign Protestants" and the Settlement of Nova Scotia:The History of a piece of arrested British Colonial Policy in the Eighteenth Century. [[Toronto]]: [[University of Toronto Press]], 1961</ref> The 1760s saw the first Jewish settlers in [[New France]] who arrived in Montreal after the British conquest of the city, among them was [[Aaron Hart (businessman)|Aaron Hart]] who is considered the father of [[Canadian Jewry]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.shalomquebec.org/members.aspx?mid=349 |title=Hart, Aaron |accessdate=March 25, 2009 |work=Exposition Shalom Québec |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20100727042141/http://www.shalomquebec.org/members.aspx?mid=349 |archivedate=July 27, 2010 |df=mdy }}</ref> His son [[Ezekiel Hart]] experience one of the first well documented cases of [[antisemitism in Canada]].<ref name="i921">{{cite web | title=Ezekiel Hart | website=The Canadian Encyclopedia | date=2022-04-20 | url=https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/ezekiel-hart | access-date=2024-12-22}}</ref> Hart was consistently prevented from taking his seat as at the [[Parliament of Québec|Quebec legislature]] when members stated that as a Jew, he could not take the [[oath of office]], which included the phrase "on the true faith of a Christian".<ref name="x275">{{cite web | title=The Oath or Solemn Affirmation of Allegiance | website=House of Commons of Canada | date=2004-10-04 | url=https://www.ourcommons.ca/procedure-book-livre/en/document?sbdid=2ae20cbe-e824-466b-b37c-8941bbc99c37&sbpid=457e8854-c70d-4a8a-b0e0-7ad72d703b65 | access-date=2024-12-23}}</ref> By the 1970s and 1980s, most legal barriers were removed, and Jews began to hold significant positions in Canadian society.<ref name="u620">{{cite journal | last1=Weinfeld | first1=Morton | last2=Schnoor | first2=Randal F. | last3=Koffman | first3=David S. | title=Overview of Canadian Jewry | journal=The American Jewish Year Book | publisher=[American Jewish Committee, Springer] | volume=109/112 | year=2012 | issn=0065-8987 | jstor=45373711 | pages=55–90 | doi=10.1007/978-94-007-5204-7_2 | isbn=978-94-007-5203-0 | url=http://www.jstor.org/stable/45373711 | access-date=2024-12-22}}</ref> However, antisemitism persists, evident in hate crimes and extremist groups.<ref name="m477">{{cite journal | last1=Stein | first1=Matthew | last2=Perry | first2=Barbara | last3=Levit | first3=Irina | title=Punishing "Privilege": Antisemitic Hate Crime in Canada | journal=Journal of Interpersonal Violence | volume=39 | issue=17–18 | date=2024 | issn=0886-2605 | doi=10.1177/08862605241259996 | pages=3876–3903| pmid=39119653 }}</ref>

== Settlement (1783–1897) ==
Prior to the [[Conquest of New France (1758-1760)|British conquest of New France]], Jews lived in [[Nova Scotia]]. There were no official Jews in Quebec because when [[Louis XIV of France|King Louis XIV]] made Canada officially a province of the [[Kingdom of France]] in 1663, he decreed that only [[Roman Catholicism in Canada|Roman Catholics]] could enter the colony. One exception was [[Esther Brandeau]], a Jewish girl who arrived in 1738 disguised as a boy and remained a year before she was returned for refusing to convert.<ref>[http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?BioId=34791 Brandeau, Esther] Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online</ref> The earliest subsequent documentation of Jews in Canada are [[British Army]] records from the [[French and Indian War]], the North American part of the [[Seven Years' War]]. In 1760, [[General (United Kingdom)|General]] [[Jeffrey Amherst, 1st Baron Amherst]] attacked and seized [[Montreal]], winning Canada for the British. Several Jews were members of his regiments, and among his officer corps were five Jews: Samuel Jacobs, Emmanuel de Cordova, [[Aaron Hart (businessman)|Aaron Hart]], Hananiel Garcia, and Isaac Miramer.<ref>Canada's Jews: A Social and Economic Study of Jews in Canada in the 1930s. Louis Rosenberg, [[Morton Weinfeld]]. 1993.</ref>


The most prominent of these five were the business associates Samuel Jacobs and Aaron Hart. In 1759, in his capacity as [[Commissariat]] to the [[British Army]] on the staff of [[Frederick Haldimand|General Sir Frederick Haldimand]], Jacobs was recorded as the first Jewish resident of [[Quebec]], and thus the first Canadian Jew.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cjnews.com/node/81170|title=Exhibition celebrates history of Quebec City Jews – The Canadian Jewish News|first=Janice |last=Arnold|date=May 28, 2008|website=Cjnews.com|access-date=August 18, 2017}}</ref> From 1749, Jacobs had been supplying British army officers at [[Halifax (former city)|Halifax]], Nova Scotia. In 1758, he was at [[Fort Cumberland (Canada)|Fort Cumberland]] and the following year he was with [[James Wolfe|Wolfe]]'s army at Quebec.<ref name="ReferenceA">Canada's Entrepreneurs: From The Fur Trade to the 1929 Stock Market Crash: Portraits from the Dictionary of Canadian Biography. By Andrew Ross and Andrew Smith, 2012</ref> Remaining in Canada, he became the dominant merchant of the [[Richelieu River|Richelieu valley]] and [[Seigneurial system of New France|Seigneur]] of [[Saint-Denis-sur-Richelieu]].<ref>Search Out the Land: The Jews and the Growth of Equality in British Colonial America, 1740–1867. Sheldon Godfrey, 1995</ref> Because he married a [[French Canadian]] girl and brought his children up as Catholics, Jacobs is often overlooked as the first permanent Jewish settler in Canada in favour of Aaron Hart, who married a Jew and brought up his children, or at least his sons, in the Jewish tradition.<ref name="ReferenceA"/>
'''Canadian Jews''' or, alternatively, '''Jewish Canadians''' are Canadian citizens of the [[Jewish faith]] or [[Jewish ethnic divisions|Jewish ethnicity]]. Jewish Canadians are a part of the greater [[Jewish diaspora]] and is one of the largest Jewish communities in the world. [[Canada]] is home to the fourth largest Jewish community, exceeded by the Jewish communities in the [[American Jews|United States]], [[French Jews|France]], and [[Israel]] itself.{{Ref|jppistudy}}<ref>{{cite paper|url=http://www.cbs.gov.il/shnaton61/st02_27.pdf |title=JEWISH POPULATION IN THE WORLD AND IN ISRAEL |publisher=CBS |date= |accessdate=2011-11-22}}</ref><ref name="autogenerated1975">{{cite web|url=http://www.jcpa.org/dje/books/canch1.htm |title=The Canadian Jewish Experience |publisher=Jcpa.org |date=1975-10-16 |accessdate=2011-11-22}}</ref> Overall demographic research tends to include [[Ashkenazi Jews]] who immigrated from diaspora communities in [[Europe]] into the broadly defined Canadian Jewish category as [[StatsCan]] refers Israeli-Canadians as a distinct group of origin separate from Canadian Jews. Canadians of Jewish origin number 358,000 and make up about 1.1 percent of the total Canadian population as of 2006.<ref name="statcan2006"/>


Lieutenant Hart first arrived in Canada from New York City as Commissariat to [[Jeffery Amherst, 1st Baron Amherst|Jeffery Amherst]]'s forces at Montreal in 1760. After his service in the army ended, he settled at [[Trois-Rivières]], where he became a wealthy landowner and respected community member. He had four sons, Moses, Benjamin, [[Ezekiel Hart|Ezekiel]] and Alexander, all of whom would become prominent in Montreal and help build the Jewish Community. Ezekiel was elected to the legislature of [[Lower Canada]] in the by-election of April 11, 1807, becoming the first Jew in an [[official opposition]] in the British Empire. Ezekiel was expelled from the legislature with his religion a major factor.<ref>Denis Vaugeois, "Hart, Ezekiel", in ''Dictionary of Canadian Biography'', vol. 7, University of Toronto/Université Laval, 2003, accessed June 9, 2013, [http://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/hart_ezekiel_7E.html online]</ref> Sir [[James Henry Craig]], Governor-General of Lower Canada, tried to protect Hart, but French Canadians saw this as an attempt of the British to undermine them and the legislature expelled Hart in both 1808 and following his re-election in 1809. The legislature then barred Jews from holding elected office in Canada until the passage of the [[Jewish emancipation|1832 ''Emancipation Act'']].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://faculty.marianopolis.edu/c.belanger/QuebecHistory/docs/jews/1832act.htm|title=An Act to Grant Equal Rights and Privileges to Persons of the Jewish Religion (1832)|publisher=Marianopolis College|date=August 23, 2000|editor-first=Claude|editor-last=Bélanger}}</ref>
The Jewish community in Canada is composed predominantly of [[Ashkenazi Jews]] and their descendants. Other Jewish ethnic divisions are also represented, including [[Sephardi Jews]], [[Mizrahi Jews]], and a number of converts. The Canadian Jewish community manifests a wide range of Jewish cultural traditions, as well as encompassing the [[Jewish religious movements#Modern divisions or denominations|full spectrum of Jewish religious observance]]. Though a small minority, Canadian Jews have had an open presence in the country since the arrival of the first Jewish immigrants after the [[British Empire|British]] took possession of nearly all of [[New France]] after the [[Treaty of Paris (1763)|1763 Treaty of Paris]] ending the [[Seven Years' War]].


Most of the early Jewish Canadians were either [[fur traders]] or served in the British Army troops. A few were merchants or landowners. Although Montreal's Jewish community was small, numbering only around 200, they built the [[Spanish and Portuguese Synagogue of Montreal]], Shearith Israel, the [[oldest synagogues in Canada|oldest synagogue in Canada]] in 1768. It remained the only synagogue in Montreal until 1846.<ref name="bh.org.il">{{cite web |title=The Jewish Community of Montreal |url=https://dbs.bh.org.il/place/montreal |publisher=[[The Museum of the Jewish People at Beit Hatfutsot]] |access-date=June 25, 2018 |archive-date=June 25, 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180625134002/https://dbs.bh.org.il/place/montreal |url-status=dead }}</ref> Some sources date the actual establishment of synagogue to 1777 on Notre Dame Street.<ref>{{cite book |title=Montreal and Vicinity: being a history of the old town, a pictorial record of the modern city, its sports and pastimes, and an illustrated description of many charming summer resorts around |last=Hinshelwood |first=N.M. |year=1903 |publisher=Desbarats & co. by commission of the City of Montreal and the Department of Agriculture |location=Canada |page=55 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=fDkTAAAAYAAJ |access-date=January 1, 2012}}</ref>
== Early history (1759–1850) ==
{{Jews and Judaism sidebar |Population}}
Prior to the [[British Conquest of New France]] there were officially no Jews in Canada because when [[Louis XIV of France|King Louis XIV]] made Canada officially a province of the [[Kingdom of France]] in 1663, he decreed that only [[Roman Catholicism in Canada|Roman Catholics]] could enter the colony. One exception was [[Esther Brandeau]], a Jewish girl who arrived in 1738 disguised as a boy and remained for a year before being sent back to France after refusing to convert.<ref>[http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?BioId=34791 Brandeau, Esther] Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online</ref> The earliest subsequent documentation of Jews in Canada are [[British Army]] records from the [[French and Indian War]], the North American part of the [[Seven Years' War]]. In 1760, [[General (United Kingdom)|General]] [[Jeffrey Amherst, 1st Baron Amherst]] attacked and seized [[Montreal]], winning Canada for the British. Several Jews were members of his regiments, and among his officer corps were five Jews: Samuel Jacobs, Emmanuel de Cordova, [[Aaron Hart (businessman)|Aaron Hart]], Hananiel Garcia, and Isaac Miramer.<ref>Canada's Jews: A Social and Economic Study of Jews in Canada in the 1930s. Louis Rosenberg, Morton Weinfeld. 1993.</ref>


Revolts and protests soon began calling for [[responsible government]] in Canada. The law requiring the oath "on my faith as a Christian" was amended in 1829 to provide for Jews to refuse the oath. In 1831, prominent French-Canadian politician [[Louis-Joseph Papineau]] sponsored a law which granted full equivalent political rights to Jews, twenty-seven years before anywhere else in the British Empire. In 1832, partly because of the work of [[Ezekiel Hart]], a law was passed that guaranteed Jews the same political rights and freedoms as Christians. In the early 1830s, German Jew Samuel Liebshitz founded Jewsburg (now incorporated as German Mills into [[Kitchener, Ontario]]), a village in [[Upper Canada]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.kpl.org/gsr/placenamestwp.htm |title=Kitchener Public Library – for Genealogists |access-date=2006-09-09 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060827045302/http://www.kpl.org/gsr/placenamestwp.htm |archive-date=2006-08-27 }} Kitchener Public Library</ref> In 1841 '''Isaac Gottschalk Ascher''' arrived in Montreal with his family, including sons Albert (who later in 1856 together with Lewis Samuel a British Orthodox Jew would rent the upper floor of Coombe's Drug Store at the corner of Yonge Street and Richmond Street in [[Toronto]] for High Holy Day services which became '''only the second temple''' in Canada), [[Isidore Gordon Ascher|Isidore]] a highly acclaimed Canadian poet and novelist, [[Jacob Ascher|Jacob]] A Canadian Chess Champion (1878, 1883).
The most prominent of these five were the business associates Samuel Jacobs and Aaron Hart. In 1759, in his capacity as [[Commissariat]] to the [[British Army]] on the staff of [[Frederick Haldimand|General Sir Frederick Haldimand]], Jacobs was recorded as the first Jewish resident of [[Quebec]], and thus the first Canadian Jew.<ref>[http://www.cjnews.com/node/81170 ''The Canadian Jewish News'', April 21, 2013]</ref> From 1749, Jacobs had been supplying British army officers at [[Halifax (former city)|Halifax]], [[Nova Scotia]]. In 1758, he was at [[Fort Cumberland (Canada)|Fort Cumberland]] and the following year he was with [[James Wolfe|Wolfe]]'s army at Quebec.<ref name="ReferenceA">Canada's Entrepreneurs: From The Fur Trade to the 1929 Stock Market Crash: Portraits from the Dictionary of Canadian Biography. By Andrew Ross and Andrew Smith, 2012</ref> Remaining in Canada, he afterwards became the dominant merchant of the [[Richelieu River|Richelieu valley]] and [[Seigneurial system of New France|Seigneur]] of [[Saint-Denis-sur-Richelieu]].<ref>Search Out the Land: The Jews and the Growth of Equality in British Colonial America, 1740-1867. Sheldon Godfrey, 1995</ref> However, as Jacobs married a [[French Canadian]] girl and brought his children up as Catholics, he is often overlooked as the first permanent Jewish settler in Canada in favour of Aaron Hart, who married a Jew and brought up his children, or at least his sons, in the Jewish tradition.<ref name="ReferenceA"/>
By 1850, there were still only 450 Jews living in Canada, mostly concentrated in Montreal.<ref name="Schoenfeld">{{cite web |last1=Schoenfeld |first1=Stuart |title=Jewish Canadians |url=https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/jewish-canadians |website=The Canadian Encyclopedia |access-date=June 29, 2020}}</ref>


'''Toronto's''' first Jewish prayer services were held on [[Rosh Hashanah]], September 29, 1856, initially with a [[Sefer Torah]] borrowed from '''Canada's only other synagogue''', the Spanish and Portuguese Congregation of Montreal.
Lieutenant Hart first arrived in Canada from [[New York City]] as Commissariat to [[Jeffery Amherst, 1st Baron Amherst|Jeffery Amherst]]'s forces at [[Montreal]] in 1760. After his service in the army had ended, he settled at [[Trois-Rivières]]. Eventually, he became a very wealthy landowner and a respected community member. He had four sons, Moses, Benjamin, [[Ezekiel Hart|Ezekiel]] and Alexander, all of whom would become prominent in Montreal and help build the Jewish Community. One of his sons, Ezekiel, was elected to the legislature of [[Lower Canada]] in the by-election of April 11, 1807, becoming the first Jew in an [[official opposition]] in the British Empire. Ezekiel was expelled from the legislature with his religion a major factor.<ref>Denis Vaugeois , "Hart, Ezekiel", in ''Dictionary of Canadian Biography'', vol. 7, University of Toronto/Université Laval, 2003, accessed June 9, 2013, [http://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/hart_ezekiel_7E.html online]</ref> Sir [[James Henry Craig]], Governor-General of Lower Canada at the time, tried to protect Hart, but the legislature dismissed him in both 1808 and 1809. French Canadians later saw this as an attempt of the British to undermine their role in Canada. Ezekiel was re-elected to the legislature, but Jews were not allowed to hold elected office in Canada until a generation later.{{Citation needed|date=October 2008}}
A year later in '''1857''' a permanent Torah arrived as a gift from '''Albert Ascher's''' (Asher) parents in Montreal (Isaac Gottschalk Ascher & Rachel Altmann) inscribed in Hebrew to ''"The Holy Congregation, Blossoms of Holiness [Pirchei Kodesh], in the city of Toronto."'' The name resonated among the congregants, and on July 23, 1871, the synagogue officially adopted the name פרחי קדש — [[Holy Blossom Temple|Toronto Holy Blossom Temple]] .


Abraham Jacob Franks settled at [[Quebec City]] in 1767.<ref>{{cite book|author1=Isidore Singer|author2=Cyrus Adler|title=The Jewish Encyclopedia: A Descriptive Record of the History, Religion, Literature, and Customs of the Jewish People from the Earliest Times to the Present Day|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=R0gYAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA286|year=1907|publisher=Funk & Wagnalls|page=286}}</ref> His son, David Salesby (or Salisbury) Franks, who afterward became head of the Montreal Jewish community, also lived in Quebec prior to 1774. Abraham Joseph, who was long a prominent figure in public affairs in Quebec City, took up his residence there shortly after his father's death in 1832. Quebec City's Jewish population for many years remained very small, and early efforts at organization were fitful and short-lived. A cemetery was acquired in 1853, and a place of worship was opened in a hall in the same year, in which services were held intermittently. In 1892, the Jewish population of Quebec City had sufficiently augmented to permit the permanent establishment of the present synagogue, [[Congregation Beth Israel Ohev Sholem|Beth Israel]]. The congregation was granted the right of keeping a register in 1897. Other communal institutions were the Quebec Hebrew Sick Benefit Association, the Quebec Hebrew Relief Association for Immigrants, and the Quebec Zionist Society. By 1905, the Jewish population was about 350, in a total population of 68,834.<ref>{{cite book|author=Singer and Adler|title=The Jewish Encyclopedia: A Descriptive Record of the History, Religion, Literature, and Customs of the Jewish People from the Earliest Times to the Present Day|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=R0gYAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA286|year=1907|publisher=Funk & Wagnalls|page=286}}</ref> According to census of 1871, there were 1,115 Jews living in Canada with 409 in Montreal, 157 in Toronto, and 131 in Hamilton with the rest living in Brantford, Quebec City, St. John, Kingston and London.<ref name="Schoenfeld"/>
Revolts and protests soon began calling for [[responsible government]] in Canada. The law requiring the oath "on my faith as a Christian" was amended in 1829 to provide for Jews to not take the oath. In 1831, prominent French-Canadian politician [[Louis-Joseph Papineau]] sponsored a law which granted full equivalent political rights to Jews, 27 years before anywhere else in the British Empire.


==Community growth (1862–1939)==
Most of the early Jewish Canadians were either [[fur traders]] or served in the British Army troops. A few were merchants or landowners. Although Montreal's Jewish community was small, numbering only around 200, they built the [[Spanish and Portuguese Synagogue of Montreal]], Shearith Israel, the [[oldest synagogues in Canada|oldest synagogue in Canada]] in 1768. In 1832, partly because of the work of Ezekiel Hart, a law was passed that guaranteed Jews the same political rights and freedoms as Christians. In the early 1830s, German Jew Samuel Liebshitz founded Jewsburg (now incorporated as German Mills into [[Kitchener, Ontario]]), a village in [[Upper Canada]].<ref>[http://www.kpl.org/gsr/placenamestwp.htm] Kitchener Public Library</ref> By 1850, there were still only 450 Jews living in Canada, mostly concentrated in Montreal.
[[File:Congregation Emanu-El, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada 06.jpg|thumb|right|[[Congregation Emanu-El (Victoria, British Columbia)|Congregation Emmanu-El Synagogue]] (1863) in [[Victoria, British Columbia]], the oldest Synagogue in Canada still in use, and the oldest on the West Coast of North America]]
With the beginning of the [[pogroms]] of [[History of the Jews in Russia|Russia]] in the 1880s, and continuing through the growing [[anti-Semitism]] of the early 20th century, millions of Jews began to flee the [[Pale of Settlement]] and other areas of Eastern Europe for the West. Although the United States received the overwhelming majority of these immigrants, Canada was also a destination of choice due to [[Government of Canada]] and [[Canadian Pacific Railway]] efforts to develop Canada after Confederation. Between 1880 and 1930, the Jewish population of Canada grew to over 155,000. At the time, according to the 1901 census of Montreal, only 6861 Jews were residents.<ref>{{cite book |title=Montreal and Vicinity: being a history of the old town, a pictorial record of the modern city, its sports and pastimes, and an illustrated description of many charming summer resorts around |last=Hinshelwood |first=N.M. |year=1903 |publisher=Desbarats & co. |location=Canada |isbn=978-0-226-49407-4 |page=53 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=fDkTAAAAYAAJ |access-date=January 1, 2012}}</ref>


Jewish immigrants brought a tradition of establishing a communal body, called a [[kehilla (modern)|kehilla]] to look after the social and welfare needs of their less fortunate. Virtually all of these Jewish refugees were very poor. Wealthy Jewish philanthropists, who had come to Canada much earlier, felt it was their social responsibility to help their fellow Jews get established in this new country. One such man was [[Abraham de Sola]], who founded the Hebrew Philanthropic Society. In Montreal and Toronto, a wide range of communal organizations and groups developed. Recently arrived immigrant Jews also founded ''landsmenschaften'', guilds of people who came originally from the same village.
According to a historical source, the first synagogue in Montreal was founded in 1777 on Notre Dame Street.<ref>{{cite book |title=Montreal and Vicinity: being a history of the old town, a pictorial record of the modern city, its sports and pastimes, and an illustrated description of many charming summer resorts around |last=Hinshelwood |first=N.M. |year=1903 |publisher=Desbarats & co. by commission of the City of Montreal and the Department of Agriculture |location=Canada |page=55 |url=http://books.google.ca/books?id=fDkTAAAAYAAJ&q |accessdate=January 1, 2012}}</ref>


Most of these immigrants established communities in the larger cities. Canada's first ever census, recorded that in 1871 there were 1,115 Jews in Canada; 409 in Montreal, 157 in [[Toronto]], 131 in [[Hamilton, Ontario|Hamilton]] and the rest were dispersed in small communities along the [[St. Lawrence River]].<ref name="Schoenfeld"/> When elected mayor of [[Alexandria, Ontario|Alexandria]] in 1914, George Simon was the second Jewish mayor in Canada (after [[David Oppenheimer]], who was mayor of Vancouver from 1888 to 1891)<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/oppenheimer_david_12E.html|title=Biography – OPPENHEIMER, DAVID – Volume XII (1891–1900) – Dictionary of Canadian Biography}}</ref> and the youngest mayor in the country at the time. He died suddenly in 1969 while serving his tenth term in office.<ref name=canadasfirstm>{{cite journal|title=Canada's first Jewish mayor dies suddenly|journal=The Ottawa Citizen|date=February 1, 1964|volume=121st Year|issue=403|page=15}}</ref>
Abraham Jacob Franks settled at [[Quebec City]] in 1767.<ref>{{cite book|author1=Isidore Singer|author2=Cyrus Adler|title=The Jewish Encyclopedia: A Descriptive Record of the History, Religion, Literature, and Customs of the Jewish People from the Earliest Times to the Present Day|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=R0gYAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA286|year=1907|publisher=Funk & Wagnalls|page=286}}</ref> His son, David Salesby (or Salisbury) Franks, who afterward became head of the Montreal Jewish community, also lived in Quebec prior to 1774. Abraham Joseph, who was long a prominent figure in public affairs in Quebec City, took up his residence there shortly after his father's death in 1832. Quebec City's Jewish population for many years remained very small, and early efforts at organization were fitful and short-lived. A cemetery was acquired in 1853, and a place of worship was opened in a hall in the same year, in which services were held intermittently; but it was not until 1892 that the Jewish population of Quebec City had sufficiently augmented to permit of the permanent establishment of the present synagogue, Beth Israel. The congregation was granted the right of keeping a register in 1897. Other communal institutions were the Quebec Hebrew Sick Benefit Association, the Quebec Hebrew Relief Association for Immigrants, and the Quebec Zionist Society. By 1805, the Jewish population was about 350, in a total population of 68,834.<ref>{{cite book|author=Singer and Adler|title=The Jewish Encyclopedia: A Descriptive Record of the History, Religion, Literature, and Customs of the Jewish People from the Earliest Times to the Present Day|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=R0gYAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA286|year=1907|publisher=Funk & Wagnalls|page=286}}</ref>


A community of about 100 settled in [[Victoria, British Columbia]] to open shops to supply prospectors during the [[Cariboo Gold Rush]] (and later the [[Klondike Gold Rush]] in the [[Yukon]]). This led to the opening of a synagogue in [[Victoria, British Columbia]] in 1862. In 1875, B'nai B'rith Canada was formed as a Jewish [[fraternal organization]]. When [[British Columbia]] sent their delegation to Ottawa to agree on the colony's entry into [[Confederation]], a Jew, [[Henry Nathan, Jr.]], was among them. Nathan eventually became the first Canadian Jewish Member of Parliament. In 1899, the Federation of Canadian Zionist Societies was founded to champion Zionism, and became the first nation-wide Jewish group.<ref name="Schoenfeld"/> The overwhelming majority of Canadian Jews were ''Ashkenazim'' who came from either the Austrian empire or the Russian empire.<ref name="Schoenfeld"/> Jewish women tended to be particularly active in Canadian Zionism, perhaps because many of the Zionist groups were secular.<ref name="Schoenfeld"/>
==Growth of the Canadian Jewish community (1850–1939)==
[[File:Synagogue Emmanu-el Victoria BC.jpg|thumb|left|[[Congregation Emanu-El (Victoria, British Columbia)|Congregation Emmanu-El Synagogue]] (1863) in [[Victoria, British Columbia]], the oldest Synagogue in Canada still in use, and the oldest on the West Coast of North America.]]
With the beginning of the [[pogroms]] of [[History of the Jews in Russia|Russia]] in the 1880s, and continuing through the growing [[anti-Semitism]] of the early 20th century, millions of Jews began to flee the [[Pale of Settlement]] and other areas of Eastern Europe for the West. Although the United States received the overwhelming majority of these immigrants, Canada was also a destination of choice due to [[Government of Canada]] and [[Canadian Pacific Railway]] efforts to develop Canada after Confederation. Between 1880 and 1930, the Jewish population of Canada grew to over 155,000. At the time, according to the 1901 census of Montreal, only 6861 Jews were residents.<ref>{{cite book |title=Montreal and Vicinity: being a history of the old town, a pictorial record of the modern city, its sports and pastimes, and an illustrated description of many charming summer resorts around |last=Hinshelwood |first=N.M. |year=1903 |publisher=Desbarats & co. |location=Canada |isbn=978-0-226-49407-4 |page=53 |url=http://books.google.ca/books?id=fDkTAAAAYAAJ&q |accessdate=January 1, 2012}}</ref>


By 1911, there were Jewish communities in all of Canada's major cities. By 1914, there were about 100,000 Jews in Canada with three-quarters living in either Montreal or Toronto.<ref name="Schoenfeld"/> The overwhelming majority of Canadian Jews were ''[[Ashkenazi Jews|Ashkenazim]]'' who came from either the [[Austrian Empire|Austrian]] or [[Russian Empire]]s.<ref name="Schoenfeld"/> There were two competing strands of Jewish nationalism in Eastern Europe in the early 20th century, namely Zionism and another tendency that favoured forming separate Jewish cultural institutions with a focus on promoting Yiddish.<ref name="Schoenfeld"/> Institutions such as the Montreal Jewish Library with its collection of Yiddish books were examples of the latter tendency.<ref name="Schoenfeld"/>
Jewish immigrants brought a tradition of establishing a communal body, called a [[kehilla (modern)|kehilla]] to look after the social and welfare needs of their less fortunate. Virtually all of these Jewish refugees were very poor. Wealthy Jewish philanthropists, who had come to Canada much earlier, felt it was their social responsibility to help their fellow Jews get established in this new country. One such man was [[Abraham de Sola]], who founded the Hebrew Philanthropic Society. In Montreal and Toronto, there developed a wide range of communal organizations and groups. Recently arrived immigrant Jews also founded ''landsmenschaften'', guilds of people who came originally from the same village.


Most of these immigrants established communities in the larger cities. Canada’s first ever census, recorded that in 1871 there were 1,115 Jews in Canada; 409 in Montreal, 157 in [[Toronto]], 131 in [[Hamilton, Ontario|Hamilton]] and the rest were dispersed in small communities along the [[St. Lawrence River]]. There was also a community of about 100 that settled in [[Victoria, British Columbia]] to open shops to supply prospectors during the [[Cariboo Gold Rush]] (and later the [[Klondike Gold Rush]] in the [[Yukon]]). This led to the opening of a [[synagogue]] in [[Victoria, British Columbia]] in 1862. In 1875, B'nai Brith Canada was formed as a Jewish [[fraternal organization]]. When [[British Columbia]] sent their delegation to Ottawa to agree on the colony’s entry into [[Confederation]], a Jew, [[Henry Nathan, Jr.]], was among them. Nathan eventually became the first Canadian Jewish [[Member of Parliament]]. By 1911, there were Jewish communities in all of Canada's major cities.
<gallery>
<gallery>
File:Benhart.jpg|[[Benjamin Hart (businessman)|Benjamin Hart]], businessman, militia officer, and justice of the peace, in 1855.
File:Benhart.jpg|[[Benjamin Hart (businessman)|Benjamin Hart]], businessman, militia officer, and justice of the peace, 1855
File:The Ward as viewed from Eaton factory.jpg|[[The Ward, Toronto]], a predominantly Jewish neighbourhood, 1910
File:Dedication of the new Synagogue.jpg|Dedication of the new Synagogue, [[Kirkland Lake]], [[Ontario]]. Rabbi Joseph Rabin carrying the Torah. Sept. 1, 1929
File:Jewish rag picker, Bloor Street West.jpg|Jewish rag picker, Bloor Street West, Toronto, 1911
File:Jewish rag picker, Bloor Street West.jpg|Jewish rag picker, Bloor Street West, Toronto, 1911
File:Dedication of the new Synagogue.jpg|Dedication of the new Synagogue, [[Kirkland Lake]], Ontario. Rabbi Joseph Rabin carrying the Torah, 1929
File:The Ward as viewed from Eaton factory.jpg|[[The Ward, Toronto]], a predominantly Jewish neighbourhood, in 1910.
File:Canadian Jewish Farm School, Georgetown, Ontario (1929).jpg|The Canadian Jewish Farm School in [[Georgetown, Ontario]] was established in 1927 and served as a training school for Polish war orphans brought to Canada after the First World War<ref>{{cite web | title = Ida Siegel with Edmund Scheuer at the Canadian Jewish Farm School, Georgetown | publisher = Ontario Jewish Archives | url = http://search.ontariojewisharchives.org/Permalink/descriptions278803 | access-date = July 1, 2014}}</ref>
</gallery>
</gallery>


The [[Canadian Jewish Congress]] (CJC) was founded in 1919 and would be the major representative body of the Canadian Jewish community for 90 years. Much of its work was focused on lobbying government around issues of immigration, human rights and anti-Semitism. One of the terms of the 1919 Treaty of Versailles were the so-called "minorities treaties" that committed Eastern European states with substantial Jewish populations such as Poland, Romania, and Czechoslovakia to protect the rights of minorities with the League of Nations to monitor their compliance. The CJC was founded in part to lobby the government of Canada to use its influence at the League of Nations to ensure that the Eastern European states were abiding by the terms of the "minorities treaties".<ref name="Schoenfeld"/>
On August 6, 1933 one of the most famous anti-Semitic incidents in Canada took place, known as "the Christie Pits Riot". On that day after a baseball game in Toronto a group of young men using Nazi symbols started a massive melee, arguably the largest in Toronto’s history, on the ground of racial hatred, arguably the largest in Toronto’s history, involving hundreds of men.<ref>[http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/toronto/remembering-the-christie-pits-riot/article13695461/]</ref>


On August 16, 1933, one of the most famous [[Antisemitism in Canada|anti-Semitic incidents in Canada]] took place, known as the [[Christie Pits riot]]. On that day after a baseball game in Toronto a group of young men using Nazi symbols started a massive melee, arguably the largest in Toronto's history, on the ground of racial hatred, involving hundreds of men.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/toronto/remembering-the-christie-pits-riot/article13695461/|title=Remembering Toronto's Christie Pits Riot|first=Daniel|last=Bitonti|date=August 9, 2013|website=Theglobeandmail.com|access-date=August 18, 2017|via=The Globe and Mail}}</ref>
=== Jewish settlement in the West ===

In 1934, another anti-Semitic incident occurred when the first medical strike in a Canadian hospital was held in response to the appointment of a Jewish doctor to Montreal's Notre-Dame Hospital.<ref name="2003-12-09-cmaj">{{cite journal |last1=Wilton |first1=P |title=Days of shame, Montreal, 1934. |journal=Canadian Medical Association Journal |date=December 9, 2003 |volume=169 |issue=12 |pages=1329 |pmid=14662683 |pmc=280601 }}</ref><ref name="2010-11-25-cjn">{{cite news |last1=Lazarus |first1=David |title=Doctor was central figure in 1934 hospital strike |url=https://www.cjnews.com/news/canada/doctor-central-figure-1934-hospital-strike |access-date=July 21, 2021 |work=The Canadian Jewish News |date=November 25, 2010}}</ref><ref name="imjm">{{cite web |title=Dr. Sam Rabinovitch and The Notre-Dame Hospital Strike – Hôpital Notre-Dame – Museum of Jewish Montreal |url=http://imjm.ca/location/2395 |website=imjm.ca |access-date=July 21, 2021 |language=en}}</ref><ref name="2021-07-18-aish">{{cite news |last1=Miller |first1=Yvette Alt |title=Montreal's Days of Shame: When 75 Doctors Went on Strike until a Jewish Doctor Resigned |url=https://www.aish.com/jw/s/Montreals-Days-of-Shame-When-75-Doctors-Went-on-Strike-until-a-Jewish-Doctor-Resigned.html |access-date=July 21, 2021 |work=aishcom |date=July 18, 2021 |language=en}}</ref> Dr Sam Rabinovitch would have been the first Jew appointed to the a French-Canadian hospital.<ref name="2003-12-09-cmaj" /> The four-day strike, nicknamed the "[[Days of Shame]]", involved interns refusing to "provide care to anyone, including emergency patients".<ref name="2003-12-09-cmaj" /> The strike was called off after Dr Rabinovitch resigned after he realised that no patients would be treated otherwise.<ref name="2003-12-09-cmaj" />

===Westward expansion===
{{See also|Block settlement#Jewish}}
[[File:Graves in Jewish cemetery at Lipton Colony, Saskatchewan.jpg|thumb|left|Graves in Jewish cemetery at Lipton Colony, Saskatchewan, 1916]]
[[File:Graves in Jewish cemetery at Lipton Colony, Saskatchewan.jpg|thumb|left|Graves in Jewish cemetery at Lipton Colony, Saskatchewan, 1916]]
In the late 1800s and early 1900s, through such utopian movements as the [[Jewish Colonization Association]], fifteen Jewish [[farm]] colonies were established on the Canadian [[prairies]];<ref name="jones"/> However, few of the colonies did very well. This was partly because, the Jews of [[East European]] origin were not allowed to own farms in the old country, and thus had little experience in farming. One settlement that did do well was [[Yid'n Bridge]], [[Saskatchewan]], started by [[South Africa]]n farmers. Eventually the community grew larger as the [[South African Jews]], who had gone to South Africa from [[Lithuania]] invited Jewish families directly from Europe to join them, and the settlement eventually became a town, whose name was later changed to the [[Anglicized]] name of [[Edenbridge, Saskatchewan|Edenbridge]].,<ref name="jones">{{cite web|url=http://www.jewishlibraries.org/ajlweb/publications/proceedings/proceedings2003/jones.pdf |title=1: Yiddish culture in Western Canada |format=PDF |date= |accessdate=2011-05-18}}</ref><ref>Manitoba Historical Society "The Contribution of the Jews to the Opening and Development of the West" [http://www.mhs.mb.ca/docs/transactions/3/jewsandwest.shtml]</ref> The Jewish farming settlement did not last to a second generation, however.<ref name="jones"/> [[Beth Israel Synagogue (Edenbridge, Saskatchewan)|Beth Israel Synagogue]] at Edenbridge is now a designated [[heritage site]]. In Alberta, the [[Little Synagogue on the Prairie]] is now in the collection of a museum.


In the late 1800s and early 1900s, through such movements as the [[Jewish Colonization Association]], 15 Jewish farm colonies were established on the Canadian [[prairies]].<ref name="jones"/> Few of the colonies did very well, partly because the Jews of [[East European]] origin were forbidden to own farms in the old country and thus had little experience in farming. One settlement that did do well was Yid'n Bridge, [[Saskatchewan]], started by South African farmers. Eventually the community grew larger as the [[South African Jews]], who had gone to South Africa from [[Lithuania]] invited Jewish families directly from Europe to join them, and the settlement eventually became a town, whose name was later changed to the [[Anglicized]] name of [[Edenbridge, Saskatchewan|Edenbridge]].<ref name="jones">{{cite web |url=http://www.jewishlibraries.org/ajlweb/publications/proceedings/proceedings2003/jones.pdf |title=1: Yiddish culture in Western Canada |access-date=2011-05-18 |archive-date=2011-07-16 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110716080937/http://www.jewishlibraries.org/ajlweb/publications/proceedings/proceedings2003/jones.pdf |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.mhs.mb.ca/docs/transactions/3/jewsandwest.shtml|title=MHS Transactions: The Contribution of the Jews to the Opening and Development of the West|first=Gordon|last=Goldsborough|website=Mhs.mb.ca|access-date=August 18, 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Story of Saskatchewan's Jewish farmers goes to national museum|url=http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/saskatchewan/story-of-saskatchewan-s-jewish-farmers-goes-to-national-museum-1.1302867|publisher=[[CBC News]]|access-date=May 18, 2016|date=July 12, 2013}}</ref> The Jewish farming settlement folded in the first generation.<ref name="jones"/> [[Beth Israel Synagogue (Edenbridge, Saskatchewan)|Beth Israel Synagogue]] at Edenbridge is now a designated [[heritage site]]. In Alberta, the [[Little Synagogue on the Prairie]] is now in the collection of a museum.
At this time, most of the Jewish Canadians in the west were either storekeepers or tradesmen. Many set up shops on the new rail lines, selling goods and supplies to the construction workers, many of whom were also Jewish.{{Citation needed|date=October 2008}} Later, because of the railway, some of these [[Homestead (buildings)|homestead]]s grew into prosperous towns. At this time, Canadian Jews also had important roles in developing the west coast fishing industry, while others worked on building telegraph lines. {{Citation needed|date=October 2008}} Some, descended from the earliest Canadian Jews, stayed true to their ancestors as fur trappers. The first major Jewish organization to appear was B'nai Brith. Till today B'nai Brith Canada is the community's independent advocacy and social service organization. Also at this time, the Montreal branch of the [[Workmen's Circle]] was founded in 1907. This group was an off-shoot of the [[General Jewish Labour Bund in Lithuania, Poland and Russia|Jewish Labour Bund]], an outlawed party in Russia's [[Pale of Settlement]]. It was an organization for The Main's radical, non-Communist, non-religious, working class.<ref>Smith, p.123</ref>


At this time, most of the Jewish Canadians in the west were either storekeepers or tradesmen. Many set up shops on the new rail lines, selling goods and supplies to the construction workers, many of whom were also Jewish.<ref>{{cite web|title=Alberta|url=https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/alberta|access-date=June 12, 2024 |website=Jewish Virtual Library |publisher=American-Israeli Cooperative Enterprise (AICE)}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Sir Wilfrid Laurier and Canada's Jews |url=https://www.canadashistory.ca/explore/prime-ministers/sir-wilfrid-laurier-and-canada-s-jews |website=Canada's History |access-date=June 12, 2024 |publisher=Canada's National History Society }}</ref> Later, because of the railway, some of these [[Homestead (buildings)|homestead]]s grew into prosperous towns. At this time, Canadian Jews also had important roles in developing the west coast fishing industry, while others worked on building telegraph lines.<ref>{{cite web|title=Canadian National Railways Settle Jews in British Columbia|url=https://www.jta.org/archive/canadian-national-railways-settle-jews-in-british-columbia |date=September 21, 1926 |access-date=June 12, 2024 |publisher=Jewish Telegraphic Agency}}</ref> Some, descended from the earliest Canadian Jews, stayed true to their ancestors as fur trappers. The first major Jewish organization to appear was B'nai B'rith. Till today B'nai B'rith Canada is the community's independent advocacy and social service organization. Also at this time, the Montreal branch of the [[Workmen's Circle]] was founded in 1907. This group was an offshoot of the [[General Jewish Labour Bund in Lithuania, Poland and Russia|Jewish Labour Bund]], an outlawed party in Russia's [[Pale of Settlement]]. It was an organization for The Main's radical, non-Communist, non-religious, working class.<ref>Smith, p.123</ref>
=== Growth and community organization ===

=== Organization ===
[[File:Jewish general hospital montreal.jpg|thumb|left|The [[Jewish General Hospital]] opened in Montreal in 1934.]]
[[File:Jewish general hospital montreal.jpg|thumb|left|The [[Jewish General Hospital]] opened in Montreal in 1934.]]
By the outbreak of [[World War I]], there were approximately 100,000 Canadian Jews, of whom three-quarters lived in either Montreal or Toronto. Many of the children of the European refugees started out as peddlers, eventually working their way up to established businesses, such as retailers and wholesalers. Jewish Canadians played an essential role in the development of the Canadian clothing and textile industry. {{Citation needed|date=October 2008}} Most worked as labourers in [[sweatshops]]; while some owned the manufacturing facilities. Jewish merchants and labourers spread out from the cities to small towns, building synagogues, community centres and schools as they went.
By the outbreak of [[World War I]], there were approximately 100,000 Canadian Jews, of whom three-quarters lived in either Montreal or Toronto. Many of the children of the European refugees started out as peddlers, eventually working their way up to established businesses, such as retailers and wholesalers. Jewish Canadians played an essential role in the development of the Canadian clothing and textile industry.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Jewish Canadians|url=https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/jewish-canadians|last=Schoenfeld|first=Stuart|date=December 3, 2012|website=The Canadian Encyclopedia|access-date=2020-05-29}}</ref> Most worked as labourers in [[sweatshops]]; while some owned the manufacturing facilities. Jewish merchants and labourers spread out from the cities to small towns, building synagogues, community centres and schools as they went.

As the population grew, Canadian Jews began to organize themselves as a community despite the presence of dozens of competing [[sects]]. The [[Canadian Jewish Congress]] (CJC) was founded in 1919 as the result of the merger of several smaller organizations. The purpose of the CJC was to speak on behalf of the common interests of Jewish Canadians and assist immigrant Jews. The largest Jewish community was in Montreal, at the time the largest, wealthiest and most cosmopolitan city in Canada.<ref name="Waller">{{cite web |last1=Waller |first1=Harold |title=Montreal, Canada |url=https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/montreal-canada |website=Jewish Virtual Library |publisher=Encyclopedia Judacia |access-date=June 29, 2020}}</ref> The vast majority of Montreal's Jews who arrived in the early 20th century were Yiddish-speaking ''Ashkenazim'' but their children chose speak English rather than French.<ref name="Waller"/> Until 1964, Quebec had no public education system, instead having two parallel educational systems run by the Protestant churches and the Catholic church. As the Jewish community was too poor to fund its own educational system, most Jewish parents chose to enrol their children in the English-speaking Protestant school system, which was willing to accept Jews unlike the Catholic school system.<ref name="Waller"/> The CJC had its headquarters in Montreal while the Jewish Public Library of Montreal and the Montreal Yiddish Theatre were two of the largest Jewish cultural institutions in Canada.<ref name="Waller"/> The Jews of Montreal tended to be concentrated in several neighbourhoods, which gave a strong sense of community identity.<ref name="Waller"/>


In 1930 under the impact of the Great Depression, Canada sharply limited immigration from Eastern Europe, which adversely impacted on the ability of the &nbsp;''Ashkenazim'' to come to Canada.<ref name="Schoenfeld"/> In a climate of anti-semitism where the Jewish immigrants were seen as economic competition for Gentiles, the leadership of the CJC was assumed by the whisky tycoon [[Samuel Bronfman]] who it was hoped might be able to persuade the government to allow more Jews to come.<ref name="Schoenfeld"/> In view of worsening situation for Jews in Europe, allowing more Jewish immigration became the central concern of the CJC.<ref name="Schoenfeld"/> Through many Canadian Jews voted for the Liberal Party, traditionally seen as the friend of minorities, the Liberal Prime Minister from 1935 onward, [[William Lyon Mackenzie King]], proved to be extremely unsympathetic. Mackenzie King adamantly refused to change the immigration law, and Canada accepted proportionally the fewest Jewish refugees from Nazi Germany.<ref name="Schoenfeld"/>
As the population grew, Canadian Jews began to organize themselves as a community despite the presence of dozens of competing [[sects]]. The [[Canadian Jewish Congress]] (CJC) was founded in 1919 as the result of the merger of several smaller organizations. The purpose of the CJC was to speak on behalf of the common interests of Jewish Canadians and assist immigrant Jews.


==World War II (1939–1945)==
==World War II (1939–1945)==
[[File:Jewish Canadian soldiers during WWII.jpg|thumb|left|Jewish soldiers fought in the Canadian military during [[World War II]].]]
[[File:Jewish Canadian soldiers during WWII.jpg|thumb|left|Jewish soldiers fought in the Canadian military during [[World War II]].]]
[[File:Stolperstein Rudi Terhoch Velen-Ramsdorf.jpg|thumb|left|[[Stolperstein]] for Rudi Terhoch in [[Velen]]-Ramsdorf, a Jewish survivor in Canada]]
Almost 20,000 Jewish Canadians volunteered to fight for Canada during [[World War II]].


About 17,000 Jewish Canadians served in the [[Canadian Armed Forces]] during [[World War II]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.veterans.gc.ca/eng/remembrance/people-and-stories/jewish-canadian-service|title=Jewish Canadian service in the Second World War – Veterans Affairs Canada|first=Veterans Affairs|last=Canada|date=July 24, 2020|website=www.veterans.gc.ca}}</ref> Major [[Ben Dunkelman]] of the Queen's Own Rifles regiment was a soldier in the campaigns of 1944–45 in northwest Europe, highly decorated for his courage and ability under fire. In 1943, [[Saidye Rosner Bronfman]] of Montreal, the wife of the whiskey tycoon [[Samuel Bronfman]] was appointed MBE (Member of the Order of the British Empire) for her work on the home front.<ref name="Curtis">{{cite web |last1=Curtis |first1=Christopher |title=The Bronfman Family |url=https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/bronfman-family |website=The Canadian Encyclopedia |access-date=June 30, 2020}}</ref> Saidye Bronfram had organized 7, 000 women in Montreal to make packages for Canadian soldiers serving overseas, for which she was recognized by King George VI.<ref name="Curtis"/> &nbsp;Most Jewish Canadian who joined the Armed Forces at this time became members of the [[Royal Canadian Air Force]].<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Usher |first=Peter |date=March 4, 2014 |title=Jews in the Royal Canadian Air Force, 1940–1945 |journal=Canadian Jewish Studies / Études juives canadiennes |volume=20 |pages=93–114|doi=10.25071/1916-0925.36059 |doi-access=free }}</ref>
In 1945, several organizations merged to form the [[United Jewish Peoples' Order]] which was one of the largest Jewish fraternal organizations in Canada for a number of years.<ref>Ester Reiter and Roz Usiskin, "[http://www.vcn.bc.ca/outlook/library/articles/jewsontheleft/p05Forum1.htm Jewish Dissent in Canada: The United Jewish People's Order]", paper presented on May 30, 2004 at a forum on "Jewish Dissent in Canada", at a conference of the Association of Canadian Jewish Studies (ACJS) in Winnipeg.</ref><ref>{{cite web|last=Benazon |first=Michael |url=http://www.vcn.bc.ca/outlook/library/articles/jewsontheleft/p05Forum.htm |title=Forum on Jewish Dissent |publisher=Vcn.bc.ca |date=2004-05-30 |accessdate=2011-05-18}}</ref>


In 1939, Canada turned away the [[MS St. Louis|MS ''St. Louis'']] with 908 Jewish refugees aboard. It went back to Europe where 254 of them died in concentration camps. And overall, Canada only accepted 5,000 Jewish refugees during the 1930s and 1940s in a climate of widespread anti-Semitism.<ref>{{cite web|last=Beswick |first=Aaron |url=http://thechronicleherald.ca/novascotia/1174272-canada-turned-away-jewish-refugees |title=Canada turned away Jewish refugees |date=December 15, 2013 |access-date=2016-11-24}}</ref> A most striking display of antisemitism occurred with the [[1944 Quebec general election|1944 Quebec election]]. The leader of the ''Union Nationale'', [[Maurice Duplessis]] appealed to anti-Semitic prejudices in Quebec in a violently anti-Semitic speech by claiming that the Dominion government of William Lyon Mackenzie King together with Liberal Premier [[Adélard Godbout]] of Quebec had secretly made an agreement with the "International Zionist Brotherhood" to settle 100,000 Jewish refugees left homeless by the Holocaust in Quebec after the war in exchange for the "International Zionist Brotherhood" promising to fund both the federal and provincial Liberal parties.<ref name="auto">Knowles, Valerie ''Strangers at Our Gates: Canadian Immigration and Immigration Policy, 1540–2006'', Toronto: Dundun Press, 2007 page 149.</ref> By contrast, Duplessis claimed that he would never take any money from the Jews, and if he were elected Premier, he would stop this alleged plan to bring Jewish refugees to Quebec. Though Duplessis' claims about the alleged plan to settle 100,000 Jewish refugees in Quebec was entirely false, his story was widely believed in Quebec, and ensured he won the election.<ref name="auto"/>
As in the United States, the community's response to news of the Holocaust was muted for decades. Bialystok (2000) argues that in the 1950s the community was "virtually devoid" of discussion. Although one in seven Canadian Jews were survivors and their children, most Canadian Jews "did not want to know what happened, and few survivors had the courage to tell them.' He argues that the main obstacle to discussion was "an inability to comprehend the event. Awareness emerged in the 1960s, however, as the community realized that antisemitism had not disappeared.<ref>Franklin Bialystok, ''Delayed Impact: The Holocaust and the Canadian Jewish Community'' (Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press, 2000) pp 7-8</ref>


In 1945, several organizations merged to form the left-wing [[United Jewish Peoples' Order]] which was one of the largest Jewish fraternal organizations in Canada for a number of years.<ref>Ester Reiter and Roz Usiskin, "[http://www.vcn.bc.ca/outlook/library/articles/jewsontheleft/p05Forum1.htm Jewish Dissent in Canada: The United Jewish People's Order]", paper presented on May 30, 2004, at a forum on "Jewish Dissent in Canada", at a conference of the Association of Canadian Jewish Studies (ACJS) in Winnipeg.</ref><ref>{{cite web|last=Benazon |first=Michael |url=http://www.vcn.bc.ca/outlook/library/articles/jewsontheleft/p05Forum.htm |title=Forum on Jewish Dissent |publisher=Vcn.bc.ca |date=May 30, 2004 |access-date=2011-05-18}}</ref>
==Post war (1945–1999)==
After the war, Canada liberalized its immigration policy. Roughly 40,000 [[Holocaust Survivors|Holocaust survivors]] came during the late 1940s, hoping to rebuild their shattered lives. In 1947, the [[Workmen's Circle]] and [[Jewish Labour Committee]] started a project, spearheaded by [[Kalmen Kaplansky]] and [[Moshe Lewis]], to bring Jewish refuges to Montreal in the needle trades, called the Tailors Project.<ref>Smith, p. 215</ref> They were able to do this through the federal government's "bulk-labour" program that allowed labour-intensive industries to bring European [[displaced person]]s to Canada, in order to fill those jobs.<ref>Smith, p. 216</ref> For Lewis' work on this and other projects during this period, the Montreal branch was renamed the Moshe Lewis Branch, after his death in 1950. The Canadian arm of the Jewish Labor Committee also honored him when they established the Moshe Lewis Foundation in 1975.<ref>Smith, p. 218</ref>


As in the United States, the community's response to news of the Holocaust was muted for decades. Bialystok (2000) wrote that in the 1950s the community was "virtually devoid" of discussion. Although one in seven Canadian Jews were survivors or their children, most "did not want to know what happened, and few survivors had the courage to tell them". He argued that the main obstacle to discussion was "an inability to comprehend the event". Awareness emerged in the 1960s, as the community realized that antisemitism remained.<ref>Franklin Bialystok, ''Delayed Impact: The Holocaust and the Canadian Jewish Community'' (Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press, 2000) pp 7–8</ref>
==Canadian Jews today==
[[File:Canada-jewish-population.jpg|thumb|400px||left|Percentage of Jewish population in Canada, 2001 (without territory Nunavut).]]
Today the [[Jewish culture]] in Canada is maintained by both practising Jews and those who choose not to practise the [[religion]]. Nearly all Jews in Canada speak one of the two [[official languages]], although most speak [[English language|English]] over [[French language|French]]. However, there seems to be a sharp division between the Ashkenazi and the Sephardi community in [[Quebec]].{{Citation needed|date=January 2008}} The Ashkenazi overwhelmingly speak English while the Sephardi mostly speak French. There is also an increasing large number who speak [[Hebrew language|Hebrew]], other than for religious ceremonies, while a few keep the [[Yiddish]] language alive.


==Post war (1945–1997)==
Recent surveys of the national Jewish population are unavailable. According to population studies of Montreal and Vancouver, 14% and 22% are [[Orthodox Judaism|Orthodox]], 37% and 30% are [[Conservative Judaism|Conservative]] and 19% and 5% are [[Reform Judaism|Reform]]. The Reform movement is weaker in Canada, especially in Quebec, compared to the United States. This may explain the higher proportion of Canadian Jews who identify as unaffiliated - 30% in Montreal and 28% in Vancouver - than is the case in the United States. As in the United States, regular synagogue attendance is rather low - with less than one-quarter attending synagogue once a month or more.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.jewishtoronto.net/getfile.asp?id=13782 |title=Jewish Life in Greater Montreal Study |date= |accessdate=2011-05-18}}</ref> However, Canadian Jews also seem to have lower intermarriage rates than the American Jewish community. Canadian census data should be reviewed with care, because it contains separate categories for religion and for ethnicity. Some Canadians identify themselves as ethnically but not religiously Jewish.
From the 1940s to the 1960s, the man generally recognized as the chief spokesman for the Canadian Jewish community was Rabbi [[Abraham Feinberg]] of the [[Holy Blossom Temple]] in Toronto.<ref name="Menkis">{{cite web |last1=Menkis |first1=Richard |title=Abraham L. Feinberg |url=https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/abraham-l-feinberg |website=Jewish Virtual Encyclopedia |publisher=Encyclopaedia Judaica |access-date=June 23, 2020}}</ref> In 1950, Dorothy Sangster wrote in ''Macleans''' about him: "Today American-born Rabbi Feinberg is one of the most controversial figures to occupy a Canadian pulpit. Gentiles recognize him as the official voice of Canadian Jewry. This fact was aptly demonstrated a few years ago when Montreal's Mayor Houde introduced him to friends as ''Le Cardinal des Juifs''—the Cardinal of the Jews".<ref name="Sangster">{{cite news |last1=Sangster |first1=Dorothy |title=The Impulsive Crusader of Holy Blossom |url=https://archive.macleans.ca/article/1950/10/1/the-impulsive-crusader-of-holy-blossom |access-date=June 23, 2020 |publisher=MacLean's |date=October 1, 1950 |archive-date=August 16, 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210816002909/https://archive.macleans.ca/article/1950/10/1/the-impulsive-crusader-of-holy-blossom |url-status=dead }}</ref> Feinberg was very active in various social justice efforts, campaigning for laws against discrimination against minorities and to end the "restrictive covenants".<ref name="Menkis"/>


In March 1945, Rabbi Feinberg wrote an article in ''Maclean's'' charging that there was rampant [[antisemitism in Canada]], stating: <blockquote>"Jews are kept out of most ski clubs. Sundry summer colonies (even on municipally owned land), fraternities, and at least one Rotary Club operate under written or unwritten “Gentiles Only” signs. Many bank positions are not open to Jews. Only three Jewish male physicians have been admitted to non-Jewish Hospital staffs in Toronto. McGill University has instituted a rule requiring in effect at least a 10% higher academic average for Jewish applicants; in certain schools of the University of Toronto anti-Jewish bias is being felt. City Councils debate whether Jewish petitioners should be permitted to build a synagogue; property deeds in some areas bar resale to them. I have seen crude handbills circulated thanking Hitler for his massacre of 80,000 Jews in Kiev."<ref>{{cite news |last1=Feinberg |first1=Abraham |title="Those Jews" We fight Hitler's creed overseas ... but we have a seedling of it right here at home, says this Rabbi |url=https://archive.macleans.ca/article/1945/3/1/those-jews |access-date=23 June 2020 |publisher=MacLean's |date=1 March 1945 |archive-date=June 26, 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200626171603/https://archive.macleans.ca/article/1945/3/1/those-jews |url-status=dead }}</ref></blockquote>
Most of Canada's Jews live in [[Ontario]] and [[Quebec]], followed by [[British Columbia]], [[Manitoba]] and [[Alberta]]. While Toronto is the largest Jewish population centre, Montreal played this role until many English-speaking Jewish Canadians left for Toronto, fearing that Quebec might leave the federation following the rise during the 1970s of nationalist political parties in Quebec, as well as a result of Quebec's [[Official Language Act (Quebec)|Language Law]]. According to the 2001 census, 164,510 Jews lived in [[Toronto]], 88,765 in [[Montreal]], 17,270 in [[Vancouver]], 12,760 in [[Winnipeg]], 11,325 in [[Ottawa]], 6,530 in [[Calgary]], 3,980 in [[Edmonton]], and 3,855 in [[Hamilton, Ontario|Hamilton]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www12.statcan.ca/english/profil01/CP01/Index.cfm?Lang=E |title=Statistics canada: 2001 Community Profiles |publisher=2.statcan.ca |date=2002-03-12 |accessdate=2011-05-18}}</ref>

In 1945, in the [[Re Drummond Wren]] case, a Jewish group, the Workers' Education Association (WEA) challenged the "restrictive covenants" that forbade the renting or selling of properties to Jews.<ref name="Girard, Philip page 251">Girard, Philip &nbsp;''Bora Laskin: Bringing Law to Life'', Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2015 page 251</ref> Through the case was something of a set-up as the WEA had quite consciously purchased a property in Toronto known to have a "restrictive covenant" in order to challenge the legality of "restrictive covenants" in the courts, Justice [[John Keiller MacKay]] struck down "restrictive covenants" in his ruling on October 31, 1945.<ref name="Girard, Philip page 251"/> In 1948, MacKay's ruling in the Drummond Wren case was struck down in the [[Noble v Alley]] case by the Ontario Supreme Court, which ruled that "restrictive covenants" were "legal and enforceable".<ref name="Levine, Allan p.219">Levine, Allan ''Seeking the Fabled City: The Canadian Jewish Experience'', Toronto: McClelland & Stewart, 2018 p.219</ref> A woman named Anna Noble decided to sell her cottage at the [[Beach O' Pines]] resort to Bernard Wolf, a Jewish businessman from London, Ontario. The sale was blocked by the Beach O'Pines Resort Association which had a "restrictive covenant" forbidding the sale of cottages to any person of "Jewish, Hebrew, Semitic, Negro or colored race or blood".<ref name="Levine, Allan p.219"/> With the support of the Joint Public Relations Committee of the Canadian Jewish Congress and B'nai B'rith headed by Rabbi Feinberg, the Noble ruling was appealed to the Supreme Court of Canada, which in November 1950 ruled against "restrictive covenants", albeit only on the technicality that the phrase "Jewish, Hebrew, Semitic, Negro or colored race or blood" was too vague.<ref name="Levine, Allan p.219"/>

After the war, Canada liberalized its immigration policy. Roughly 40,000 [[Holocaust Survivors]] came during the late 1940s, hoping to rebuild their shattered lives. In 1947, the [[Workmen's Circle]] and [[Jewish Labour Committee]] started a project, spearheaded by [[Kalmen Kaplansky]] and [[Moshe Lewis]], to bring Jewish refugees to Montreal in the needle trades, called the Tailors Project.<ref>Smith, p. 215</ref> They were able to do this through the federal government's "bulk-labour" program that allowed labour-intensive industries to bring European [[displaced person]]s to Canada, to fill those jobs.<ref>Smith, p. 216</ref> For Lewis' work on this and other projects during this period, the Montreal branch was renamed the Moshe Lewis Branch, after his death in 1950. The Canadian arm of the Jewish Labor Committee also honored him when they established the Moshe Lewis Foundation in 1975.<ref>Smith, p. 218</ref>

In the post-war era, universities proved more willing to accept Jewish applicants and in decades after 1945, many Canadian Jews tended to move up from a lower-class group working as menial laborers to a middle class group working as ''bourgeois'' professionals.<ref name="Schoenfeld"/> With the ability to obtain a better education, many Jews become doctors, teachers, lawyers, dentists, accountants, professors and other ''bourgeois'' occupations.<ref name="Schoenfeld"/> Geographically, there was a tendency for many Jews living in the inner cities of Toronto and Montreal to move out to the suburbs.<ref name="Schoenfeld"/> The rural Jewish communities almost vanished as Jews living in rural areas decamped to the cities.<ref name="Schoenfeld"/> Reflecting a more tolerant attitude, Canadian Jews became active on the cultural scene.<ref name="Schoenfeld"/> In the post-war decades [[Peter C. Newman]], [[Wayne and Shuster]], [[Mordecai Richler]], [[Leonard Cohen]], [[Barbara Frum]], [[Joseph Rosenblatt]], [[Irving Layton]], [[Eli Mandel]], [[A.M. Klein]], [[Henry Kreisel]], [[Adele Wiseman]], [[Miriam Waddington]], [[Naim Kattan]], and Rabbi [[Stuart Rosenberg]] were individuals of note in the fields of arts, journalism and literature.<ref name="Schoenfeld"/> &nbsp;

Since the 1960s a new immigration wave of Jews started to take place. A number of French-speaking Jews from North Africa ended up settling in Montreal.<ref name="Schoenfeld"/> Some [[History of the Jews in South Africa|South African Jews]] decided to emigrate to Canada after South Africa became a republic in 1961, and was followed by another wave in the late 1970s, which was precipitated by anti-apartheid rioting and civil unrest.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.cjnews.com/news/canada/archive-collects-stories-southern-african-jews |title=Archive collects stories of Southern African Jews |author=Canadian Jewish News |date=September 2, 2014 |access-date=November 15, 2015|author-link=Canadian Jewish News }}</ref> The majority of them settled in [[Ontario]], with the largest community in [[Toronto]], followed by those in [[Hamilton, Ontario|Hamilton]], [[London, Ontario|London]] and [[Kingston, Ontario|Kingston]]. Smaller waves of [[History of the Jews in Zimbabwe|Zimbabwean Jews]] were also present during this period.

In 1961 [[Louis Rasminsky]] became the first Jewish governor of the Bank of Canada. Every previous governor of the Bank of Canada had been a member of the prestigious [[Rideau Club]] of Ottawa, but Rasminsky's application to join the Rideau Club was turned down on the account of his religion, a rejection that deeply hurt him.<ref name="Rasminsky">{{cite web |title=Louis Rasminsky |url=https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/rasminsky-louis |website=Jewish Virtual Encyclopedia |publisher=Encyclopaedia Judaica |access-date=June 30, 2020}}</ref> Through the Rideau Club changed its policies in response to public criticism, Rasminsky only joined the club after he retired as bank governor in 1973.<ref name="Rasminsky"/> In 1968, the Liberal MP [[Herb Gray]] of Windsor became the Jewish federal cabinet minister. In 1970, [[Bora Laskin]] became the first Jewish justice of the Supreme Court of Canada and in 1973, the first Jewish Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. In 1971, [[David Lewis (Canadian politician)|David Lewis]] became the leader of the New Democratic Party, becoming the first Jew to head a major Canadian political party.

In 1976, the Quebec provincial election was won by the separatist ''Parti Québécois'' (PQ), which sparked a major flight of Montreal's English-speaking Jews to Toronto with about 20,000 leaving.<ref name="Waller"/> The Jewish community of Montreal has been a bastion of federalism, and Quebec separatists with their ideal of a creating a nation-state for French-Canadians have tended to be hostile to Jews.<ref name="Waller"/> In both the 1980 and 1995 referendums, Montreal's Jews voted overwhelmingly for Quebec to remain in Canada.<ref name="Waller"/>

It was official Canadian policy after 1945 to accept immigrants from Eastern Europe as long they were anti-communist even if they had fought for Nazi Germany. For an example the veterans of the [[14th Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS (1st Galician)|14th Waffen SS Division ''Galizien'']], which was mostly recruited from Ukrainians in [[Galicia (Eastern Europe)|Galicia]], settled in Canada.<ref name="Littman, Sol p.180">Littman, Sol ''Pure Soldiers Or Sinister Legion: The Ukrainian 14th Waffen-SS Division'', Montreal: Black Rose, 2003 p.180</ref> The fact that the men of the 14th Waffen-SS division had committed war crimes was ignored because they were felt to be useful for the Cold War.<ref name="Littman, Sol p.180"/> In [[Oakville, Ontario]], a public monument honors the men of the 14th SS Division as heroes.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Pugliese |first1=David |title=Canadian government comes to the defence of Nazi SS and Nazi collaborators but why? |url=https://ottawacitizen.com/news/national/defence-watch/canadian-government-comes-to-the-defence-of-nazi-ss-and-nazi-collaborators-but-why |access-date=June 30, 2020 |publisher=Ottawa Citizen |date=May 17, 2018}}</ref> Starting in the 1980s, Jewish groups began to lobby the Canadian government to deport the Axis collaborators from Eastern Europe whom the government of Canada had welcomed with open arms in the 1940s–1950s.<ref name="Schoenfeld"/> In 1997, a report by Sol Littman, the head of [[Simon Wiesenthal Center]] operations in Canada charged that Canada in 1950 had accepted 2,000 veterans of 14th Waffen-SS Division with no screening; the American news program ''60 Minutes'' showed that Canada had allowed about 1,000 SS veterans from the Baltic states to become Canadian citizens; and the ''Jerusalem Post'' called Canada a "near-blissful refuge" for Nazi war criminals.<ref name="Tugend">{{cite news |last1=Tugend |first1=Tom |title=Canada admits letting in 2,000 Ukrainian SS troopers |url=https://www.jweekly.com/1997/02/07/canada-admits-letting-in-2-000-ukrainian-ss-troopers/ |access-date=June 29, 2020 |publisher=Jewish News of Northern California |date=February 7, 1997}}</ref> The Canadian Jewish historian [[Irving Abella]] stated that for Eastern Europeans the best way of getting into postwar Canada "was by showing the SS tattoo. This proved that you were an anti-Communist".<ref name="Tugend"/> Despite pressure from Jewish groups, the Canadian government dragged its feet on deporting Nazi war criminals out of the fear of offending voters of Eastern European background, who make up a significant number of Canadian voters.<ref name="Tugend"/>

==Modernity (since 2001)==
Today, the [[Jewish culture]] in Canada is maintained by practising Jews and [[Jewish secularism|secular Jews]]. Nearly all Jews in Canada speak one of the two [[official languages]], although most speak English over French. Most Ashkenazi Jews speak English as a first language, including most Ashkenazi Jews in [[Quebec]].<ref>{{cite web |title=Why do Montreal Jews speak English? |first=Matthew |last=Meland |publisher=National Observatory on Language Rights |date=June 10, 2016 |access-date=2019-11-11 |url=https://odl.openum.ca/en/pourquoi-la-communaute-juive-montrealaise-parle-t-elle-anglais/ |archive-date=2021-06-24 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210624200640/https://odl.openum.ca/en/pourquoi-la-communaute-juive-montrealaise-parle-t-elle-anglais/ |url-status=dead }}</ref>

In terms of Jewish denominations, 26% of Canadian Jews are [[Conservative Judaism|Conservative]], 17% [[Orthodox Judaism|Orthodox]], 16% [[Reform Judaism|Reform]], 29% are "Just Jewish", and the remaining 12% align themselves with smaller movements or are unsure. Intermarriage is relatively low among Canadian Jews, with 77% of married Jews having a Jewish spouse.<ref name="Project Details">{{Cite web|title=Project Details|url=https://www.environicsinstitute.org/projects/project-details/survey-of-jews-in-canada|access-date=2021-06-29|website=www.environicsinstitute.org}}</ref>

Most of Canada's Jews live in [[Ontario]] and Quebec, followed by [[British Columbia]], Manitoba and [[Alberta]]. While Toronto is the largest Jewish population centre, Montreal played this role until many English-speaking Jewish Canadians left for Toronto, fearing that Quebec might leave the federation following the rise during the 1970s of nationalist political parties in Quebec, as well as a result of Quebec's [[Official Language Act (Quebec)|Language Law]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www12.statcan.ca/english/profil01/CP01/Index.cfm?Lang=E |title=Statistics canada: 2001 Community Profiles |publisher=2.statcan.ca |date=March 12, 2002 |access-date=2011-05-18 |archive-date=2005-12-22 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20051222170659/http://www12.statcan.ca/english/Profil01/CP01/Index.cfm?Lang=E |url-status=dead }}</ref>
<gallery>
<gallery>
File:Bens (1).jpg|[[Bens De Luxe Delicatessen & Restaurant|Ben's Deli]] was a Montreal icon during the 20th century
File:Bens (1).jpg|[[Bens De Luxe Delicatessen & Restaurant|Ben's Deli]] was a Montreal icon during the 20th century
File:Rockwood park loyalist house 041.jpg|[[Saint John Jewish Historical Museum]] in [[Saint John, New Brunswick]]
File:Rockwood park loyalist house 041.jpg|[[Saint John Jewish Historical Museum]] in [[Saint John, New Brunswick]]
File:Siegels Bagels Granville Island Vancouver.jpg|A sign at Siegel's Bagels, [[Granville Island]], [[Vancouver]]
File:Siegels Bagels Granville Island Vancouver.jpg|A sign at Siegel's [[Bagels]], [[Granville Island]], Vancouver
File:Assoc Jewish Senior CJPAC Toronto Mayoral Debate.jpg|Association of Jewish Seniors/Canadian Jewish Political Affairs Committee hosting a Toronto Mayoral candidates' debate, 2010
File:Assoc Jewish Senior CJPAC Toronto Mayoral Debate.jpg|Association of Jewish Seniors/[[Canadian Jewish Political Affairs Committee|CJPAC]] hosting a Toronto Mayoral candidates' debate, 2010
File:Schwartz's Charcuterie Hebraique Montreal Quebec.jpg|Schwartz's Charcuterie Hebraïque, a popular deli in Montreal
File:Schwartz's Charcuterie Hebraique Montreal Quebec.jpg|[[Schwartz's]] Hebrew Delicatessen, a popular deli in Montreal
File:Jewish members Pride Toronto Parade.jpg|Jewish members of [[Toronto Pride]] 2009 Parade for [[LGBT]] pride
File:Jewish members Pride Toronto Parade.jpg|Jewish members of [[Toronto Pride]] 2009 Parade for [[LGBT]] pride
</gallery>
</gallery>


The Jewish population is growing rather slowly due to aging and low birth rates. The population of Canadian Jews increased by just 3.5% between 1991 and 2001, despite much immigration from the Former Soviet Union, Israel and other countries.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.jfgv.org/items/CensusCanadaPart1.pdf |title=Microsoft Word - Canada_Part1General Demographics_Report.doc |format=PDF |date= |accessdate=2011-05-18}}</ref> Recently, anti-Semitism has become a growing concern, with reports of anti-semitic incidents increasing sharply over the past two years. This includes the well publicized anti-Semitic comments by [[David Ahenakew]] and [[Ernst Zündel]]. In 2009, the [[Canadian Parliamentary Coalition to Combat Antisemitism]] was established by all four [[List of federal political parties in Canada#Political parties currently represented in the House of Commons|major federal political parties]] to investigate and combat antisemitism, namely [[new antisemitism]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cpcca.ca/about.htm |title=CanadianParliamentaryCoalitiontoCombatAntisemitism |publisher=Cpcca.ca |date= |accessdate=2011-05-18}}</ref> However, anti-semitism is less of a concern in Canada than it is in most countries with significant Jewish populations. The League for Human Rights of [[B'nai Brith Canada|B'nai Brith]] monitors the incidents and prepares an annual audit of these events.
The Jewish population is growing rather slowly due to aging and low birth rates. The population of Canadian Jews increased by just 3.5% between 1991 and 2001, despite much immigration from the Former Soviet Union, Israel and other countries.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.jfgv.org/items/CensusCanadaPart1.pdf |title=Microsoft Word - Canada_Part1General Demographics_Report.doc|website=Jfgv.org |access-date=2011-05-18}}</ref>


Politically, the major Jewish Canadian organizations are the membership-based [[B'nai Brith Canada]] and the [[Canadian Jewish Congress]] (funded through the United Jewish Appeal, the largest Jewish charity campaign in Canada) which both claim to be the voice of the Jewish community. A small anti-Zionist outfit with no connection to the organized Jewish community known as [[Independent Jewish Voices (Canada)]] argues that the CJC and B'nai Brith do not speak for most Canadian Jews. Also, many Canadian Jews simply have no connections to any of these organizations. Differing views in the Jewish community are reflected in the periodicals ''[[The Jewish Tribune (Canada)|Jewish Tribune]]'', the largest weekly Jewish newspaper published by [[B'nai Brith Canada]], ''[[Canadian Jewish News]]'', a moderate weekly generally reflective of the views of the [[Canadian Jewish Congress]], and the left-leaning ''[[Outlook (Jewish magazine)|Outlook]]'', published six times a year. Western Canadian Jewish views are reflected in the Winnipeg-based weekly ''[[The Jewish Post & News]]''.
Politically, the major Jewish Canadian organizations are the [[Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs|Centre for Israel and Jewish Advocacy]] (CIJA) and the more conservative [[B'nai Brith Canada]] both claim to be the voice of the Jewish community. The [[United Jewish People's Order]], once the largest Jewish fraternal organization in Canada, is a left-leaning secular group established in 1927 with current chapters in Toronto, Hamilton, Winnipeg and Vancouver. Politically, UJPO opposes the Israeli Occupation and advocate for a two-state solution but focus primarily on Jewish cultural, educational and social justice issues. A smaller organization, [[Independent Jewish Voices (Canada)]], characterized as anti-Zionist, argues that the CIJA and B'nai B'rith do not speak for most Canadian Jews. Also, many Canadian Jews simply have no connections to any of these organizations.{{cn|date=January 2023}}


The birth rate for Jews in Canada is much higher than that in the United States, with a TFR of 1.91 according to the 2001 Census. This is due to the presence of large numbers of orthodox Jews in Canada.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.statcan.ca/english/freepub/91-209-XIE/91-209-XIE2003000.pdf |title= Report on the Demographic Situation in Canada (Catalogue no. 91-209-XIE) |format=PDF |publisher=Statistics Canada |year=2005 |accessdate=2010-08-25}} {{Dead link|date=November 2010|bot=H3llBot}}</ref>
The birth rate for Jews in Canada is much higher than that in the United States, with a TFR of 1.91 according to the 2001 Census. This is due to the presence of large numbers of Orthodox Jews in Canada. According to the census, the Jewish birth rate and TFR is higher than that of Christian (1.35), Buddhist (1.34), Non-Religious (1.41), and Sikh (1.9) populations, but slightly lower than that of Hindus (2.05), and Muslims (2.01).<ref>{{cite web|year=2005|title=Report on the Demographic Situation in Canada (Catalogue no. 91-209-XIE)|url=http://www.statcan.ca/english/freepub/91-209-XIE/91-209-XIE2003000.pdf|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081030183351/http://www.statcan.ca/english/freepub/91-209-XIE/91-209-XIE2003000.pdf|archive-date=October 30, 2008|access-date=2010-08-25|publisher=Statistics Canada}}</ref>
According to the census, the Jewish birth rate and TFR is higher than that of the Protestant, Catholic, Orthodox (1.35), Buddhist (1.34), Non-Religious (1.41), and Sikhs (1.9). populations, but slightly lower than that of Hindus (2.05), and Muslims (2.01).


In the 21st century there was an increase of the scope of anti-Semitic incidents in Canada with number of cases of anti-Semitic vandalism and spraying Nazi symbols in August 2013 in Winnipeg and in the greater Toronto area.<ref>[http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/toronto/anti-semitic-vandalism-in-motion-across-gta/article13724378/?cmpid=rss1]</ref><ref>[http://www.jewsnews.co.il/2013/08/14/antisemitism-in-canada-swastikas-in-winnipeg/]</ref>
In the 21st century, anti-Semitism has become a growing concern, with reports of anti-semitic incidents increasing sharply in recent years. This includes the well publicized anti-Semitic comments of [[Ernst Zündel]]. In 2009, the [[Canadian Parliamentary Coalition to Combat Antisemitism]] was established by all four [[List of federal political parties in Canada#Political parties currently represented in the House of Commons|major federal political parties]] to investigate and combat antisemitism, namely [[new antisemitism]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cpcca.ca/about.htm |title=CanadianParliamentaryCoalitiontoCombatAntisemitism |publisher=Cpcca.ca |access-date=2011-05-18 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110706173716/http://www.cpcca.ca/about.htm |archive-date=2011-07-06 }}</ref> The League for Human Rights of [[B'nai Brith Canada|B'nai B'rith]] monitors the incidents and prepares an annual audit of these events. There was an increase of the scope of anti-Semitic incidents in Canada with a number of cases of anti-Semitic vandalism and spraying Nazi symbols in August 2013 in Winnipeg and in the greater Toronto area.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/toronto/anti-semitic-vandalism-in-motion-across-gta/article13724378/|title=Anti-Semitic vandalism in motion across GTA|first=Cynthia|last=McQueen|date=August 12, 2013|website=Theglobeandmail.com|access-date=August 18, 2017|via=The Globe and Mail}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.jewsnews.co.il/2013/08/14/antisemitism-in-canada-swastikas-in-winnipeg.html|title=Antisemitism In Canada: Swastikas In Winnipeg|date=August 14, 2013|website=Jewsnews.co.il|access-date=August 18, 2017|archive-date=August 21, 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160821045141/http://www.jewsnews.co.il/2013/08/14/antisemitism-in-canada-swastikas-in-winnipeg.html|url-status=dead}}</ref>


On February 26, 2014, and for the first time in Canadian history, B'nai Brith Canada led an official delegation of Sephardi community leaders, activists, philanthropists and spiritual leaders from across the country visiting Parliament Hill and meeting with the prime minister, ambassadors and other dignitaries.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cjnews.com/canada/sephardi-delegation-heads-ottawa-meets-pm#sthash.rJiA3Muj.dpuf|title=Sephardi delegation heads to Ottawa, meets PM – The Canadian Jewish News|first=Sheri |last=Shefa|date=March 2, 2015|website=Cjnews.com|access-date=August 18, 2017}}</ref>
==Socioeconomics==
[[File:TorontoIsr.JPG|thumb|Israeli Canadians and Jewish Canadians celebrating [[Yom Ha'atzmaut]] in Toronto.]]
Since the beginning of the 21st century Jewish immigration to Canada has continued, increasing in numbers with the passing of the years. With the rise of [[Antisemitism in 21st-century France|antisemitic acts]] in France and weak economic conditions, most of the Jewish newcomers are [[History of the Jews in France|French Jews]] who are mainly looking for new economic opportunities (either in Israel or elsewhere, with Canada one of the top destinations chosen by French Jews to live in, particularly in [[Quebec]]).<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.i24news.tv/fr/actu/international/ameriques/52740-141129-l-autre-destination-des-juifs-de-france-le-canada |title=The destination of French Jews, Canada |website=I24news.fr |access-date=July 1, 2015 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161006151416/http://www.i24news.tv/fr/actu/international/ameriques/52740-141129-l-autre-destination-des-juifs-de-france-le-canada |archive-date=October 6, 2016 }}</ref> For the same reasons, and due to cultural and linguistic proximity, several members of the [[History of the Jews in Belgium|Belgian-Jewish community]] choose Canada as their new home. There are efforts by the Jewish community of Montreal to attract these immigrants and make them feel at home, as well as those from other parts of the world.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.cjnews.com/news/will-jews-flee-belgium-and-france-quebec |title=Will Jews flee Belgium and France for Quebec? |author=The [[Canadian Jewish News]] |access-date=June 7, 2015}}</ref> There is also some immigration of [[History of the Jews in Argentina|Argentine Jews]] and from other parts of Latin America. [[Argentina]] is home to the largest Jewish community in Latin America and the third largest in the Americas after the United States and Canada.<ref name="The Jewish Agency for Israel" />


A population of [[Israeli Jews]] emigrate to Canada to study and work. The [[Israeli Canadian]] community is growing and it is one of the largest [[Yerida|Israeli diaspora]] groups with an estimate of 30,000 people.<ref name="The Jewish Agency for Israel">{{cite web |url=http://jafi.org/nr/exeres/ef51326b-a217-4e16-8b3c-61f996184077,frameless.htm?nrmode=published |title=The Jewish Community of Canada: A History of the Canadian Jewish Community |author=The Jewish Agency for Israel |access-date=June 7, 2015 |archive-date=February 3, 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140203170123/http://www.jafi.org/nr/exeres/ef51326b-a217-4e16-8b3c-61f996184077,frameless.htm?nrmode=published |url-status=dead }}</ref> A small proportion of Israeli Jews who come to Canada are [[Beta Israel|Ethiopian Jews]].
===Education===
[[File:Trinquadfacingprovostlodge.jpg|right|thumb|Canadian Jews make up a significant percentage of student body of Canada's leading higher education institutions. For instance at the [[University of Toronto]], Canadian Jews account for 5% of the undergraduate student body, over 5 times the proportion of Jews in Canada.<ref name="Hillel">{{cite web|url=http://www.hillel.org/HillelApps/JLOC/Campus.aspx?AgencyId=17273 |title=Carleton University - Hillel: The Foundation for Jewish Campus Life |publisher=Hillel |date=2008-01-08 |accessdate=2011-12-09}}</ref>]]
There are about a dozen day schools in [[Toronto]] and [[Montreal]], as well as a number of [[Yeshivot]]. In [[Toronto]], around 40% of Jewish children attend Jewish elementary schools and 12% go to Jewish high schools. The figures for [[Montreal]] are higher: 60% and 30%, respectively. There are also a few Jewish day schools in the smaller communities. The national average for attendance at Jewish elementary schools (at least) is 55%.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.jafi.org.il/nr/exeres/ef51326b-a217-4e16-8b3c-61f996184077,frameless.htm?nrmode=published |title=Jews of Canada |publisher=Jafi.org.il |date=2008-12-02 |accessdate=2011-11-22}}</ref>


=== Afghan Jews ===
The Jewish community in Canada is amongst the country's most educated groups. As a group, Canadian Jews tend to be better educated and earn more than most Canadians as a whole. Jews have attained high levels of education, increasingly work in higher class managerial and professional occupations and derive higher incomes than the general Canadian population.<ref name="bnaibrith1">{{cite web|url=http://www.bnaibrith.ca/institute/millennium/millennium16.html |title=From Immigration To Integration - Chapter Sixteen |publisher=Bnaibrith.ca |date= |accessdate=2011-11-20}}</ref><ref name="bnaibrith2">{{cite web|url=http://www.bnaibrith.ca/institute/millennium/millennium19.html#8 |title=The Institute for International Affairs Page |publisher=Bnaibrith.ca |date= |accessdate=2011-11-20}}</ref>
Following the [[Fall of Kabul (2021)|Fall of Kabul]] in August 2021, the final [[History of the Jews in Afghanistan|Afghan Jew]] still in [[Afghanistan]], Tova Moradi, fled to Canada.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Jalalzai |first=Freshta |date=March 8, 2024 |title=The Little-Known Story of Afghanistan's Last Jew |url=https://newlinesmag.com/essays/the-little-known-story-of-afghanistans-last-jew/ |access-date=2024-04-11 |website=New Lines Magazine |language=en}}</ref> This marked the end of Afghanistan's 2,700-year Jewish history.<ref>{{Cite web |date=October 29, 2021 |title=Woman now thought to be Afghanistan's last Jew flees country |url=https://www.independent.ie/world-news/woman-now-thought-to-be-afghanistans-last-jew-flees-country/40996142.html |access-date=2024-04-11 |website=Irish Independent |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=October 29, 2021 |title=Woman now thought to be Afghanistan's last Jew flees country |url=https://apnews.com/article/afghanistan-lifestyle-canada-religion-middle-east-893baa3e2849b0081882d06d1da07535 |access-date=2024-04-11 |website=AP News |language=en}}</ref>


==Demographics==
Three in ten Jews held [[managerial]] and [[professional]] positions in 1991, compared to one in five Canadians. In Toronto, four out of ten doctors and dentists were Jewish in 1991 and, nationally, four times as many Jews completed graduate degrees as Canadians generally. The levels of educational attainment among Canadian Jews is dramatically higher than for the overall Canadian population. One out of every two Jews in Canada age fifteen and over was either enrolled in university or had completed a [[Bachelor of Arts|BA]] in 1991. This is in contrast to Canadians as a whole, among whom one in five was attending university or had completed an undergraduate degree. At the graduate level, these differential rates of education are even higher. About one in six Jews (16 per cent) had obtained an [[Master of Arts|MA]], [[Doctor of Medicine|M.D.]], or [[PhD]] in 1991. Among Canadians in general, only one in twenty-five (4 per cent) had attained comparable educational levels.<ref name="bnaibrith2"/><ref>[http://canada.metropolis.net/.../Religious_Discrimination_in_Canada_e.ppt ]{{dead link|date=November 2011}}</ref>


=== Provincial and territorial ===
Higher rates of educational achievement are particularly pronounced with Canadian Jews in the thirty-five to forty-four age cohort. Nearly one in four Canadians was enrolled in university or had completed a bachelor’s degree in 1991 but among Canadian Jews in this age range, two out of three had comparable levels of education.<ref name="bnaibrith1"/><ref name="bnaibrith2"/>
[[File:Canada-jewish-population.jpg|thumb|400px|Percentage of Jewish population in Canada, 2001.]]
Jewish Canadian population by province and territory in Canada in 2011 according to [[Statistics Canada]] and United Jewish Federations of Canada<ref name=":0">[http://www.jewishdatabank.org/Studies/downloadFile.cfm?FileID=3131 Berman Jewish Databank] jewishdatabank.org</ref>
{| class="wikitable sortable"
|-
! [[Provinces and territories of Canada|Province or territory]] !! Jews !! Percentage
|-
|style="background:silver" | '''Canada''' || style="background:silver" | 391,665 || style="background:silver" |1.2%
|-
| {{flag|Ontario}} || 226,610 || 1.8%
|-
| {{flag|Quebec}} || 93,625 || 1.2%
|-
| {{flag|British Columbia}} || 35,005 || 0.8%
|-
| {{flag|Alberta}} || 15,795 || 0.4%
|-
| {{flag|Manitoba}} || 14,345 || 1.2%
|-
| {{flag|Nova Scotia}} || 2,910 || 0.3%
|-
| {{flag|Saskatchewan}} || 1,905 || 0.2%
|-
| {{flag|New Brunswick}} || 860 || 0.1%
|-
| {{flag|Newfoundland and Labrador}} || 220 || 0.0%
|-
| {{flag|Prince Edward Island}} || 185 || 0.1%
|-
| {{flag|Yukon}} || 145 || 0.4%
|-
| {{flag|Northwest Territories}} || 40 || 0.1%
|-
| {{flag|Nunavut}} || 15 || 0.1%
|}


=== Municipal ===
According to Multicultural Canada, 43 percent of Jewish Canadians have a bachelors degree or higher; the comparable figure for persons of British origin is 19 percent and compared with just 16 percent of the general Canadian population as a whole.<ref name="bnaibrith1"/><ref name="bnaibrith2"/>
[[File:Kanada-pop.jpg|thumb]]
{| class="wikitable sortable"
!
! colspan="3" |2001<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.jewishdatabank.org/content/upload/bjdb/409/I-CanadaNational-2001-Jewish_Populations_in_Geographic_Areas.pdf |title=Canada 2001 Census – Jewish Populations in Geographic Areas|website=Jewish Data Bank|access-date=August 1, 2023}}</ref>
! colspan="3" |2011<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.jewishdatabank.org/databank/search-results/study/743|title=Search results
|website=www.jewishdatabank.org|access-date=2019-06-29}}</ref>
!Trend
|-
! City
!Population
!Jews
!Percentage
!Population!! Jews !! Percentage
!
|-
|[[Greater Toronto Area]]
|5,081,826
|179,100
|3.5%
|6,054,191|| 188,710 || 3.1%
|{{increase}} 5.4%
|-
|[[Greater Montreal]]
|3,380,645
|92,975
|2.8%
|3,824,221
|90,780
|2.4%
|{{decrease}} 2.4%
|-
|[[Greater Vancouver]]
|1,967,480
|22,590
|1.1%
|2,313,328|| 26,255 || 1.1%
|{{increase}} 16.2%
|-
|[[Calgary]]
|943,315
|7,950
|0.8%
|1,096,833|| 8,335 || 0.8%
|{{increase}} 4.8%
|-
|[[Ottawa]]
|795,250
|13,130
|1.7%
|883,390|| 14,010 || 1.6%
|{{increase}} 6.7%
|-
|[[Edmonton]]
|666,105
|4,920
|0.7%
|812,201|| 5,550 || 0.7%
|{{increase}} 12.8%
|-
|[[Winnipeg]]
|619,540
|14,760
|2.4%
|663,617|| 13,690 || 2.0%
|{{decrease}} 7.2%
|-
|[[Hamilton, Ontario|Hamilton]]
|490,270
|4,675
|1.0%
|519,949|| 5,110 || 1.0%
|{{increase}} 9.3%
|-
|[[Tri-Cities (Ontario)|Kitchener-Waterloo]]
|495,845
|1,950
|0.4%
|507,096|| 2,015 || 0.4%
|{{increase}} 3.3%
|-
|[[Halifax, Nova Scotia|Halifax]]
|355,945
|1,985
|0.6%
|390,096|| 2,120 || 0.5%
|{{increase}} 6.8%
|-
|[[London, Ontario|London]]
|336,539
|2,290
|0.7%
|366,151|| 2,675 || 0.7%
|{{increase}} 16.8%
|-
|[[Victoria, British Columbia|Victoria]]
|74,125
|2,595
|3.5%
|80,017|| 2,740 || 3.4%
|{{increase}} 5.6%
|-
|[[Windsor, Ontario|Windsor]]
|208,402
|1,525
|0.7%
|210,891|| 1,515 || 0.7%
|{{decrease}} 0.7%
|}


== Culture ==
Despite comprising a mere one percent of the Canadian population, Jewish Canadians make up a significant percentage of graduates of some of the most prestigious universities in Canada.<ref name="Hillel"/>


=== Yiddish ===
{| class="wikitable"
[[Yiddish language|Yiddish]] ({{Script/Hebrew|יידיש}}) is the historical and cultural language of [[Ashkenazi Jews]], who make up the majority of the Canadian Jewry and was widely spoken within the Canadian Jewish community up to the middle of the twentieth century.<ref name="Troper2017">{{cite journal
|first=Harold
|last=Troper
|title=Review: Michael Manel, "The Jewish Hour: The Golden Age of Toronto Yiddish Radio Show and Newspaper"
|journal=[[Canadian Jewish Studies]]
|volume=25
|number=1
|year=2017
|doi=10.25071/1916-0925.40029
|pages=204–206
|doi-access=free
}}</ref>

Montreal had and to some extent still has one of the most thriving Yiddish communities in North America. Yiddish was Montreal's third language (after French and English) for the entire first half of the 20th century. The [[Kanader Adler]] (The Canadian Eagle), Montreal's daily Yiddish newspaper founded by [[Hirsch Wolofsky]], appeared from 1907 to 1988.<ref>CHRISTOPHER DEWOLF, "A peek inside Yiddish Montreal", ''Spacing Montreal'', February 23, 2008.[http://spacing.ca/montreal/2008/02/23/a-peek-inside-montreals-yiddish-universe/]</ref> The [[Monument National]] was the centre of Yiddish theatre from 1896 until the construction of the [[Saidye Bronfman Centre for the Arts]], inaugurated on September 24, 1967, where the established resident theatre, the [[Dora Wasserman Yiddish Theatre]], remains the only permanent Yiddish theatre in North America. The theatre group also tours Canada, US, Israel, and Europe. In 1931, 99% of Montreal Jews stated that Yiddish was their mother language. In the 1930s there was a Yiddish language education system and a Yiddish newspaper in Montreal.<ref name="Spolskyp227">Spolsky, Bernard. ''The Languages of the Jews: A Sociolinguistic History''. [[Cambridge University Press]], March 27, 2014. {{ISBN|1139917145}}, 9781139917148. p. [https://books.google.com/books?id=5Xk9AwAAQBAJ&pg=PA227 227].</ref> In 1938, most Jewish households in Montreal primarily used English and often used French and Yiddish. 9% of the Jewish households only used French and 6% only used Yiddish.<ref name=Spolskyp226>Spolsky, Bernard. ''The Languages of the Jews: A Sociolinguistic History''. [[Cambridge University Press]], March 27, 2014. {{ISBN|1139917145}}, 9781139917148. p. [https://books.google.com/books?id=5Xk9AwAAQBAJ&pg=PA226 226].</ref>

In 1980 [[Chaim Leib Fox]] published ''Hundert yor yidishe un hebreyishe literatur in Kanade''<ref name=":2" /> ("One Hundred Years of Yiddish and Hebrew Literature in Canada")<ref>{{Cite book|last=Margolis|first=Rebecca|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FlmLEi6Y3FMC&dq=Hundert+yor+yidishe+un+hebreyishe+literatur+in+Kanade&pg=PR19|title=Jewish Roots, Canadian Soil: Yiddish Cultural Life in Montreal, 1905–1945|date=2011|publisher=McGill-Queen's Press – MQUP|isbn=978-0-7735-3812-2|pages=XIX|language=en}}</ref> – a compendium on the history of literature and culture of the Jewish diaspora in Canada.<ref name=":2">{{Cite book|last=Felsen|first=Vivian|url=https://brill.com/view/book/edcoll/9789004379411/BP000009.xml|title=Kanade, di Goldene Medine? Perspectives on Canadian-Jewish Literature and Culture / Perspectives sur la littérature et la culture juives canadiennes|date=2018|publisher=Brill {{!}} Rodopi|isbn=978-90-04-37941-1|pages=9|language=en|chapter=Preserving Yiddish Culture in Canada: The Remarkable Legacy of Chaim Leib Fuks|access-date=February 16, 2022|archive-date=October 30, 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211030103523/https://brill.com/view/book/edcoll/9789004379411/BP000009.xml|url-status=dead}}</ref> The comprehensive volume covered 429 Yiddish and Hebrew authors who published in Canada in 1870–1970.<ref name=":2" /> According to [[Vivian Felsen]], it was "the most ambitious attempt to preserve Yiddish culture in Canada."<ref name=":2" />

=== Press ===
{{main|:Category:Jewish newspapers published in Canada}}
The [[Canadian Jewish News]] was, until April 2020, Canada's most widely-read Jewish community newspaper. It had suffered from financial shortfalls for years, which were exacerbated by the impact of the [[coronavirus pandemic in Canada]] on its finances. CJN president Elizabeth Wolfe stated that "The CJN suffered from a pre-existing condition and has been felled by [[COVID-19]]."<ref>{{cite news |last1=Wolfe |first1=Elizabeth |title=To our readers: everything has its season. It is time |url=https://www.cjnews.com/home-featured/to-our-readers-everything-has-its-season-it-is-time |access-date=31 October 2020 |agency=Canadian Jewish News |date=April 13, 2020}}</ref>

Shortly thereafter, two new Jewish community newspapers made their debuts, with the Canadian Jewish Record {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201031135227/https://canadianjewishrecord.ca/ |date=October 31, 2020 }} and TheJ.ca beginning publication in May 2020.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Lazarus |first1=David |title=Canada welcomes two new Jewish outlets, but COVID-19 has media on life support |url=https://www.timesofisrael.com/canada-welcomes-two-new-jewish-outlets-but-covid-19-has-media-on-life-support/ |access-date=October 31, 2020 |agency=Times of Israel |date=May 26, 2020}}</ref> These two papers sought to fill the void left by the CJN, but unlike the CJN,<ref>{{cite web |title=About Us |url=https://www.cjnews.com/about |website=The Canadian Jewish News |access-date=October 31, 2020}}</ref> had politically partisan editorial stances. The left-leaning Canadian Jewish Record was noted by its CEO as "not an anti-Zionist outlet, but rather that the newspaper will periodically provide legitimate [[Criticism of the Israeli government|criticism of the State of Israel]].<ref name="Jewish media struggle, revive">{{cite web|last1=Johnson|first1=Pat|title=Jewish media struggle, revive|url=https://www.jewishindependent.ca/tag/canadian-jewish-record/|access-date=31 October 2020|website=The Jewish Independent|date=26 June 2020 }}</ref> TheJ.ca, by contrast, has emphasized that its stance on the question of Israel is right-leaning, with staff journalist and co-founder Dave Gordon saying "we’re very pro-Israel, very Zionistic [sic] …" while Ron East, a publisher of TheJ.ca, has voiced opposition to progressive Jewish activism, claiming that right-wing Zionist viewpoints are "drowned out," thereby necessitating "a platform that would allow for those voices".<ref name="Jewish media struggle, revive" /><ref>{{cite news|last1=Beck|first1=Atara|date=May 19, 2020|title=Canadian Jewish media: 2 new sites vie to replace flagship weekly that folded|agency=World Israel News|url=https://worldisraelnews.com/canadian-jewish-media-2-new-sites-vie-to-replace-flagship-weekly-that-folded/|access-date=October 31, 2020}}</ref>

In May 2021, the [[Canadian Jewish News#Revival in digital form|Canadian Jewish News]] relaunched as a digital-only publication at ''thecjn.ca''. In December 2020, the Canadian Jewish Record announcing it would end its run with a post titled "A Note from the Publisher: The Bridge is Now Completed", stating that it had intended "to be a bridge between the recently shuttered Canadian Jewish News and its hoped-for return," and given that the CJN had managed to relaunch, it (The Canadian Jewish Record) would cease publication.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Cohen |first1=Andrew |title=A Note from the Publisher: The Bridge is Now Completed |url=https://canadianjewishrecord.ca/2020/12/23/a-note-from-the-publisher-the-bridge-is-now-completed/ |website=The Canadian Jewish Record |publisher=Canadian Jewish Record |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210831200843/https://canadianjewishrecord.ca/2020/12/23/a-note-from-the-publisher-the-bridge-is-now-completed/ |access-date=December 18, 2021|archive-date=2021-08-31 }}</ref> The CJN resumed its journalistic reporting, and now also hosts an email newsletter,<ref>{{cite web |title=Newsletters |url=https://thecjn.ca/newsletters/ |website=The Canadian Jewish News |access-date=December 18, 2021}}</ref> as well as several weekly podcasts.<ref>{{cite web |title=Podcasts |url=https://thecjn.ca/podcasts/ |website=The Canadian Jewish News |access-date=December 18, 2021}}</ref>

=== Museums and monuments ===
{{main|:Category:Jewish museums in Canada}}

Canada has several Jewish museums and monuments, which focus upon [[Jewish culture]] and [[Jewish history]].<ref>{{cite web|title=Community in Canada|url=https://www.worldjewishcongress.org/en/about/communities/ca |access-date=12 June 2024 |publisher=[[World Jewish Congress]] |quote=There are also numerous Jewish museums }}</ref>

==Socioeconomics==
===Education===
There are numerous Jewish day schools throughout the country, as well as a number of [[Yeshivot]]. In Toronto, around 40% of Jewish children attend Jewish elementary schools and 12% go to Jewish high schools. The figures for Montreal are higher: 60% and 30%, respectively. The national average for attendance at Jewish elementary schools is at least 55%.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.jafi.org.il/nr/exeres/ef51326b-a217-4e16-8b3c-61f996184077,frameless.htm?nrmode=published |title=Jews of Canada |publisher=Jafi.org.il |date=December 2, 2008 |access-date=2011-11-22 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120508103000/http://www.jafi.org.il/nr/exeres/ef51326b-a217-4e16-8b3c-61f996184077,frameless.htm?nrmode=published |archive-date=2012-05-08 }}</ref>[[File:Trinquadfacingprovostlodge.jpg|right|thumb|Canadian Jews make up a significant percentage of student body of Canada's leading higher education institutions. For instance at the [[University of Toronto]], Canadian Jews account for 5% of the student body, over 5 times the proportion of Jews in Canada.<ref name=":1" />]]

The Jewish community in Canada is among the country's most educated groups. In 1991, four out of ten doctors and dentists in Toronto were Jewish and nationally, four times as many Jews completed graduate degrees as Canadians generally. In the same study, it was found that 43% of Jewish Canadians had a bachelor's degree or higher while the comparable figure for persons of British origin is 19% and just 16% for the general Canadian population as a whole.<ref name="bnaibrith1">{{cite web|title=From Immigration To Integration – Chapter Sixteen|url=http://www.bnaibrith.ca/institute/millennium/millennium16.html|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120330062146/http://www.bnaibrith.ca/institute/millennium/millennium16.html|archive-date=2012-03-30|access-date=2011-11-20|publisher=Bnaibrith.ca}}</ref><ref name="bnaibrith2">{{cite web|title=The Institute for International Affairs Page|url=http://www.bnaibrith.ca/institute/millennium/millennium19.html#8|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120330062151/http://www.bnaibrith.ca/institute/millennium/millennium19.html#8|archive-date=2012-03-30|access-date=2011-11-20|publisher=Bnaibrith.ca}}</ref>

In 2016, 80% of Canadian Jewish adults aged 25–64 had a Bachelor's Degree while only 29% of the general Canadian population did. An additional 37% of Canadian Jews in this age range had post-graduate or professional degrees.<ref name="Project Details"/>

Jewish Canadians comprise approximately one percent of the Canadian population, but make up a significantly larger percentage of the student body of some of the most prestigious universities in Canada.<ref name="Hillel">{{cite web|date=January 8, 2008|title=Carleton University – Hillel: The Foundation for Jewish Campus Life|url=http://www.hillel.org/HillelApps/JLOC/Campus.aspx?AgencyId=17273|access-date=2011-12-09|publisher=Hillel}}</ref>
{| class="wikitable sortable"
|- "
|- "
!Reputation Rankings ([[Maclean's]])<ref>{{Cite web|date=October 8, 2020|title=Canada's best universities by reputation: Rankings 2021|url=https://www.macleans.ca/education/university-rankings/canadas-best-universities-by-reputation-rankings-2021/|access-date=2021-06-29|website=Macleans.ca|language=en}}</ref>
!width="50"|Rank !! style="width:210px;"|University !! style="width:50px;"|Enrollment for Jewish Students (est.)!!<ref name=autogenerated3>[http://www.hillel.org/about/news/2006/feb/20060216_top.htm Hillel's Top 10 Jewish Schools<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> width="70" | % of Student body !! style="width:70px;"|Undergraduate Enrollment
! style="width:210px;" |University !! style="width:50px;" |Jewish Students<ref name=":1">{{Cite web|title=Top 60 Jewish Schools – Hillel|url=https://www.hillel.org/college-guide/top-60-jewish-schools|access-date=2021-06-26|website=Default}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|date=June 28, 2017|title=Mcgill University – Hillel College Guide|url=http://hillel.org/college-guide/list/record/mcgill-university|access-date=2021-06-26|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170628154415/http://hillel.org/college-guide/list/record/mcgill-university|archive-date=2017-06-28}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|date=June 28, 2017|title=Concordia University Sir George And Loyola Campus – Hillel College Guide|url=http://hillel.org/college-guide/list/record/concordia-university--sir-george-and-loyola-campus|access-date=2021-06-26|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170628151230/http://hillel.org/college-guide/list/record/concordia-university--sir-george-and-loyola-campus|archive-date=2017-06-28}}</ref>!!% of Student Body<ref name=":1" />
|-
|-
|1
| 1 || [[University of Toronto]] || 3,000 || 5% || 60,500
| [[University of Toronto]]|| 3,000 || 5%
|-
|-
|2
| 2 || [[McGill University]] || 3,500|| 10% || 35,000
| [[University of British Columbia]]|| 1,000 || 2%
|-
|-
|3
| 3 || [[Queens University]] || 700 || 7% || 10,350
|[[University of Waterloo]]
|1,200
|3%
|-
|-
|4
| 4 || [[University of British Columbia]] || 800 || 3% ||27,276
| [[McGill University]] || 3,550|| 10%
|-
|-
|5
| 5 || [[University of Victoria]]<br>[[Ryerson University]]<br>[[University of Ottawa]]<br>[[Carleton University]] || 700<br>1,500<br>650<br>850 || 4%<br>7%<br>2%<br>4% || 17,000<br>22,200<br>32,630<br>21,732
|[[McMaster University]]
|900
|3%
|-
|-
|7
| 6 || [[University of Waterloo]]<br>[[McMaster University]]<br>[[Concordia University (Quebec)|Concordia University]] || 400<br>500<br>900|| 2%<br>3%<br>3%||26,854<br>22,000<br>33,571
| [[Queen's University at Kingston|Queen's University]]|| 2,000 || 7%
|-
|-
|8
| 8|| [[Simon Fraser University]]|| 400 || 2% || 16,800
| [[University of Western Ontario]]|| 3,250 || 10%
|-
|-
|15
| 9 || [[University of Western Ontario]]|| 3,000 || 10% ||30,000
|[[Toronto Metropolitan University|Ryerson University]]
|1,650
|3%
|-
|-
|17
| 10 || [[York University]]|| 4,600|| 10% ||47,000
| [[Concordia University (Quebec)|Concordia University]] || 1,125|| 3%
|-
|18
|[[University of Ottawa]]
|850
|2%
|-
|20
| [[York University]]|| 4,000|| 7%
|}
|}


===Employment===
===Employment===
Before the mass Jewish immigration of the 1880s, the Canadian Jewish community was relatively affluent compared to other ethnic groups in Canada, a distinguishable feature that still continues on to this day. Arguably, Canadian Jews have made a disproportionate contribution to the economic development of Canada throughout the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. During the 18th and the 19th centuries, upper class Jews tended to be [[fur trader]]s, [[merchant]]s, and [[entrepreneur]]s. In addition, upper middle class white collar occupations also included [[banker]]s, [[lawyer]]s, and [[physician|doctor]]s as there was an overwhelmingly definable British economic or corporate elite in Canada, Jews remained well represented.<ref name="multiculturalcanada1">{{cite web|url=http://multiculturalcanada.ca/Encyclopedia/A-Z/j3/4 |title=Economic Life &#124; Multicultural Canada |publisher=Multiculturalcanada.ca |date= |accessdate=2011-11-22}}</ref>
Before the mass Jewish immigration of the 1880s, the Canadian Jewish community was relatively affluent compared to other ethnic groups in Canada, a distinguishable feature that still continues on to this day.{{citation needed|date=December 2021}} During the 18th and the 19th centuries, upper class Jews tended to be [[fur trader]]s, merchants, and entrepreneurs.<ref name="multiculturalcanada1">{{cite web |url=http://multiculturalcanada.ca/Encyclopedia/A-Z/j3/4 |title=Economic Life &#124; Multicultural Canada |publisher=Multiculturalcanada.ca |access-date=2011-11-22 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110813033819/http://www.multiculturalcanada.ca/Encyclopedia/A-Z/j3/4 |archive-date=2011-08-13 }}</ref>


At the turn of the 20th century, most Jewish heads of household were self-employed wholesalers, retailers, or [[peddlar|peddlers]], though large numbers of Jews began to enter the [[Blue-collar worker|blue-collar]] labour force in the early 1900s and 1910s, particularly in the garment sector. By 1915, half the Toronto Jewish community was self-employed, and divided the other were blue-collar workers employed, mostly by non-Jews, in the secondary segment of the labor market. By the early 1930s, there were approximately 400 Jewish-owned garment shops and factories in Toronto, and white Anglo-Saxon manufacturers' control on this sector was no longer total. Geographer Daniel Hiebert wrote that "Jewish entrepreneurs were successful because they could rely upon resources within their ethnic group, such as the large number of Jewish-owned clothing retail stores and, more particularly, the presence of a skilled co-ethnic labor force."<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Hiebert |first1=Daniel |title=Jewish Immigrants and the Garment Industry of Toronto, 1901–1931: A Study of Ethnic and Class Relations |journal=Annals of the Association of American Geographers |date=1993 |volume=83 |issue=2 |pages=243–271 |doi=10.1111/j.1467-8306.1993.tb01934.x |jstor=2563495 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/2563495 |access-date=December 16, 2021}}</ref> In 1930, fully half of all Canadians working in pawn-shops were Jewish. That year, only 2.2% of Jews were working in law or medicine (though this was double the overall Canadian rate of 1.1%).<ref>{{cite web |last1=Kay |first1=Jonathan |title=The story of Jewish immigrants to Canada, and how they prospered |url=https://thecjn.ca/perspectives/the-story-of-jewish-immigrants-to-canada-and-how-they-prospered/ |website=The Canadian Jewish News |date=January 23, 2019 |access-date=December 16, 2021}}</ref>
Building a distinctive occupational profile and an affinity for entrepreneurship and business, Jews were heavily involved in the Canadian garment industry as it was the only business for which they had any training. Furthermore, cultural factors that made the industry somewhat lucrative as Jews could be certain that they would not have to work on the Sabbath or on major holidays if they had Jewish employers as opposed to non Jewish employers and were certain that they were also unlikely to encounter anti-Semitism from co-workers. Jews generally did not exhibit any loyalty and sympathy toward the [[working class]] through successive generations. Even within the working class, Canadian Jews tended to be concentrated in the ranks of highly skilled, as opposed to unskilled labor. But ties to the working class and union solidarity were not part of an eternal ideology as Jewish parents desired their children to attend University and achieve higher ranked jobs as it served as the primary gateway for a higher income. By the end of [[World War II]], Jews in Canada began to disperse the working class in large numbers and attained a disproportionate amount success in a variety of white collar jobs as well as starting their businesses. Median household incomes in the Jewish community exceeded the national average.<ref name="multiculturalcanada1"/>


Canadian Jews' participation in labour and trade union activism through the 1940s and into midcentury is noteworthy. The Canadian Jewish Labour Committee, whose membership peaked at 50,000, represented trade unions with a large Jewish membership, including the [[International Ladies Garment Workers Union]], the Amalgamated Clothing Workers’ Union, and the United Cap, Hat and Millinery Workers’ Union.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Godwin |first1=Matthew |title=A legacy worth fighting for: the Left and the Jewish community |url=https://www.broadbentinstitute.ca/373252/a_legacy_worth_fighting_for_the_left_and_the_jewish_community |website=PressProgress |date=September 12, 2017 |publisher=The Broadbent Institute |access-date=December 16, 2021}}</ref> Following WWII, Jewish Canadians turned their attention to combating structural antisemitism in the employment:<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Frager |first1=Ruth A. |last2=Patrias |first2=Carmela |title=Ethnic, Class and Gender Dynamics among Jewish Labour Activists and Jewish Human Rights Activists |journal=Canadian Jewish Studies / Études juives canadiennes |date=2015 |volume=21 |issue=1 |pages=143–160 |url=https://cjs.journals.yorku.ca/index.php/cjs/article/view/39914 |access-date=December 16, 2021}}</ref> many Canadian universities, boardrooms, banks, educational institutions, professional associations and businesses discriminated against Jewish applicants, or restricted participation and advancement through quotas as a matter of policy.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Berton |first1=Pierre |title=No Jews Need Apply |url=https://archive.macleans.ca/article/1948/11/1/no-jews-need-apply |website=Maclean's |publisher=St. Joseph Communications |access-date=December 16, 2021 |archive-date=December 16, 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211216024738/https://archive.macleans.ca/article/1948/11/1/no-jews-need-apply |url-status=dead }}</ref>
Sol Encel and Leslie Stein, authors of ''Continuity, Commitment, and Survival: Jewish communities in the diaspora'' cite that Jews over the age of the 15 who are in University or completed a bachelors degree is roughly 40% in [[Montreal]], 50% in [[Toronto]] and 57% in [[Vancouver]]. Stein also cites that Canadian Jews are statiscally overrepresented in many fields such as [[medicine]], [[law]], finance careers such as [[banking]] and [[accounting]], and human service occupations such as [[social work]] and [[academia]].<ref name="google2">{{cite book|url=http://books.google.ca/books?id=oZPmjch1je8C&pg=PA25&lpg=PA25&dq=JEWS+ARE+OVERREPRESENTED+CANADIAN+JEWS&source=bl&ots=VPEhbUF-Az&sig=I7Lt8MPQY96hmp5tfxc2X7Gbdl4&hl=en&ei=swrQTqeWA8PmiAKf2aCFDA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=2&ved=0CCIQ6AEwAQ#v=onepage&q=JEWS%20ARE%20OVERREPRESENTED%20CANADIAN%20JEWS&f=false |title=Continuity, commitment, and survival ... - Sol Encel, Leslie Stein - Google Books |publisher=Books.google.ca |date= |accessdate=2011-11-25}}</ref>


In the early 1950s, popular support for anti-discrimination legislation increased, and by the 1960s, multiple provinces had created human rights commissions and enacted legislation proscribing discrimination on the basis of race or religion in employment,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Abella |first1=Irving |title=Presidential Address: Jews, Human Rights, and the Making of a New Canada |journal=Journal of the Canadian Historical Association / Revue de la Société historique du Canada |date=2000 |volume=11 |issue=1 |pages=3–15 |doi=10.7202/031129ar |s2cid=154741819 |url=https://www.erudit.org/en/journals/jcha/1900-v1-n1-jcha1007/031129ar/ |access-date=December 16, 2021|doi-access=free }}</ref> enabling Jews to participate more fully in a variety of sectors and industries.
The Winter 1986 - Winter 1987 Issue of Journal of Small Business and Entrepreneurship cited that despite Jews comprise roughly 1 percent of the Canadian population, they comprised 35% of all [[entrepreneur]]s in [[Quebec]] and 10% of all technical entrepreneurs in Canada.<ref>{{cite book|url=http://books.google.ca/books?id=NTiC7T74eQUC&pg=PA24&lpg=PA24&dq=%22+of+canadians+are+jewish%22&source=bl&ots=J6bC9m4LAq&sig=fRlD_aN2A-GTq1uOS7qSMR8Yztg&hl=en&ei=cGriTt_ABaGbiAL80NSyBg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=2&ved=0CCIQ6AEwAQ#v=onepage&q=%22%20of%20canadians%20are%20jewish%22&f=false |title=Journal of Small Business and ... - Google Books |publisher=Books.google.ca |date= |accessdate=2011-12-09}}</ref> According to the 1986 census data, about 56 percent of Jewish males, compared to 43 percent among those of [[United Kingdom|British]] origin, are in select white-collar occupations, such as [[managerial]] and [[Administration of business|administrative]] positions, the natural sciences, engineering,mathematics, the social sciences, education,medicine and health, the arts, and recreational occupations.<ref name="multiculturalcanada1"/>


It became possible for Jewish lawyers to practice law outside their community beginning in the late 1960s and early 1970s, ultimately resulting in a considerable increase in the number of Jewish lawyers employed in large Canadian law firms in the 1990s. A 1960 study found that although 40% of Jews had grades in the top 10% of their class, only 8% of Jewish lawyers surveyed were employed in large law firms, which resulted in lower wages. By the 1990s, the numbers of Jews and non-Jews employed in large firms had more or less equalized.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Nigro |first1=Mario |last2=Mauro |first2=Clare |title=The Jewish Immigrant Experience and the Practice of Law in Montreal, 1830 to 1990 |url=https://canlii.ca/t/2bdh |website=CanLII |access-date=December 16, 2021}}</ref>
===Economics===
[[File:Photo of bronfman.jpg|245px|left|thumb|[[Samuel Bronfman]] is a member of the [[Bronfman family|Bronfman]] Canadian Jewish family dynasty.]]
By any criterion, Canadian Jews have achieved an amount of socioeconomic success that is generally higher compared to the rest of the Canadian population.


===Economics===
Immigrant Jewish males earn $7,000 a year above the Canadian average, higher than any other ethnic and religious group in Canada. Among females, 47 percent are in select white-collar occupations. Immigrant Jewish women earn $3,200 above the national average for women, also the highest for any ethnic group.<ref name="multiculturalcanada1"/> In modern times, Jews can be numbered among the wealthiest Canadians as they comprise 4% of the Canadian upper class elite despite constituting 1% of the population.<ref>{{cite web|author=Wallace Clement |url=http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm?PgNm=TCE&Params=A1ARTA0002573 |title=Elites |publisher=The Canadian Encyclopedia |date= |accessdate=2011-11-25}}</ref> Canadian Jews have begun slowly to penetrate those economic sectors that have hitherto been closed to them, concurrently as they are building up wealth in family-owned firms and creating their own family foundations. Prominent Canadian Jewish families such as the [[Bronfman family|Bronfmans]], the Belzbergs, and the [[Reichmann family|Reichmanns]] represent the summit of the extremely affluent segment of high class Jewish society in Canada.<ref name="multiculturalcanada1"/> Sol Encel and Leslie Stein, authors of ''Continuity, Commitment, and Survival: Jewish communities in the diaspora'' write that 22% of Canadian Jews lived in households with an income over $100,000 [[CAD]] or more, which was equivalent to the percentage of households in the general population according to [[StatsCan]] but was 7.3% higher than Canadian national average according to a [[University of Alberta]] study.<ref>{{cite journal|title=2006 Income by Age of Head of Household|journal=Tetrad|year=2006|series=Sociology|url=http://www.tetrad.com/demographics/canada/census/agebyhh.html|accessdate=18 May 2012}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last=Veenstra|first=Gerry|title=Culture and Class in Canada|year=2010|publisher=Canadian Journal of Sociology|location=University of Alberta|url=https://docs.google.com/viewer?a=v&q=cache:cnPGVt1yCO8J:ejournals.library.ualberta.ca/index.php/CJS/article/download/4198/6462+social+class+in+canada&hl=en&gl=ca&pid=bl&srcid=ADGEESgqfxven0U6Xrn_MAc506aJfGXy3-ZA5cR4g182JSWhoNp0mQai4Q9d7gvwgQ5kHgHwQI8_HTfk95KHu03WH7KodiwHG4iv1XzHKhCZUBvIFrR8suubfqgQcDKekn4PrBjtQ5Rv&sig=AHIEtbSX8Fw68eC4Less_qQjmEufr4QY5Q}}</ref> Professional occupations translate into higher incomes for Jews and 38% of Jewish families live in households with an annual income of $75,000 [[CAD]] or more.<ref>{{cite book|url=http://books.google.ca/books?id=oZPmjch1je8C&pg=PA27&lpg=PA27&dq=percent+of+canadians+are+jewish+%2B+wealthiest+families&source=bl&ots=VPEidVz1By&sig=mtnGq-wzDAOCGFfxRwQ7kRRFeow&hl=en&ei=pGriTuDxLMO0iQLe75CYBg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=9&ved=0CFgQ6AEwCA#v=onepage&q=percent%20of%20canadians%20are%20jewish%20%2B%20wealthiest%20families&f=false |title=Continuity, commitment, and survival ... - Sol Encel, Leslie Stein - Google Books |publisher=Books.google.ca |date= |accessdate=2011-12-09}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url=http://books.google.ca/books?id=fKob8vX7l_sC&pg=PA221&lpg=PA221&dq=percent+of+canadians+are+jewish+%2B+wealthiest+families&source=bl&ots=A3co_YBzuv&sig=8WmqSTzQf5N7x78X2hkrkZPUGhs&hl=en&ei=pGriTuDxLMO0iQLe75CYBg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=8&ved=0CFQQ6AEwBw#v=snippet&q=14%20percent&f=false |title=Leo: a life - Leo Kolber, L. Ian MacDonald - Google Books |publisher=Books.google.ca |date= |accessdate=2011-12-09}}</ref>
According to a 2018 study of the Canadian Jewish community by the Environics Institute for Survey Research, annual household income was reported as follows:<ref>{{cite web |last1=Neuman |first1=Keith |title=2018 Survey of Jews in Canada |url=https://www.environicsinstitute.org/projects/project-details/survey-of-jews-in-canada |website=Environics Institute |access-date=July 4, 2021}}</ref>

{| class="wikitable"
Mark Avrum Ehrlich of ''The Encyclopedia of the Jewish diaspora: origins, experiences, and culture'' writes that as Jews find themselves in Canada's contemporary wealthy elite, as 20 percent of the wealthiest Canadians were listed as Jewish. La Griffe du Lion cites the 23% of the top 100 wealthiest Canadians are Jewish.<ref>{{cite book|url=http://books.google.ca/books?id=NoPZu79hqaEC&pg=PA550&lpg=PA550&dq=percent+of+canadians+jewish+wealthiest+families&source=bl&ots=chTP3e3m5k&sig=Y3DGvROyyKz-RBeXnplZy8IhQkU&hl=en&ei=NwTYTpPtPISPigLXtJm3CQ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=6&ved=0CEQQ6AEwBTgK#v=onepage&q=wealthiest&f=false |title=Encyclopedia of the Jewish diaspora ... - Mark Avrum Ehrlich - Google Books |publisher=Books.google.ca |date= |accessdate=2011-12-02}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|author=La Griffe du Lion |url=http://lagriffedulion.f2s.com/dialogue.htm |title=Some Thoughts about Jews, IQ and Nobel Laureates |publisher=Lagriffedulion.f2s.com |date= |accessdate=2011-12-02}}</ref> In 2004, Nadav ʻAner, author of ''The Jewish People Policy Planning Institute'' cited that Canadian Jews are better educated and more financially off than the general population and have high political influences in the Canadian parliament. Jews are twice as likely as non-Jews to get a bachelor's degree and are three times as likely in the aged 25–34 cohort. This translates into a higher standard of living and they are financially better off than overall Canadian population. Canadian Jews are also three times as likely to earn over $75,000 compared to their non-Jewish counterparts.<ref name="google1">{{cite book|url=http://books.google.ca/books?id=4dFCmia8VnIC&pg=PA252&lpg=PA252&dq=median+income+canadian+jews&source=bl&ots=H7-tlTtK3W&sig=oLZ49FA_gqqywGwynSfSHXPp20Q&hl=en&ei=MiyjTvP4BKfhiALK3uVK&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=8&sqi=2&ved=0CEwQ6AEwBw#v=onepage&q=median |title=income Canadian Jews&f=false |publisher=Books.google.ca |date= |accessdate=2011-11-20}}</ref>
|+ Annual household income
|-
! Income !! Weighted sample
|-
| Less than $75k || 21%
|-
| $75k-$150k || 24%
|-
| $150k and above || 22%
|-
| Don't know/No answer || 32%
|}


====Wealth====
The 2011 Forbes' list of billionaires in the world listed 24 Canadian billionaires. Among the billionaires listed, 6 out of the 24 or 25% of the Canadian billionaires listed are Jewish (25 times the percentage of Jews in the Canadian population).<ref name="google1"/><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.shalomlife.com/business/14850/6-canadian-jews-on-forbes-rich-list/ |title=6 Canadian Jews on Forbes' Rich List |publisher=Shalom Life |date= |accessdate=2011-11-20}}</ref> Sol Encel and Leslie Stein, authors of ''Continuity, Commitment, and Survival: Jewish communities in the diaspora'' cite 14% of the top 50 richest Canadians are Jewish (14 times the percentage) as have been 31% of Canada's thirty wealthiest families (31 times the percentage), and while constituting only 1.0 percent of the Canadian population, they comprise 8% of the top [[CEO|executives]] of Canada's most largest and profitable companies.<ref name="google2"/>
[[File:Photo of bronfman.jpg|thumb|right|[[Samuel Bronfman]] is a member of the [[Bronfman family|Bronfman]] Canadian Jewish family dynasty.]]
The majority of Canadian Jews fall into the middle class (defined as an income between $45,000 and $120,000<ref>{{cite web |last1=Hogan |first1=Stephanie |title=Who is Canada's middle class? |url=https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/canada-votes-2019-middle-class-trudeau-scheer-definition-1.5317206 |website=CBC |publisher=CBC Radio-Canada |access-date=September 22, 2021}}</ref>) or upper-middle class. Some of the wealthiest Canadian Jewish families include the [[Bronfman family|Bronfmans]],<ref>{{cite web |last1=Curtis |first1=Christopher G. |title=Bronfman Family |url=https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/bronfman-family |website=The Canadian Encyclopedia |publisher=Historica Canada |access-date=September 22, 2021}}</ref> the [[Samuel Belzberg|Belzbergs]], the [[Jack Diamond (Canadian businessman)|Diamonds]], the [[Reichmann family|Reichmanns]],<ref>{{cite web |last1=Niosi |first1=Jorge |title=Reichmann Family |url=https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/reichmann-family |website=The Canadian Encyclopedia |publisher=Historica Canada |access-date=September 22, 2021}}</ref> and the [[Barry Sherman|Shermans]]. Canadian Jews comprise roughly 17% of Canadian Business's list of the 100 Richest Canadians.<ref>{{cite web |title=Canada's Richest People: The Complete Top 100 Ranking |url=https://www.canadianbusiness.com/lists-and-rankings/richest-people/100-richest-canadians-complete-list/ |website=Canadian Business |publisher=St. Joseph Communications |access-date=September 22, 2021 |archive-date=October 23, 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191023092427/https://www.canadianbusiness.com/lists-and-rankings/richest-people/100-richest-canadians-complete-list/ |url-status=dead }}</ref>


====Poverty====
==Notable Canadian Jews==
As of 2015, the median income among Canadian Jews over the age of 15 years is $30,670, and 14.6% of Canadian Jews live below the poverty line, with poverty concentrated among Jews in the Toronto area.<ref>{{cite web |title=Community Profiles – Jewish Canada |url=https://www.jewishcanada.org/community-profiles |website=Jewish Federations of Canada |publisher=JFC-UIA |access-date=2021-07-04 |archive-date=2021-07-09 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210709191239/https://www.jewishcanada.org/community-profiles |url-status=dead }}</ref> (By comparison, the percentage of non-Jewish Canadians living below the poverty line is 14.8%.) Slightly more Jewish women than Jewish men live in poverty, and poverty is most concentrated among Canadian Jews ages 15–24 and those over the age of 65. There is a strong correlation with level of education attained, with poverty most concentrated among Canadian Jews who had only a secondary education, and the lowest levels of poverty among those who had attained a postgraduate degree.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Shahar |first1=Charles |title=2011 National Household Survey Analysis The Jewish Population of Canada (Parts 3 and 4) |url=https://cdn.fedweb.org/fed-99/2/2011%2520Canada_Parts%25203%2520%25204_Jewish%2520Seniors%2520%2520Poverty_Final%2520Report.pdf |website=Jewish Federations of Canada – UIA |access-date=July 4, 2021}}</ref>
{{see also|List of Canadian Jews}}


==See also==
==See also==
{{Portal|Judaism|History of Canada}}
{{Portal|Canada|Judaism}}
* [[Middle Eastern Canadians]]
* [[Jewish–Canadian authors]]
* [[Miklos Kanitz]]
* [[Interactive Museum of Jewish Montreal]]
* [[Saint Laurent Boulevard#Historic Jewish quarter|Historic Jewish Quarter, Montreal]]
* [[Saint Laurent Boulevard#Historic Jewish quarter|Historic Jewish Quarter, Montreal]]
* [[Israeli Canadians]]
* [[List of Orthodox Jewish communities in Canada]]
* [[List of Canadian Jews]]
* [[Antisemitism in Canada]]
* [[Religion in Canada]]
* [[American Jews]]


==References==
==References==
{{Reflist|30em}}
{{Reflist}}


;Notes
=== Notes ===
# {{note|jppistudy}}Data based on a [http://www.jpppi.org.il/JPPPI/SendFile.asp?TID=67&FID=2377 study] by ''Jewish People Policy Institute'' (JPPI).
# {{note|jppistudy}}Data based on a study by ''Jewish People Policy Institute'' (JPPI).
# {{note|jppistudy}}Data based on a [http://www.jpppi.org.il/JPPPI/SendFile.asp?TID=67&FID=2377 study] by ''Jewish People Policy Institute'' (JPPI).
# {{note|jppistudy}}Data based on a study by ''Jewish People Policy Institute'' (JPPI).


;Bibliography
=== Bibliography ===
{{refbegin}}
{{refbegin}}
* Brown, Michael. ''[http://www.questia.com/read/7681201?title=Jew%20or%20Juif%3f%20Jews%2c%20French%20Canadians%2c%20and%20Anglo-Canadians%2c%201759-1914 Jew or Juif? Jews, French Canadians, and Anglo-Canadians, 1759-1914]'' Jewish Publication Society, 1987
* Brown, Michael. ''[https://www.questia.com/read/7681201?title=Jew%20or%20Juif%3f%20Jews%2c%20French%20Canadians%2c%20and%20Anglo-Canadians%2c%201759-1914 Jew or Juif? Jews, French Canadians, and Anglo-Canadians, 1759–1914]{{Dead link|date=October 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}'' Jewish Publication Society, 1987
* Brym, Robert J., William Shaffir, and Morton Weinfeld. ''The Jews in Canada'' (1993)
* Brym, Robert J., William Shaffir, and [[Morton Weinfeld]]. ''The Jews in Canada'' (1993)
*Davies, Alan T. ''[http://books.google.ca/books?id=3kLgn7dIEwIC&pg=PA55&dq=Jews+in+Canada&hl=en&ei=lUfTTbqyHsLL0QGDwIz1Cw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=3&ved=0CEoQ6AEwAjgK#v=onepage&q&f=false Antisemitism in Canada : history and interpretation]'', Wilfrid Laurier University Press, (1992)
*Davies, Alan T. ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=3kLgn7dIEwIC&dq=Jews+in+Canada&pg=PA55 Antisemitism in Canada : history and interpretation]'', Wilfrid Laurier University Press, (1992)
* Goldberg, David Howard. ''[http://www.questia.com/read/27498528?title=Foreign%20Policy%20and%20Ethnic%20Interest%20Groups%3a%20American%20and%20Canadian%20Jews%20Lobby%20for%20Israel Foreign Policy and Ethnic Interest Groups: American and Canadian Jews Lobby for Israel]'' (1990)
* Goldberg, David Howard. ''[https://www.questia.com/read/27498528?title=Foreign%20Policy%20and%20Ethnic%20Interest%20Groups%3a%20American%20and%20Canadian%20Jews%20Lobby%20for%20Israel Foreign Policy and Ethnic Interest Groups: American and Canadian Jews Lobby for Israel] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120527043618/http://www.questia.com/read/27498528?title=Foreign%20Policy%20and%20Ethnic%20Interest%20Groups%3a%20American%20and%20Canadian%20Jews%20Lobby%20for%20Israel |date=May 27, 2012 }}'' (1990)
* Greenstein, Michael ed. ''[http://books.google.ca/books?id=hLN0O5JyeXQC&printsec=frontcover&dq=Contemporary+Jewish+Writing+in+Canada:+An+Anthology&hl=en&ei=rkbTTdHtGMTk0QGr5JnnCw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CDoQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q&f=false Contemporary Jewish Writing in Canada: An Anthology]'' (2004). 233 pp. Primary sources
* Greenstein, Michael ed. ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=hLN0O5JyeXQC&q=Contemporary+Jewish+Writing+in+Canada:+An+Anthology Contemporary Jewish Writing in Canada: An Anthology]'' (2004). 233 pp. Primary sources
* Greenstein, Michael. "How They Write Us: Accepting and Excepting 'the Jew' in Canadian Fiction," ''[[Shofar: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Jewish Studies]]'', Volume 20, Number 2, Winter 2002, pp.&nbsp;5–27 looks at non-Jewish authors.
* Greenstein, Michael. "How They Write Us: Accepting and Excepting 'the Jew' in Canadian Fiction," ''[[Shofar: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Jewish Studies]]'', Volume 20, Number 2, Winter 2002, pp.&nbsp;5–27 looks at non-Jewish authors.
* Jedwab, Jack. ''Canadian Jews in the 21st Century: Identity and Demography'' (2010)
* Jedwab, Jack. ''Canadian Jews in the 21st Century: Identity and Demography'' (2010)
* Lipinsky, Jack. ''Imposing Their Will: An Organizational History of Jewish Toronto, 1933-1948'' (McGill-Queen's University Press; 2011) 352 pages
* Lipinsky, Jack. ''Imposing Their Will: An Organizational History of Jewish Toronto, 1933–1948'' (McGill-Queen's University Press; 2011) 352 pages
* Martz, Fraidi. ''Open Your Hearts: The Story of the Jewish War Orphans in Canada'' (Montreal: Véhicule Press, 1996. 189 pp.)
* Martz, Fraidi. ''Open Your Hearts: The Story of the Jewish War Orphans in Canada'' (Montreal: Véhicule Press, 1996. 189 pp.)
* Rosenberg, Louis, and Morton Weinfeld. ''[http://books.google.ca/books?id=ORDFC43PDZwC&lpg=PR11&ots=8OGkw5cAtv&dq=Canada's%20Jews%3A%20A%20Social%20and%20Economic%20Study%20of%20Jews%20in%20Canada%20in%20the%201930s&pg=PP3#v=onepage&q&f=false Canada's Jews: A Social and Economic Study of Jews in Canada in the 1930s]'' (1939; reprinted 1993)
* Rosenberg, Louis, and [[Morton Weinfeld]]. ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=ORDFC43PDZwC&dq=Canada's%20Jews%3A%20A%20Social%20and%20Economic%20Study%20of%20Jews%20in%20Canada%20in%20the%201930s&pg=PP3 Canada's Jews: A Social and Economic Study of Jews in Canada in the 1930s]'' (1939; reprinted 1993)
* {{cite book|author1=Singer, Isidore |author2=Cyrus Adler|title=The Jewish Encyclopedia: A Descriptive Record of the History, Religion, Literature, and Customs of the Jewish People from the Earliest Times to the Present Day|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=R0gYAQAAMAAJ|year=1907|publisher=Funk & Wagnalls}}
* {{cite book|author1=Singer, Isidore|author2=Cyrus Adler|title=The Jewish Encyclopedia: A Descriptive Record of the History, Religion, Literature, and Customs of the Jewish People from the Earliest Times to the Present Day|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=R0gYAQAAMAAJ|year=1907|publisher=Funk & Wagnalls}}
* Srebrnik, Henry. ''Creating the Chupah: The Zionist Movement and the Drive for Jewish Communal Unity in Canada, 1898-1921'' (2011)
* Srebrnik, Henry. ''Creating the Chupah: The Zionist Movement and the Drive for Jewish Communal Unity in Canada, 1898–1921'' (2011)
* Srebrnik, Henry. ''Jerusalem on the Amur: Birobidzhan and the Canadian Jewish Communist Movement, 1924-1951'' (2008)
* Srebrnik, Henry. ''Jerusalem on the Amur: Birobidzhan and the Canadian Jewish Communist Movement, 1924–1951'' (2008)
* Troper, Harold. ''The Defining Decade: Identity, Politics, and the Canadian Jewish Community in the 1960s'' (2010)
* Troper, Harold. ''The Defining Decade: Identity, Politics, and the Canadian Jewish Community in the 1960s'' (2010)
* Tulchinsky, Gerald J. J. ''[http://books.google.ca/books?id=fIZ6wftL3oQC&printsec=frontcover&dq=Canada%27s+Jews:+a+people%27s+journey&hl=en&ei=V0bTTbjtCKXm0QHRtv3YCw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CDEQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q&f=false Canada's Jews: A People's Journey]'' (2008), the standard scholarly history
* Tulchinsky, Gerald J. J. ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=fIZ6wftL3oQC&q=Canada%27s+Jews:+a+people%27s+journey Canada's Jews: A People's Journey]'' (2008), the standard scholarly history
* Weinfeld, Morton. "[http://books.google.ca/books?id=dbUuX0mnvQMC&printsec=frontcover&dq=Encyclopedia+of+Canada%27s+Peoples&hl=en&ei=NUfTTaacE8nw0gH_3d22Cw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CDAQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q&f=false Jews]" in Paul Robert Magocsi, ed. ''Encyclopedia of Canada's Peoples'' (1991), pp 860–81, the basic starting point.
* Weinfeld, Morton. "[https://books.google.com/books?id=dbUuX0mnvQMC&q=Encyclopedia+of+Canada%27s+Peoples Jews]" in Paul Robert Magocsi, ed. ''Encyclopedia of Canada's Peoples'' (1991), pp 860–81, the basic starting point.
* Weinfeld, Morton. W. Shaffir, and I. Cotler, eds. ''The Canadian Jewish Mosaic'' (1981), sociological studies
* Weinfeld, Morton. W. Shaffir, and I. Cotler, eds. ''The Canadian Jewish Mosaic'' (1981), sociological studies
{{refend}}
{{refend}}

;Primary sources
=== Primary sources ===
{{refbegin}}
{{refbegin}}
*Jacques J. Lyons and Abraham de Sola, ''Jewish Calendar with Introductory Essay'', Montreal, 1854
*Jacques J. Lyons and Abraham de Sola, ''Jewish Calendar with Introductory Essay'', Montreal, 1854
Line 221: Line 468:
{{refend}}
{{refend}}


;Further reading
== Further reading ==
* Abella, Irving. ''A Coat of Many Colours''. Toronto: Key Porter Books, 1990.
* Abella, Irving. ''A Coat of Many Colours''. Toronto: Key Porter Books, 1990.
* Comartin, J. (2016). [[doi:10.25071/1916-0925.39961|"Opening Closed Doors: Revisiting the Canadian Immigration Record (1933-1945)."]] ''Canadian Jewish Studies Études Juives Canadiennes'', 24. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.25071/1916-0925.39961</nowiki>
* Erwin, N. (2016). [[doi:10.25071/1916-0925.39962|"The Holocaust, Canadian Jews, and Canada’s “Good War” Against Nazism."]] ''Canadian Jewish Studies Études Juives Canadiennes'', 24. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.25071/1916-0925.39962</nowiki>
* Godfrey, Sheldon and Godfrey, Judith. ''Search Out the Land''. Montreal: McGill University Press, 1995.
* Godfrey, Sheldon and Godfrey, Judith. ''Search Out the Land''. Montreal: McGill University Press, 1995.
* Jedwab, Jack. ''Canadian Jews in the 21st Century: Identity and Demography'' (2010)
* Jedwab, Jack. ''Canadian Jews in the 21st Century: Identity and Demography'' (2010)
* Lapidus, S. (2004). [[doi:10.25071/1916-0925.22624|"The Forgotten Hasidim: Rabbis and Rebbes in Prewar Canada."]] ''Canadian Jewish Studies Études Juives Canadiennes'', 12. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.25071/1916-0925.22624</nowiki>
* Leonoff, Cyril. ''Pioneers, Pedlars and Prayer Shawls: the Jewish Communities in BC and the Yukon''. 1978.
* Leonoff, Cyril. ''Pioneers, Pedlars and Prayer Shawls: the Jewish Communities in BC and the Yukon''. 1978.
* {{cite book
* {{cite book
|last=Smith
|last=Smith
|first=Cameron
|first=Cameron
|authorlink=
|coauthors=
|title=Unfinished Journey: the Lewis Family
|title=Unfinished Journey: the Lewis Family
|publisher=Summerhill Press
|publisher=Summerhill Press
|year=1989
|year=1989
|location=Toronto
|location=Toronto
|url=https://archive.org/details/unfinishedjourne00smit
|pages=
|isbn=0-929091-04-3
|url=
|url-access=registration
|doi=
}}
|id=
* Schreiber. ''Canada. The Shengold Jewish Encyclopedia'' Rockland, Md.: 2001. {{ISBN|1-887563-66-0}}.
|isbn=0-929091-04-3 }}
* Schreiber. ''Canada. The Shengold Jewish Encyclopedia'' Rockland, Md.: 2001. ISBN 1-887563-66-0.
* Tulchinsky, Gerald. ''Taking Root''. Toronto: Key Porter Books, 1992.
* Tulchinsky, Gerald. ''Taking Root''. Toronto: Key Porter Books, 1992.
* [http://www.jafi.org.il/education/identity/2-4canada.html Jewish Agency Report on Canada]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20041227094918/http://www.jafi.org.il/education/identity/2-4canada.html Jewish Agency Report on Canada]
* Glass, Joseph B. [https://cjs.journals.yorku.ca/index.php/cjs/article/view/19928/18632 "Isolation and Alienation: Factors in the Growth of Zionism in the Canadian Prairies, 1917–1939."] Canadian Jewish Studies / Études Juives Canadiennes, vol 9, 2001.
* Menkis, Richard. [https://cjs.journals.yorku.ca/index.php/cjs/article/view/19954/18658 "Negotiating Ethnicity, Regionalism, and Historiography: Arthur A. Chiel and The Jews of Manitoba: A Social History."] Canadian Jewish Studies / Études Juives Canadiennes, vol 10, 2002.
* Usher, P. (2014). [[doi:10.25071/1916-0925.36059|"Jews in the Royal Canadian Air Force, 1940-1945."]] ''Canadian Jewish Studies Études Juives Canadiennes'', 20(1). <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.25071/1916-0925.36059</nowiki>
{{JewishEncyclopedia|url=http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=80&letter=C|article=Canada}}
{{JewishEncyclopedia|url=http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=80&letter=C|article=Canada}}
{{Refend}}


==External links==
==External links==
*[http://www.cjnews.com/ Canadian Jewish News]
*[http://www.cjnews.com/ Canadian Jewish News]
*[http://www.cjc.ca/ Canadian Jewish Congress Website]
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20110720045227/http://www.cjc.ca/ Canadian Jewish Congress Website]
*[http://www.nfb.ca/film/jews_of_winnipeg/ ''The Jews of Winnipeg''] a 1973 [[National Film Board of Canada]] documentary
*[http://www.nfb.ca/film/jews_of_winnipeg/ ''The Jews of Winnipeg''] a 1973 [[National Film Board of Canada]] documentary


{{Americas topic|History of the Jews in}}
{{North America topic|History of the Jews in}}
{{North America topic|History of the Jews in}}
{{People of Canada}}
{{People of Canada}}
{{Asian Canadians}}
{{Asian Canadians}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:History Of The Jews In Canada}}
[[Category:Jewish Canadian history| ]]
[[Category:Jewish Canadian history| ]]
[[Category:Jews and Judaism in Canada]]
[[Category:Jews and Judaism in Canada|History]]
[[Category:Canadian people of Jewish descent]]
[[Category:Middle Eastern diaspora in Canada|Jews]]

Latest revision as of 15:50, 5 January 2025

Canadian Jews
Juifs canadiens (French)
יהודים קנדים‎ (Hebrew)
Population distribution of Jewish Canadians by census division, 2021 census
Total population
Canada 404,015 (as of 2021)[1]
1.4% of the Canadian population[2][3][4]
Regions with significant populations
 Ontario272,400
 Quebec125,300
 British Columbia62,120
 Alberta20,000
 Manitoba18,000
Languages
English · French (among Québécois) · Hebrew (as liturgical language, some as mother tongue) · Yiddish (by some as mother tongue and as part of a language revival· and other languages like Russian, Ukrainian, Lithuanian, Polish, German, Moroccan Arabic
Religion
Judaism
Related ethnic groups
Anglo-Israelis and Israeli Canadians

The history of the Jews in Canada goes back to the 1700s. Canadian Jews, whether by culture, ethnicity, or religion, form the fourth largest Jewish community in the world, exceeded only by those in Israel, the United States and France.[2][5][6] In the 2021 census, 335,295 people reported their religion as Jewish, accounting for 0.9% of the Canadian population.[7] Some estimates have placed the enlarged number of Jews, such as those who may be culturally or ethnically Jewish, though not necessarily religiously, at around 400,000 people. This total would account for approximately 1.4% of the Canadian population.

The Jewish community in Canada is composed predominantly of Ashkenazi Jews. Other Jewish ethnic divisions are also represented and include Sephardi Jews, Mizrahi Jews, and Bene Israel. A number of converts to Judaism make up the Jewish-Canadian community, which manifests a wide range of Jewish cultural traditions and the full spectrum of Jewish religious observance. Though they are a small minority, they have had an open presence in the country since the first Jewish immigrants arrived with Governor Edward Cornwallis to establish Halifax, Nova Scotia (1749).[8] The 1760s saw the first Jewish settlers in New France who arrived in Montreal after the British conquest of the city, among them was Aaron Hart who is considered the father of Canadian Jewry.[9] His son Ezekiel Hart experience one of the first well documented cases of antisemitism in Canada.[10] Hart was consistently prevented from taking his seat as at the Quebec legislature when members stated that as a Jew, he could not take the oath of office, which included the phrase "on the true faith of a Christian".[11] By the 1970s and 1980s, most legal barriers were removed, and Jews began to hold significant positions in Canadian society.[12] However, antisemitism persists, evident in hate crimes and extremist groups.[13]

Settlement (1783–1897)

[edit]

Prior to the British conquest of New France, Jews lived in Nova Scotia. There were no official Jews in Quebec because when King Louis XIV made Canada officially a province of the Kingdom of France in 1663, he decreed that only Roman Catholics could enter the colony. One exception was Esther Brandeau, a Jewish girl who arrived in 1738 disguised as a boy and remained a year before she was returned for refusing to convert.[14] The earliest subsequent documentation of Jews in Canada are British Army records from the French and Indian War, the North American part of the Seven Years' War. In 1760, General Jeffrey Amherst, 1st Baron Amherst attacked and seized Montreal, winning Canada for the British. Several Jews were members of his regiments, and among his officer corps were five Jews: Samuel Jacobs, Emmanuel de Cordova, Aaron Hart, Hananiel Garcia, and Isaac Miramer.[15]

The most prominent of these five were the business associates Samuel Jacobs and Aaron Hart. In 1759, in his capacity as Commissariat to the British Army on the staff of General Sir Frederick Haldimand, Jacobs was recorded as the first Jewish resident of Quebec, and thus the first Canadian Jew.[16] From 1749, Jacobs had been supplying British army officers at Halifax, Nova Scotia. In 1758, he was at Fort Cumberland and the following year he was with Wolfe's army at Quebec.[17] Remaining in Canada, he became the dominant merchant of the Richelieu valley and Seigneur of Saint-Denis-sur-Richelieu.[18] Because he married a French Canadian girl and brought his children up as Catholics, Jacobs is often overlooked as the first permanent Jewish settler in Canada in favour of Aaron Hart, who married a Jew and brought up his children, or at least his sons, in the Jewish tradition.[17]

Lieutenant Hart first arrived in Canada from New York City as Commissariat to Jeffery Amherst's forces at Montreal in 1760. After his service in the army ended, he settled at Trois-Rivières, where he became a wealthy landowner and respected community member. He had four sons, Moses, Benjamin, Ezekiel and Alexander, all of whom would become prominent in Montreal and help build the Jewish Community. Ezekiel was elected to the legislature of Lower Canada in the by-election of April 11, 1807, becoming the first Jew in an official opposition in the British Empire. Ezekiel was expelled from the legislature with his religion a major factor.[19] Sir James Henry Craig, Governor-General of Lower Canada, tried to protect Hart, but French Canadians saw this as an attempt of the British to undermine them and the legislature expelled Hart in both 1808 and following his re-election in 1809. The legislature then barred Jews from holding elected office in Canada until the passage of the 1832 Emancipation Act.[20]

Most of the early Jewish Canadians were either fur traders or served in the British Army troops. A few were merchants or landowners. Although Montreal's Jewish community was small, numbering only around 200, they built the Spanish and Portuguese Synagogue of Montreal, Shearith Israel, the oldest synagogue in Canada in 1768. It remained the only synagogue in Montreal until 1846.[21] Some sources date the actual establishment of synagogue to 1777 on Notre Dame Street.[22]

Revolts and protests soon began calling for responsible government in Canada. The law requiring the oath "on my faith as a Christian" was amended in 1829 to provide for Jews to refuse the oath. In 1831, prominent French-Canadian politician Louis-Joseph Papineau sponsored a law which granted full equivalent political rights to Jews, twenty-seven years before anywhere else in the British Empire. In 1832, partly because of the work of Ezekiel Hart, a law was passed that guaranteed Jews the same political rights and freedoms as Christians. In the early 1830s, German Jew Samuel Liebshitz founded Jewsburg (now incorporated as German Mills into Kitchener, Ontario), a village in Upper Canada.[23] In 1841 Isaac Gottschalk Ascher arrived in Montreal with his family, including sons Albert (who later in 1856 together with Lewis Samuel a British Orthodox Jew would rent the upper floor of Coombe's Drug Store at the corner of Yonge Street and Richmond Street in Toronto for High Holy Day services which became only the second temple in Canada), Isidore a highly acclaimed Canadian poet and novelist, Jacob A Canadian Chess Champion (1878, 1883). By 1850, there were still only 450 Jews living in Canada, mostly concentrated in Montreal.[24]

Toronto's first Jewish prayer services were held on Rosh Hashanah, September 29, 1856, initially with a Sefer Torah borrowed from Canada's only other synagogue, the Spanish and Portuguese Congregation of Montreal. A year later in 1857 a permanent Torah arrived as a gift from Albert Ascher's (Asher) parents in Montreal (Isaac Gottschalk Ascher & Rachel Altmann) inscribed in Hebrew to "The Holy Congregation, Blossoms of Holiness [Pirchei Kodesh], in the city of Toronto." The name resonated among the congregants, and on July 23, 1871, the synagogue officially adopted the name פרחי קדש — Toronto Holy Blossom Temple .

Abraham Jacob Franks settled at Quebec City in 1767.[25] His son, David Salesby (or Salisbury) Franks, who afterward became head of the Montreal Jewish community, also lived in Quebec prior to 1774. Abraham Joseph, who was long a prominent figure in public affairs in Quebec City, took up his residence there shortly after his father's death in 1832. Quebec City's Jewish population for many years remained very small, and early efforts at organization were fitful and short-lived. A cemetery was acquired in 1853, and a place of worship was opened in a hall in the same year, in which services were held intermittently. In 1892, the Jewish population of Quebec City had sufficiently augmented to permit the permanent establishment of the present synagogue, Beth Israel. The congregation was granted the right of keeping a register in 1897. Other communal institutions were the Quebec Hebrew Sick Benefit Association, the Quebec Hebrew Relief Association for Immigrants, and the Quebec Zionist Society. By 1905, the Jewish population was about 350, in a total population of 68,834.[26] According to census of 1871, there were 1,115 Jews living in Canada with 409 in Montreal, 157 in Toronto, and 131 in Hamilton with the rest living in Brantford, Quebec City, St. John, Kingston and London.[24]

Community growth (1862–1939)

[edit]
Congregation Emmanu-El Synagogue (1863) in Victoria, British Columbia, the oldest Synagogue in Canada still in use, and the oldest on the West Coast of North America

With the beginning of the pogroms of Russia in the 1880s, and continuing through the growing anti-Semitism of the early 20th century, millions of Jews began to flee the Pale of Settlement and other areas of Eastern Europe for the West. Although the United States received the overwhelming majority of these immigrants, Canada was also a destination of choice due to Government of Canada and Canadian Pacific Railway efforts to develop Canada after Confederation. Between 1880 and 1930, the Jewish population of Canada grew to over 155,000. At the time, according to the 1901 census of Montreal, only 6861 Jews were residents.[27]

Jewish immigrants brought a tradition of establishing a communal body, called a kehilla to look after the social and welfare needs of their less fortunate. Virtually all of these Jewish refugees were very poor. Wealthy Jewish philanthropists, who had come to Canada much earlier, felt it was their social responsibility to help their fellow Jews get established in this new country. One such man was Abraham de Sola, who founded the Hebrew Philanthropic Society. In Montreal and Toronto, a wide range of communal organizations and groups developed. Recently arrived immigrant Jews also founded landsmenschaften, guilds of people who came originally from the same village.

Most of these immigrants established communities in the larger cities. Canada's first ever census, recorded that in 1871 there were 1,115 Jews in Canada; 409 in Montreal, 157 in Toronto, 131 in Hamilton and the rest were dispersed in small communities along the St. Lawrence River.[24] When elected mayor of Alexandria in 1914, George Simon was the second Jewish mayor in Canada (after David Oppenheimer, who was mayor of Vancouver from 1888 to 1891)[28] and the youngest mayor in the country at the time. He died suddenly in 1969 while serving his tenth term in office.[29]

A community of about 100 settled in Victoria, British Columbia to open shops to supply prospectors during the Cariboo Gold Rush (and later the Klondike Gold Rush in the Yukon). This led to the opening of a synagogue in Victoria, British Columbia in 1862. In 1875, B'nai B'rith Canada was formed as a Jewish fraternal organization. When British Columbia sent their delegation to Ottawa to agree on the colony's entry into Confederation, a Jew, Henry Nathan, Jr., was among them. Nathan eventually became the first Canadian Jewish Member of Parliament. In 1899, the Federation of Canadian Zionist Societies was founded to champion Zionism, and became the first nation-wide Jewish group.[24] The overwhelming majority of Canadian Jews were Ashkenazim who came from either the Austrian empire or the Russian empire.[24] Jewish women tended to be particularly active in Canadian Zionism, perhaps because many of the Zionist groups were secular.[24]

By 1911, there were Jewish communities in all of Canada's major cities. By 1914, there were about 100,000 Jews in Canada with three-quarters living in either Montreal or Toronto.[24] The overwhelming majority of Canadian Jews were Ashkenazim who came from either the Austrian or Russian Empires.[24] There were two competing strands of Jewish nationalism in Eastern Europe in the early 20th century, namely Zionism and another tendency that favoured forming separate Jewish cultural institutions with a focus on promoting Yiddish.[24] Institutions such as the Montreal Jewish Library with its collection of Yiddish books were examples of the latter tendency.[24]

The Canadian Jewish Congress (CJC) was founded in 1919 and would be the major representative body of the Canadian Jewish community for 90 years. Much of its work was focused on lobbying government around issues of immigration, human rights and anti-Semitism. One of the terms of the 1919 Treaty of Versailles were the so-called "minorities treaties" that committed Eastern European states with substantial Jewish populations such as Poland, Romania, and Czechoslovakia to protect the rights of minorities with the League of Nations to monitor their compliance. The CJC was founded in part to lobby the government of Canada to use its influence at the League of Nations to ensure that the Eastern European states were abiding by the terms of the "minorities treaties".[24]

On August 16, 1933, one of the most famous anti-Semitic incidents in Canada took place, known as the Christie Pits riot. On that day after a baseball game in Toronto a group of young men using Nazi symbols started a massive melee, arguably the largest in Toronto's history, on the ground of racial hatred, involving hundreds of men.[31]

In 1934, another anti-Semitic incident occurred when the first medical strike in a Canadian hospital was held in response to the appointment of a Jewish doctor to Montreal's Notre-Dame Hospital.[32][33][34][35] Dr Sam Rabinovitch would have been the first Jew appointed to the a French-Canadian hospital.[32] The four-day strike, nicknamed the "Days of Shame", involved interns refusing to "provide care to anyone, including emergency patients".[32] The strike was called off after Dr Rabinovitch resigned after he realised that no patients would be treated otherwise.[32]

Westward expansion

[edit]
Graves in Jewish cemetery at Lipton Colony, Saskatchewan, 1916

In the late 1800s and early 1900s, through such movements as the Jewish Colonization Association, 15 Jewish farm colonies were established on the Canadian prairies.[36] Few of the colonies did very well, partly because the Jews of East European origin were forbidden to own farms in the old country and thus had little experience in farming. One settlement that did do well was Yid'n Bridge, Saskatchewan, started by South African farmers. Eventually the community grew larger as the South African Jews, who had gone to South Africa from Lithuania invited Jewish families directly from Europe to join them, and the settlement eventually became a town, whose name was later changed to the Anglicized name of Edenbridge.[36][37][38] The Jewish farming settlement folded in the first generation.[36] Beth Israel Synagogue at Edenbridge is now a designated heritage site. In Alberta, the Little Synagogue on the Prairie is now in the collection of a museum.

At this time, most of the Jewish Canadians in the west were either storekeepers or tradesmen. Many set up shops on the new rail lines, selling goods and supplies to the construction workers, many of whom were also Jewish.[39][40] Later, because of the railway, some of these homesteads grew into prosperous towns. At this time, Canadian Jews also had important roles in developing the west coast fishing industry, while others worked on building telegraph lines.[41] Some, descended from the earliest Canadian Jews, stayed true to their ancestors as fur trappers. The first major Jewish organization to appear was B'nai B'rith. Till today B'nai B'rith Canada is the community's independent advocacy and social service organization. Also at this time, the Montreal branch of the Workmen's Circle was founded in 1907. This group was an offshoot of the Jewish Labour Bund, an outlawed party in Russia's Pale of Settlement. It was an organization for The Main's radical, non-Communist, non-religious, working class.[42]

Organization

[edit]
The Jewish General Hospital opened in Montreal in 1934.

By the outbreak of World War I, there were approximately 100,000 Canadian Jews, of whom three-quarters lived in either Montreal or Toronto. Many of the children of the European refugees started out as peddlers, eventually working their way up to established businesses, such as retailers and wholesalers. Jewish Canadians played an essential role in the development of the Canadian clothing and textile industry.[43] Most worked as labourers in sweatshops; while some owned the manufacturing facilities. Jewish merchants and labourers spread out from the cities to small towns, building synagogues, community centres and schools as they went.

As the population grew, Canadian Jews began to organize themselves as a community despite the presence of dozens of competing sects. The Canadian Jewish Congress (CJC) was founded in 1919 as the result of the merger of several smaller organizations. The purpose of the CJC was to speak on behalf of the common interests of Jewish Canadians and assist immigrant Jews. The largest Jewish community was in Montreal, at the time the largest, wealthiest and most cosmopolitan city in Canada.[44] The vast majority of Montreal's Jews who arrived in the early 20th century were Yiddish-speaking Ashkenazim but their children chose speak English rather than French.[44] Until 1964, Quebec had no public education system, instead having two parallel educational systems run by the Protestant churches and the Catholic church. As the Jewish community was too poor to fund its own educational system, most Jewish parents chose to enrol their children in the English-speaking Protestant school system, which was willing to accept Jews unlike the Catholic school system.[44] The CJC had its headquarters in Montreal while the Jewish Public Library of Montreal and the Montreal Yiddish Theatre were two of the largest Jewish cultural institutions in Canada.[44] The Jews of Montreal tended to be concentrated in several neighbourhoods, which gave a strong sense of community identity.[44]

In 1930 under the impact of the Great Depression, Canada sharply limited immigration from Eastern Europe, which adversely impacted on the ability of the  Ashkenazim to come to Canada.[24] In a climate of anti-semitism where the Jewish immigrants were seen as economic competition for Gentiles, the leadership of the CJC was assumed by the whisky tycoon Samuel Bronfman who it was hoped might be able to persuade the government to allow more Jews to come.[24] In view of worsening situation for Jews in Europe, allowing more Jewish immigration became the central concern of the CJC.[24] Through many Canadian Jews voted for the Liberal Party, traditionally seen as the friend of minorities, the Liberal Prime Minister from 1935 onward, William Lyon Mackenzie King, proved to be extremely unsympathetic. Mackenzie King adamantly refused to change the immigration law, and Canada accepted proportionally the fewest Jewish refugees from Nazi Germany.[24]

World War II (1939–1945)

[edit]
Jewish soldiers fought in the Canadian military during World War II.
Stolperstein for Rudi Terhoch in Velen-Ramsdorf, a Jewish survivor in Canada

About 17,000 Jewish Canadians served in the Canadian Armed Forces during World War II.[45] Major Ben Dunkelman of the Queen's Own Rifles regiment was a soldier in the campaigns of 1944–45 in northwest Europe, highly decorated for his courage and ability under fire. In 1943, Saidye Rosner Bronfman of Montreal, the wife of the whiskey tycoon Samuel Bronfman was appointed MBE (Member of the Order of the British Empire) for her work on the home front.[46] Saidye Bronfram had organized 7, 000 women in Montreal to make packages for Canadian soldiers serving overseas, for which she was recognized by King George VI.[46]  Most Jewish Canadian who joined the Armed Forces at this time became members of the Royal Canadian Air Force.[47]

In 1939, Canada turned away the MS St. Louis with 908 Jewish refugees aboard. It went back to Europe where 254 of them died in concentration camps. And overall, Canada only accepted 5,000 Jewish refugees during the 1930s and 1940s in a climate of widespread anti-Semitism.[48] A most striking display of antisemitism occurred with the 1944 Quebec election. The leader of the Union Nationale, Maurice Duplessis appealed to anti-Semitic prejudices in Quebec in a violently anti-Semitic speech by claiming that the Dominion government of William Lyon Mackenzie King together with Liberal Premier Adélard Godbout of Quebec had secretly made an agreement with the "International Zionist Brotherhood" to settle 100,000 Jewish refugees left homeless by the Holocaust in Quebec after the war in exchange for the "International Zionist Brotherhood" promising to fund both the federal and provincial Liberal parties.[49] By contrast, Duplessis claimed that he would never take any money from the Jews, and if he were elected Premier, he would stop this alleged plan to bring Jewish refugees to Quebec. Though Duplessis' claims about the alleged plan to settle 100,000 Jewish refugees in Quebec was entirely false, his story was widely believed in Quebec, and ensured he won the election.[49]

In 1945, several organizations merged to form the left-wing United Jewish Peoples' Order which was one of the largest Jewish fraternal organizations in Canada for a number of years.[50][51]

As in the United States, the community's response to news of the Holocaust was muted for decades. Bialystok (2000) wrote that in the 1950s the community was "virtually devoid" of discussion. Although one in seven Canadian Jews were survivors or their children, most "did not want to know what happened, and few survivors had the courage to tell them". He argued that the main obstacle to discussion was "an inability to comprehend the event". Awareness emerged in the 1960s, as the community realized that antisemitism remained.[52]

Post war (1945–1997)

[edit]

From the 1940s to the 1960s, the man generally recognized as the chief spokesman for the Canadian Jewish community was Rabbi Abraham Feinberg of the Holy Blossom Temple in Toronto.[53] In 1950, Dorothy Sangster wrote in Macleans' about him: "Today American-born Rabbi Feinberg is one of the most controversial figures to occupy a Canadian pulpit. Gentiles recognize him as the official voice of Canadian Jewry. This fact was aptly demonstrated a few years ago when Montreal's Mayor Houde introduced him to friends as Le Cardinal des Juifs—the Cardinal of the Jews".[54] Feinberg was very active in various social justice efforts, campaigning for laws against discrimination against minorities and to end the "restrictive covenants".[53]

In March 1945, Rabbi Feinberg wrote an article in Maclean's charging that there was rampant antisemitism in Canada, stating:

"Jews are kept out of most ski clubs. Sundry summer colonies (even on municipally owned land), fraternities, and at least one Rotary Club operate under written or unwritten “Gentiles Only” signs. Many bank positions are not open to Jews. Only three Jewish male physicians have been admitted to non-Jewish Hospital staffs in Toronto. McGill University has instituted a rule requiring in effect at least a 10% higher academic average for Jewish applicants; in certain schools of the University of Toronto anti-Jewish bias is being felt. City Councils debate whether Jewish petitioners should be permitted to build a synagogue; property deeds in some areas bar resale to them. I have seen crude handbills circulated thanking Hitler for his massacre of 80,000 Jews in Kiev."[55]

In 1945, in the Re Drummond Wren case, a Jewish group, the Workers' Education Association (WEA) challenged the "restrictive covenants" that forbade the renting or selling of properties to Jews.[56] Through the case was something of a set-up as the WEA had quite consciously purchased a property in Toronto known to have a "restrictive covenant" in order to challenge the legality of "restrictive covenants" in the courts, Justice John Keiller MacKay struck down "restrictive covenants" in his ruling on October 31, 1945.[56] In 1948, MacKay's ruling in the Drummond Wren case was struck down in the Noble v Alley case by the Ontario Supreme Court, which ruled that "restrictive covenants" were "legal and enforceable".[57] A woman named Anna Noble decided to sell her cottage at the Beach O' Pines resort to Bernard Wolf, a Jewish businessman from London, Ontario. The sale was blocked by the Beach O'Pines Resort Association which had a "restrictive covenant" forbidding the sale of cottages to any person of "Jewish, Hebrew, Semitic, Negro or colored race or blood".[57] With the support of the Joint Public Relations Committee of the Canadian Jewish Congress and B'nai B'rith headed by Rabbi Feinberg, the Noble ruling was appealed to the Supreme Court of Canada, which in November 1950 ruled against "restrictive covenants", albeit only on the technicality that the phrase "Jewish, Hebrew, Semitic, Negro or colored race or blood" was too vague.[57]

After the war, Canada liberalized its immigration policy. Roughly 40,000 Holocaust Survivors came during the late 1940s, hoping to rebuild their shattered lives. In 1947, the Workmen's Circle and Jewish Labour Committee started a project, spearheaded by Kalmen Kaplansky and Moshe Lewis, to bring Jewish refugees to Montreal in the needle trades, called the Tailors Project.[58] They were able to do this through the federal government's "bulk-labour" program that allowed labour-intensive industries to bring European displaced persons to Canada, to fill those jobs.[59] For Lewis' work on this and other projects during this period, the Montreal branch was renamed the Moshe Lewis Branch, after his death in 1950. The Canadian arm of the Jewish Labor Committee also honored him when they established the Moshe Lewis Foundation in 1975.[60]

In the post-war era, universities proved more willing to accept Jewish applicants and in decades after 1945, many Canadian Jews tended to move up from a lower-class group working as menial laborers to a middle class group working as bourgeois professionals.[24] With the ability to obtain a better education, many Jews become doctors, teachers, lawyers, dentists, accountants, professors and other bourgeois occupations.[24] Geographically, there was a tendency for many Jews living in the inner cities of Toronto and Montreal to move out to the suburbs.[24] The rural Jewish communities almost vanished as Jews living in rural areas decamped to the cities.[24] Reflecting a more tolerant attitude, Canadian Jews became active on the cultural scene.[24] In the post-war decades Peter C. Newman, Wayne and Shuster, Mordecai Richler, Leonard Cohen, Barbara Frum, Joseph Rosenblatt, Irving Layton, Eli Mandel, A.M. Klein, Henry Kreisel, Adele Wiseman, Miriam Waddington, Naim Kattan, and Rabbi Stuart Rosenberg were individuals of note in the fields of arts, journalism and literature.[24]  

Since the 1960s a new immigration wave of Jews started to take place. A number of French-speaking Jews from North Africa ended up settling in Montreal.[24] Some South African Jews decided to emigrate to Canada after South Africa became a republic in 1961, and was followed by another wave in the late 1970s, which was precipitated by anti-apartheid rioting and civil unrest.[61] The majority of them settled in Ontario, with the largest community in Toronto, followed by those in Hamilton, London and Kingston. Smaller waves of Zimbabwean Jews were also present during this period.

In 1961 Louis Rasminsky became the first Jewish governor of the Bank of Canada. Every previous governor of the Bank of Canada had been a member of the prestigious Rideau Club of Ottawa, but Rasminsky's application to join the Rideau Club was turned down on the account of his religion, a rejection that deeply hurt him.[62] Through the Rideau Club changed its policies in response to public criticism, Rasminsky only joined the club after he retired as bank governor in 1973.[62] In 1968, the Liberal MP Herb Gray of Windsor became the Jewish federal cabinet minister. In 1970, Bora Laskin became the first Jewish justice of the Supreme Court of Canada and in 1973, the first Jewish Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. In 1971, David Lewis became the leader of the New Democratic Party, becoming the first Jew to head a major Canadian political party.

In 1976, the Quebec provincial election was won by the separatist Parti Québécois (PQ), which sparked a major flight of Montreal's English-speaking Jews to Toronto with about 20,000 leaving.[44] The Jewish community of Montreal has been a bastion of federalism, and Quebec separatists with their ideal of a creating a nation-state for French-Canadians have tended to be hostile to Jews.[44] In both the 1980 and 1995 referendums, Montreal's Jews voted overwhelmingly for Quebec to remain in Canada.[44]

It was official Canadian policy after 1945 to accept immigrants from Eastern Europe as long they were anti-communist even if they had fought for Nazi Germany. For an example the veterans of the 14th Waffen SS Division Galizien, which was mostly recruited from Ukrainians in Galicia, settled in Canada.[63] The fact that the men of the 14th Waffen-SS division had committed war crimes was ignored because they were felt to be useful for the Cold War.[63] In Oakville, Ontario, a public monument honors the men of the 14th SS Division as heroes.[64] Starting in the 1980s, Jewish groups began to lobby the Canadian government to deport the Axis collaborators from Eastern Europe whom the government of Canada had welcomed with open arms in the 1940s–1950s.[24] In 1997, a report by Sol Littman, the head of Simon Wiesenthal Center operations in Canada charged that Canada in 1950 had accepted 2,000 veterans of 14th Waffen-SS Division with no screening; the American news program 60 Minutes showed that Canada had allowed about 1,000 SS veterans from the Baltic states to become Canadian citizens; and the Jerusalem Post called Canada a "near-blissful refuge" for Nazi war criminals.[65] The Canadian Jewish historian Irving Abella stated that for Eastern Europeans the best way of getting into postwar Canada "was by showing the SS tattoo. This proved that you were an anti-Communist".[65] Despite pressure from Jewish groups, the Canadian government dragged its feet on deporting Nazi war criminals out of the fear of offending voters of Eastern European background, who make up a significant number of Canadian voters.[65]

Modernity (since 2001)

[edit]

Today, the Jewish culture in Canada is maintained by practising Jews and secular Jews. Nearly all Jews in Canada speak one of the two official languages, although most speak English over French. Most Ashkenazi Jews speak English as a first language, including most Ashkenazi Jews in Quebec.[66]

In terms of Jewish denominations, 26% of Canadian Jews are Conservative, 17% Orthodox, 16% Reform, 29% are "Just Jewish", and the remaining 12% align themselves with smaller movements or are unsure. Intermarriage is relatively low among Canadian Jews, with 77% of married Jews having a Jewish spouse.[67]

Most of Canada's Jews live in Ontario and Quebec, followed by British Columbia, Manitoba and Alberta. While Toronto is the largest Jewish population centre, Montreal played this role until many English-speaking Jewish Canadians left for Toronto, fearing that Quebec might leave the federation following the rise during the 1970s of nationalist political parties in Quebec, as well as a result of Quebec's Language Law.[68]

The Jewish population is growing rather slowly due to aging and low birth rates. The population of Canadian Jews increased by just 3.5% between 1991 and 2001, despite much immigration from the Former Soviet Union, Israel and other countries.[69]

Politically, the major Jewish Canadian organizations are the Centre for Israel and Jewish Advocacy (CIJA) and the more conservative B'nai Brith Canada both claim to be the voice of the Jewish community. The United Jewish People's Order, once the largest Jewish fraternal organization in Canada, is a left-leaning secular group established in 1927 with current chapters in Toronto, Hamilton, Winnipeg and Vancouver. Politically, UJPO opposes the Israeli Occupation and advocate for a two-state solution but focus primarily on Jewish cultural, educational and social justice issues. A smaller organization, Independent Jewish Voices (Canada), characterized as anti-Zionist, argues that the CIJA and B'nai B'rith do not speak for most Canadian Jews. Also, many Canadian Jews simply have no connections to any of these organizations.[citation needed]

The birth rate for Jews in Canada is much higher than that in the United States, with a TFR of 1.91 according to the 2001 Census. This is due to the presence of large numbers of Orthodox Jews in Canada. According to the census, the Jewish birth rate and TFR is higher than that of Christian (1.35), Buddhist (1.34), Non-Religious (1.41), and Sikh (1.9) populations, but slightly lower than that of Hindus (2.05), and Muslims (2.01).[70]

In the 21st century, anti-Semitism has become a growing concern, with reports of anti-semitic incidents increasing sharply in recent years. This includes the well publicized anti-Semitic comments of Ernst Zündel. In 2009, the Canadian Parliamentary Coalition to Combat Antisemitism was established by all four major federal political parties to investigate and combat antisemitism, namely new antisemitism.[71] The League for Human Rights of B'nai B'rith monitors the incidents and prepares an annual audit of these events. There was an increase of the scope of anti-Semitic incidents in Canada with a number of cases of anti-Semitic vandalism and spraying Nazi symbols in August 2013 in Winnipeg and in the greater Toronto area.[72][73]

On February 26, 2014, and for the first time in Canadian history, B'nai Brith Canada led an official delegation of Sephardi community leaders, activists, philanthropists and spiritual leaders from across the country visiting Parliament Hill and meeting with the prime minister, ambassadors and other dignitaries.[74]

Israeli Canadians and Jewish Canadians celebrating Yom Ha'atzmaut in Toronto.

Since the beginning of the 21st century Jewish immigration to Canada has continued, increasing in numbers with the passing of the years. With the rise of antisemitic acts in France and weak economic conditions, most of the Jewish newcomers are French Jews who are mainly looking for new economic opportunities (either in Israel or elsewhere, with Canada one of the top destinations chosen by French Jews to live in, particularly in Quebec).[75] For the same reasons, and due to cultural and linguistic proximity, several members of the Belgian-Jewish community choose Canada as their new home. There are efforts by the Jewish community of Montreal to attract these immigrants and make them feel at home, as well as those from other parts of the world.[76] There is also some immigration of Argentine Jews and from other parts of Latin America. Argentina is home to the largest Jewish community in Latin America and the third largest in the Americas after the United States and Canada.[77]

A population of Israeli Jews emigrate to Canada to study and work. The Israeli Canadian community is growing and it is one of the largest Israeli diaspora groups with an estimate of 30,000 people.[77] A small proportion of Israeli Jews who come to Canada are Ethiopian Jews.

Afghan Jews

[edit]

Following the Fall of Kabul in August 2021, the final Afghan Jew still in Afghanistan, Tova Moradi, fled to Canada.[78] This marked the end of Afghanistan's 2,700-year Jewish history.[79][80]

Demographics

[edit]

Provincial and territorial

[edit]
Percentage of Jewish population in Canada, 2001.

Jewish Canadian population by province and territory in Canada in 2011 according to Statistics Canada and United Jewish Federations of Canada[81]

Province or territory Jews Percentage
Canada 391,665 1.2%
 Ontario 226,610 1.8%
 Quebec 93,625 1.2%
 British Columbia 35,005 0.8%
 Alberta 15,795 0.4%
 Manitoba 14,345 1.2%
 Nova Scotia 2,910 0.3%
 Saskatchewan 1,905 0.2%
 New Brunswick 860 0.1%
 Newfoundland and Labrador 220 0.0%
 Prince Edward Island 185 0.1%
 Yukon 145 0.4%
 Northwest Territories 40 0.1%
 Nunavut 15 0.1%

Municipal

[edit]
2001[82] 2011[83] Trend
City Population Jews Percentage Population Jews Percentage
Greater Toronto Area 5,081,826 179,100 3.5% 6,054,191 188,710 3.1% Increase 5.4%
Greater Montreal 3,380,645 92,975 2.8% 3,824,221 90,780 2.4% Decrease 2.4%
Greater Vancouver 1,967,480 22,590 1.1% 2,313,328 26,255 1.1% Increase 16.2%
Calgary 943,315 7,950 0.8% 1,096,833 8,335 0.8% Increase 4.8%
Ottawa 795,250 13,130 1.7% 883,390 14,010 1.6% Increase 6.7%
Edmonton 666,105 4,920 0.7% 812,201 5,550 0.7% Increase 12.8%
Winnipeg 619,540 14,760 2.4% 663,617 13,690 2.0% Decrease 7.2%
Hamilton 490,270 4,675 1.0% 519,949 5,110 1.0% Increase 9.3%
Kitchener-Waterloo 495,845 1,950 0.4% 507,096 2,015 0.4% Increase 3.3%
Halifax 355,945 1,985 0.6% 390,096 2,120 0.5% Increase 6.8%
London 336,539 2,290 0.7% 366,151 2,675 0.7% Increase 16.8%
Victoria 74,125 2,595 3.5% 80,017 2,740 3.4% Increase 5.6%
Windsor 208,402 1,525 0.7% 210,891 1,515 0.7% Decrease 0.7%

Culture

[edit]

Yiddish

[edit]

Yiddish (יידיש‎) is the historical and cultural language of Ashkenazi Jews, who make up the majority of the Canadian Jewry and was widely spoken within the Canadian Jewish community up to the middle of the twentieth century.[84]

Montreal had and to some extent still has one of the most thriving Yiddish communities in North America. Yiddish was Montreal's third language (after French and English) for the entire first half of the 20th century. The Kanader Adler (The Canadian Eagle), Montreal's daily Yiddish newspaper founded by Hirsch Wolofsky, appeared from 1907 to 1988.[85] The Monument National was the centre of Yiddish theatre from 1896 until the construction of the Saidye Bronfman Centre for the Arts, inaugurated on September 24, 1967, where the established resident theatre, the Dora Wasserman Yiddish Theatre, remains the only permanent Yiddish theatre in North America. The theatre group also tours Canada, US, Israel, and Europe. In 1931, 99% of Montreal Jews stated that Yiddish was their mother language. In the 1930s there was a Yiddish language education system and a Yiddish newspaper in Montreal.[86] In 1938, most Jewish households in Montreal primarily used English and often used French and Yiddish. 9% of the Jewish households only used French and 6% only used Yiddish.[87]

In 1980 Chaim Leib Fox published Hundert yor yidishe un hebreyishe literatur in Kanade[88] ("One Hundred Years of Yiddish and Hebrew Literature in Canada")[89] – a compendium on the history of literature and culture of the Jewish diaspora in Canada.[88] The comprehensive volume covered 429 Yiddish and Hebrew authors who published in Canada in 1870–1970.[88] According to Vivian Felsen, it was "the most ambitious attempt to preserve Yiddish culture in Canada."[88]

Press

[edit]

The Canadian Jewish News was, until April 2020, Canada's most widely-read Jewish community newspaper. It had suffered from financial shortfalls for years, which were exacerbated by the impact of the coronavirus pandemic in Canada on its finances. CJN president Elizabeth Wolfe stated that "The CJN suffered from a pre-existing condition and has been felled by COVID-19."[90]

Shortly thereafter, two new Jewish community newspapers made their debuts, with the Canadian Jewish Record Archived October 31, 2020, at the Wayback Machine and TheJ.ca beginning publication in May 2020.[91] These two papers sought to fill the void left by the CJN, but unlike the CJN,[92] had politically partisan editorial stances. The left-leaning Canadian Jewish Record was noted by its CEO as "not an anti-Zionist outlet, but rather that the newspaper will periodically provide legitimate criticism of the State of Israel.[93] TheJ.ca, by contrast, has emphasized that its stance on the question of Israel is right-leaning, with staff journalist and co-founder Dave Gordon saying "we’re very pro-Israel, very Zionistic [sic] …" while Ron East, a publisher of TheJ.ca, has voiced opposition to progressive Jewish activism, claiming that right-wing Zionist viewpoints are "drowned out," thereby necessitating "a platform that would allow for those voices".[93][94]

In May 2021, the Canadian Jewish News relaunched as a digital-only publication at thecjn.ca. In December 2020, the Canadian Jewish Record announcing it would end its run with a post titled "A Note from the Publisher: The Bridge is Now Completed", stating that it had intended "to be a bridge between the recently shuttered Canadian Jewish News and its hoped-for return," and given that the CJN had managed to relaunch, it (The Canadian Jewish Record) would cease publication.[95] The CJN resumed its journalistic reporting, and now also hosts an email newsletter,[96] as well as several weekly podcasts.[97]

Museums and monuments

[edit]

Canada has several Jewish museums and monuments, which focus upon Jewish culture and Jewish history.[98]

Socioeconomics

[edit]

Education

[edit]

There are numerous Jewish day schools throughout the country, as well as a number of Yeshivot. In Toronto, around 40% of Jewish children attend Jewish elementary schools and 12% go to Jewish high schools. The figures for Montreal are higher: 60% and 30%, respectively. The national average for attendance at Jewish elementary schools is at least 55%.[99]

Canadian Jews make up a significant percentage of student body of Canada's leading higher education institutions. For instance at the University of Toronto, Canadian Jews account for 5% of the student body, over 5 times the proportion of Jews in Canada.[100]

The Jewish community in Canada is among the country's most educated groups. In 1991, four out of ten doctors and dentists in Toronto were Jewish and nationally, four times as many Jews completed graduate degrees as Canadians generally. In the same study, it was found that 43% of Jewish Canadians had a bachelor's degree or higher while the comparable figure for persons of British origin is 19% and just 16% for the general Canadian population as a whole.[101][102]

In 2016, 80% of Canadian Jewish adults aged 25–64 had a Bachelor's Degree while only 29% of the general Canadian population did. An additional 37% of Canadian Jews in this age range had post-graduate or professional degrees.[67]

Jewish Canadians comprise approximately one percent of the Canadian population, but make up a significantly larger percentage of the student body of some of the most prestigious universities in Canada.[103]

Reputation Rankings (Maclean's)[104] University Jewish Students[100][105][106] % of Student Body[100]
1 University of Toronto 3,000 5%
2 University of British Columbia 1,000 2%
3 University of Waterloo 1,200 3%
4 McGill University 3,550 10%
5 McMaster University 900 3%
7 Queen's University 2,000 7%
8 University of Western Ontario 3,250 10%
15 Ryerson University 1,650 3%
17 Concordia University 1,125 3%
18 University of Ottawa 850 2%
20 York University 4,000 7%

Employment

[edit]

Before the mass Jewish immigration of the 1880s, the Canadian Jewish community was relatively affluent compared to other ethnic groups in Canada, a distinguishable feature that still continues on to this day.[citation needed] During the 18th and the 19th centuries, upper class Jews tended to be fur traders, merchants, and entrepreneurs.[107]

At the turn of the 20th century, most Jewish heads of household were self-employed wholesalers, retailers, or peddlers, though large numbers of Jews began to enter the blue-collar labour force in the early 1900s and 1910s, particularly in the garment sector. By 1915, half the Toronto Jewish community was self-employed, and divided the other were blue-collar workers employed, mostly by non-Jews, in the secondary segment of the labor market. By the early 1930s, there were approximately 400 Jewish-owned garment shops and factories in Toronto, and white Anglo-Saxon manufacturers' control on this sector was no longer total. Geographer Daniel Hiebert wrote that "Jewish entrepreneurs were successful because they could rely upon resources within their ethnic group, such as the large number of Jewish-owned clothing retail stores and, more particularly, the presence of a skilled co-ethnic labor force."[108] In 1930, fully half of all Canadians working in pawn-shops were Jewish. That year, only 2.2% of Jews were working in law or medicine (though this was double the overall Canadian rate of 1.1%).[109]

Canadian Jews' participation in labour and trade union activism through the 1940s and into midcentury is noteworthy. The Canadian Jewish Labour Committee, whose membership peaked at 50,000, represented trade unions with a large Jewish membership, including the International Ladies Garment Workers Union, the Amalgamated Clothing Workers’ Union, and the United Cap, Hat and Millinery Workers’ Union.[110] Following WWII, Jewish Canadians turned their attention to combating structural antisemitism in the employment:[111] many Canadian universities, boardrooms, banks, educational institutions, professional associations and businesses discriminated against Jewish applicants, or restricted participation and advancement through quotas as a matter of policy.[112]

In the early 1950s, popular support for anti-discrimination legislation increased, and by the 1960s, multiple provinces had created human rights commissions and enacted legislation proscribing discrimination on the basis of race or religion in employment,[113] enabling Jews to participate more fully in a variety of sectors and industries.

It became possible for Jewish lawyers to practice law outside their community beginning in the late 1960s and early 1970s, ultimately resulting in a considerable increase in the number of Jewish lawyers employed in large Canadian law firms in the 1990s. A 1960 study found that although 40% of Jews had grades in the top 10% of their class, only 8% of Jewish lawyers surveyed were employed in large law firms, which resulted in lower wages. By the 1990s, the numbers of Jews and non-Jews employed in large firms had more or less equalized.[114]

Economics

[edit]

According to a 2018 study of the Canadian Jewish community by the Environics Institute for Survey Research, annual household income was reported as follows:[115]

Annual household income
Income Weighted sample
Less than $75k 21%
$75k-$150k 24%
$150k and above 22%
Don't know/No answer 32%

Wealth

[edit]
Samuel Bronfman is a member of the Bronfman Canadian Jewish family dynasty.

The majority of Canadian Jews fall into the middle class (defined as an income between $45,000 and $120,000[116]) or upper-middle class. Some of the wealthiest Canadian Jewish families include the Bronfmans,[117] the Belzbergs, the Diamonds, the Reichmanns,[118] and the Shermans. Canadian Jews comprise roughly 17% of Canadian Business's list of the 100 Richest Canadians.[119]

Poverty

[edit]

As of 2015, the median income among Canadian Jews over the age of 15 years is $30,670, and 14.6% of Canadian Jews live below the poverty line, with poverty concentrated among Jews in the Toronto area.[120] (By comparison, the percentage of non-Jewish Canadians living below the poverty line is 14.8%.) Slightly more Jewish women than Jewish men live in poverty, and poverty is most concentrated among Canadian Jews ages 15–24 and those over the age of 65. There is a strong correlation with level of education attained, with poverty most concentrated among Canadian Jews who had only a secondary education, and the lowest levels of poverty among those who had attained a postgraduate degree.[121]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ DellaPergola, Sergio (2013). Dashefsky, Arnold; Sheskin, Ira (eds.). "World Jewish Population, 2013". Current Jewish Population Reports. Storrs, Connecticut: North American Jewish Data Bank. Archived from [. https://thecjn.ca/podcasts/canadian-jewish-population/ the original] on October 26, 2022. Retrieved October 26, 2022. {{cite web}}: Check |url= value (help)
  2. ^ Shahar, Charles (2011). "The Jewish Population of Canada – 2016 National Household Survey". Berman Jewish Databank. Retrieved September 9, 2014.
  3. ^ "Basic Demographics of the Canadian Jewish Community". The Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs. 2011. Archived from the original on December 2, 2013. Retrieved September 9, 2014.
  4. ^ "Jewish Population of the World". Jewish Virtual Library. 2012. Retrieved September 9, 2014.
  5. ^ "JEWISH POPULATION IN THE WORLD AND IN ISRAEL" (PDF). CBS. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 26, 2011. Retrieved November 22, 2011. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  6. ^ "The Canadian Jewish Experience". Jcpa.org. October 16, 1975. Retrieved November 22, 2011.
  7. ^ Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (February 9, 2022). "Profile table, Census Profile, 2021 Census of Population – Canada [Country]". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved October 26, 2022.
  8. ^ Sheldon Godfrey and Judy Godfrey. Search Out the Land" The Jews and the Growth of Equality in British Colonial America, 1740–1867. McGill Queen's University Press. 1997. pp. 76–77;Bell, Winthrop Pickard. The "Foreign Protestants" and the Settlement of Nova Scotia:The History of a piece of arrested British Colonial Policy in the Eighteenth Century. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1961
  9. ^ "Hart, Aaron". Exposition Shalom Québec. Archived from the original on July 27, 2010. Retrieved March 25, 2009.
  10. ^ "Ezekiel Hart". The Canadian Encyclopedia. April 20, 2022. Retrieved December 22, 2024.
  11. ^ "The Oath or Solemn Affirmation of Allegiance". House of Commons of Canada. October 4, 2004. Retrieved December 23, 2024.
  12. ^ Weinfeld, Morton; Schnoor, Randal F.; Koffman, David S. (2012). "Overview of Canadian Jewry". The American Jewish Year Book. 109/112. [American Jewish Committee, Springer]: 55–90. doi:10.1007/978-94-007-5204-7_2. ISBN 978-94-007-5203-0. ISSN 0065-8987. JSTOR 45373711. Retrieved December 22, 2024.
  13. ^ Stein, Matthew; Perry, Barbara; Levit, Irina (2024). "Punishing "Privilege": Antisemitic Hate Crime in Canada". Journal of Interpersonal Violence. 39 (17–18): 3876–3903. doi:10.1177/08862605241259996. ISSN 0886-2605. PMID 39119653.
  14. ^ Brandeau, Esther Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online
  15. ^ Canada's Jews: A Social and Economic Study of Jews in Canada in the 1930s. Louis Rosenberg, Morton Weinfeld. 1993.
  16. ^ Arnold, Janice (May 28, 2008). "Exhibition celebrates history of Quebec City Jews – The Canadian Jewish News". Cjnews.com. Retrieved August 18, 2017.
  17. ^ a b Canada's Entrepreneurs: From The Fur Trade to the 1929 Stock Market Crash: Portraits from the Dictionary of Canadian Biography. By Andrew Ross and Andrew Smith, 2012
  18. ^ Search Out the Land: The Jews and the Growth of Equality in British Colonial America, 1740–1867. Sheldon Godfrey, 1995
  19. ^ Denis Vaugeois, "Hart, Ezekiel", in Dictionary of Canadian Biography, vol. 7, University of Toronto/Université Laval, 2003, accessed June 9, 2013, online
  20. ^ Bélanger, Claude, ed. (August 23, 2000). "An Act to Grant Equal Rights and Privileges to Persons of the Jewish Religion (1832)". Marianopolis College.
  21. ^ "The Jewish Community of Montreal". The Museum of the Jewish People at Beit Hatfutsot. Archived from the original on June 25, 2018. Retrieved June 25, 2018.
  22. ^ Hinshelwood, N.M. (1903). Montreal and Vicinity: being a history of the old town, a pictorial record of the modern city, its sports and pastimes, and an illustrated description of many charming summer resorts around. Canada: Desbarats & co. by commission of the City of Montreal and the Department of Agriculture. p. 55. Retrieved January 1, 2012.
  23. ^ "Kitchener Public Library – for Genealogists". Archived from the original on August 27, 2006. Retrieved September 9, 2006. Kitchener Public Library
  24. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Schoenfeld, Stuart. "Jewish Canadians". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved June 29, 2020.
  25. ^ Isidore Singer; Cyrus Adler (1907). The Jewish Encyclopedia: A Descriptive Record of the History, Religion, Literature, and Customs of the Jewish People from the Earliest Times to the Present Day. Funk & Wagnalls. p. 286.
  26. ^ Singer and Adler (1907). The Jewish Encyclopedia: A Descriptive Record of the History, Religion, Literature, and Customs of the Jewish People from the Earliest Times to the Present Day. Funk & Wagnalls. p. 286.
  27. ^ Hinshelwood, N.M. (1903). Montreal and Vicinity: being a history of the old town, a pictorial record of the modern city, its sports and pastimes, and an illustrated description of many charming summer resorts around. Canada: Desbarats & co. p. 53. ISBN 978-0-226-49407-4. Retrieved January 1, 2012.
  28. ^ "Biography – OPPENHEIMER, DAVID – Volume XII (1891–1900) – Dictionary of Canadian Biography".
  29. ^ "Canada's first Jewish mayor dies suddenly". The Ottawa Citizen. 121st Year (403): 15. February 1, 1964.
  30. ^ "Ida Siegel with Edmund Scheuer at the Canadian Jewish Farm School, Georgetown". Ontario Jewish Archives. Retrieved July 1, 2014.
  31. ^ Bitonti, Daniel (August 9, 2013). "Remembering Toronto's Christie Pits Riot". Theglobeandmail.com. Retrieved August 18, 2017 – via The Globe and Mail.
  32. ^ a b c d Wilton, P (December 9, 2003). "Days of shame, Montreal, 1934". Canadian Medical Association Journal. 169 (12): 1329. PMC 280601. PMID 14662683.
  33. ^ Lazarus, David (November 25, 2010). "Doctor was central figure in 1934 hospital strike". The Canadian Jewish News. Retrieved July 21, 2021.
  34. ^ "Dr. Sam Rabinovitch and The Notre-Dame Hospital Strike – Hôpital Notre-Dame – Museum of Jewish Montreal". imjm.ca. Retrieved July 21, 2021.
  35. ^ Miller, Yvette Alt (July 18, 2021). "Montreal's Days of Shame: When 75 Doctors Went on Strike until a Jewish Doctor Resigned". aishcom. Retrieved July 21, 2021.
  36. ^ a b c "1: Yiddish culture in Western Canada" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on July 16, 2011. Retrieved May 18, 2011.
  37. ^ Goldsborough, Gordon. "MHS Transactions: The Contribution of the Jews to the Opening and Development of the West". Mhs.mb.ca. Retrieved August 18, 2017.
  38. ^ "Story of Saskatchewan's Jewish farmers goes to national museum". CBC News. July 12, 2013. Retrieved May 18, 2016.
  39. ^ "Alberta". Jewish Virtual Library. American-Israeli Cooperative Enterprise (AICE). Retrieved June 12, 2024.
  40. ^ "Sir Wilfrid Laurier and Canada's Jews". Canada's History. Canada's National History Society. Retrieved June 12, 2024.
  41. ^ "Canadian National Railways Settle Jews in British Columbia". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. September 21, 1926. Retrieved June 12, 2024.
  42. ^ Smith, p.123
  43. ^ Schoenfeld, Stuart (December 3, 2012). "Jewish Canadians". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved May 29, 2020.
  44. ^ a b c d e f g h Waller, Harold. "Montreal, Canada". Jewish Virtual Library. Encyclopedia Judacia. Retrieved June 29, 2020.
  45. ^ Canada, Veterans Affairs (July 24, 2020). "Jewish Canadian service in the Second World War – Veterans Affairs Canada". www.veterans.gc.ca.
  46. ^ a b Curtis, Christopher. "The Bronfman Family". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved June 30, 2020.
  47. ^ Usher, Peter (March 4, 2014). "Jews in the Royal Canadian Air Force, 1940–1945". Canadian Jewish Studies / Études juives canadiennes. 20: 93–114. doi:10.25071/1916-0925.36059.
  48. ^ Beswick, Aaron (December 15, 2013). "Canada turned away Jewish refugees". Retrieved November 24, 2016.
  49. ^ a b Knowles, Valerie Strangers at Our Gates: Canadian Immigration and Immigration Policy, 1540–2006, Toronto: Dundun Press, 2007 page 149.
  50. ^ Ester Reiter and Roz Usiskin, "Jewish Dissent in Canada: The United Jewish People's Order", paper presented on May 30, 2004, at a forum on "Jewish Dissent in Canada", at a conference of the Association of Canadian Jewish Studies (ACJS) in Winnipeg.
  51. ^ Benazon, Michael (May 30, 2004). "Forum on Jewish Dissent". Vcn.bc.ca. Retrieved May 18, 2011.
  52. ^ Franklin Bialystok, Delayed Impact: The Holocaust and the Canadian Jewish Community (Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press, 2000) pp 7–8
  53. ^ a b Menkis, Richard. "Abraham L. Feinberg". Jewish Virtual Encyclopedia. Encyclopaedia Judaica. Retrieved June 23, 2020.
  54. ^ Sangster, Dorothy (October 1, 1950). "The Impulsive Crusader of Holy Blossom". MacLean's. Archived from the original on August 16, 2021. Retrieved June 23, 2020.
  55. ^ Feinberg, Abraham (March 1, 1945). ""Those Jews" We fight Hitler's creed overseas ... but we have a seedling of it right here at home, says this Rabbi". MacLean's. Archived from the original on June 26, 2020. Retrieved June 23, 2020.
  56. ^ a b Girard, Philip  Bora Laskin: Bringing Law to Life, Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2015 page 251
  57. ^ a b c Levine, Allan Seeking the Fabled City: The Canadian Jewish Experience, Toronto: McClelland & Stewart, 2018 p.219
  58. ^ Smith, p. 215
  59. ^ Smith, p. 216
  60. ^ Smith, p. 218
  61. ^ Canadian Jewish News (September 2, 2014). "Archive collects stories of Southern African Jews". Retrieved November 15, 2015.
  62. ^ a b "Louis Rasminsky". Jewish Virtual Encyclopedia. Encyclopaedia Judaica. Retrieved June 30, 2020.
  63. ^ a b Littman, Sol Pure Soldiers Or Sinister Legion: The Ukrainian 14th Waffen-SS Division, Montreal: Black Rose, 2003 p.180
  64. ^ Pugliese, David (May 17, 2018). "Canadian government comes to the defence of Nazi SS and Nazi collaborators but why?". Ottawa Citizen. Retrieved June 30, 2020.
  65. ^ a b c Tugend, Tom (February 7, 1997). "Canada admits letting in 2,000 Ukrainian SS troopers". Jewish News of Northern California. Retrieved June 29, 2020.
  66. ^ Meland, Matthew (June 10, 2016). "Why do Montreal Jews speak English?". National Observatory on Language Rights. Archived from the original on June 24, 2021. Retrieved November 11, 2019.
  67. ^ a b "Project Details". www.environicsinstitute.org. Retrieved June 29, 2021.
  68. ^ "Statistics canada: 2001 Community Profiles". 2.statcan.ca. March 12, 2002. Archived from the original on December 22, 2005. Retrieved May 18, 2011.
  69. ^ "Microsoft Word - Canada_Part1General Demographics_Report.doc" (PDF). Jfgv.org. Retrieved May 18, 2011.
  70. ^ "Report on the Demographic Situation in Canada (Catalogue no. 91-209-XIE)" (PDF). Statistics Canada. 2005. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 30, 2008. Retrieved August 25, 2010.
  71. ^ "CanadianParliamentaryCoalitiontoCombatAntisemitism". Cpcca.ca. Archived from the original on July 6, 2011. Retrieved May 18, 2011.
  72. ^ McQueen, Cynthia (August 12, 2013). "Anti-Semitic vandalism in motion across GTA". Theglobeandmail.com. Retrieved August 18, 2017 – via The Globe and Mail.
  73. ^ "Antisemitism In Canada: Swastikas In Winnipeg". Jewsnews.co.il. August 14, 2013. Archived from the original on August 21, 2016. Retrieved August 18, 2017.
  74. ^ Shefa, Sheri (March 2, 2015). "Sephardi delegation heads to Ottawa, meets PM – The Canadian Jewish News". Cjnews.com. Retrieved August 18, 2017.
  75. ^ "The destination of French Jews, Canada". I24news.fr. Archived from the original on October 6, 2016. Retrieved July 1, 2015.
  76. ^ The Canadian Jewish News. "Will Jews flee Belgium and France for Quebec?". Retrieved June 7, 2015.
  77. ^ a b The Jewish Agency for Israel. "The Jewish Community of Canada: A History of the Canadian Jewish Community". Archived from the original on February 3, 2014. Retrieved June 7, 2015.
  78. ^ Jalalzai, Freshta (March 8, 2024). "The Little-Known Story of Afghanistan's Last Jew". New Lines Magazine. Retrieved April 11, 2024.
  79. ^ "Woman now thought to be Afghanistan's last Jew flees country". Irish Independent. October 29, 2021. Retrieved April 11, 2024.
  80. ^ "Woman now thought to be Afghanistan's last Jew flees country". AP News. October 29, 2021. Retrieved April 11, 2024.
  81. ^ Berman Jewish Databank jewishdatabank.org
  82. ^ "Canada 2001 Census – Jewish Populations in Geographic Areas" (PDF). Jewish Data Bank. Retrieved August 1, 2023.
  83. ^ "Search results". www.jewishdatabank.org. Retrieved June 29, 2019.
  84. ^ Troper, Harold (2017). "Review: Michael Manel, "The Jewish Hour: The Golden Age of Toronto Yiddish Radio Show and Newspaper"". Canadian Jewish Studies. 25 (1): 204–206. doi:10.25071/1916-0925.40029.
  85. ^ CHRISTOPHER DEWOLF, "A peek inside Yiddish Montreal", Spacing Montreal, February 23, 2008.[1]
  86. ^ Spolsky, Bernard. The Languages of the Jews: A Sociolinguistic History. Cambridge University Press, March 27, 2014. ISBN 1139917145, 9781139917148. p. 227.
  87. ^ Spolsky, Bernard. The Languages of the Jews: A Sociolinguistic History. Cambridge University Press, March 27, 2014. ISBN 1139917145, 9781139917148. p. 226.
  88. ^ a b c d Felsen, Vivian (2018). "Preserving Yiddish Culture in Canada: The Remarkable Legacy of Chaim Leib Fuks". Kanade, di Goldene Medine? Perspectives on Canadian-Jewish Literature and Culture / Perspectives sur la littérature et la culture juives canadiennes. Brill | Rodopi. p. 9. ISBN 978-90-04-37941-1. Archived from the original on October 30, 2021. Retrieved February 16, 2022.
  89. ^ Margolis, Rebecca (2011). Jewish Roots, Canadian Soil: Yiddish Cultural Life in Montreal, 1905–1945. McGill-Queen's Press – MQUP. pp. XIX. ISBN 978-0-7735-3812-2.
  90. ^ Wolfe, Elizabeth (April 13, 2020). "To our readers: everything has its season. It is time". Canadian Jewish News. Retrieved October 31, 2020.
  91. ^ Lazarus, David (May 26, 2020). "Canada welcomes two new Jewish outlets, but COVID-19 has media on life support". Times of Israel. Retrieved October 31, 2020.
  92. ^ "About Us". The Canadian Jewish News. Retrieved October 31, 2020.
  93. ^ a b Johnson, Pat (June 26, 2020). "Jewish media struggle, revive". The Jewish Independent. Retrieved October 31, 2020.
  94. ^ Beck, Atara (May 19, 2020). "Canadian Jewish media: 2 new sites vie to replace flagship weekly that folded". World Israel News. Retrieved October 31, 2020.
  95. ^ Cohen, Andrew. "A Note from the Publisher: The Bridge is Now Completed". The Canadian Jewish Record. Canadian Jewish Record. Archived from the original on August 31, 2021. Retrieved December 18, 2021.
  96. ^ "Newsletters". The Canadian Jewish News. Retrieved December 18, 2021.
  97. ^ "Podcasts". The Canadian Jewish News. Retrieved December 18, 2021.
  98. ^ "Community in Canada". World Jewish Congress. Retrieved June 12, 2024. There are also numerous Jewish museums
  99. ^ "Jews of Canada". Jafi.org.il. December 2, 2008. Archived from the original on May 8, 2012. Retrieved November 22, 2011.
  100. ^ a b c "Top 60 Jewish Schools – Hillel". Default. Retrieved June 26, 2021.
  101. ^ "From Immigration To Integration – Chapter Sixteen". Bnaibrith.ca. Archived from the original on March 30, 2012. Retrieved November 20, 2011.
  102. ^ "The Institute for International Affairs Page". Bnaibrith.ca. Archived from the original on March 30, 2012. Retrieved November 20, 2011.
  103. ^ "Carleton University – Hillel: The Foundation for Jewish Campus Life". Hillel. January 8, 2008. Retrieved December 9, 2011.
  104. ^ "Canada's best universities by reputation: Rankings 2021". Macleans.ca. October 8, 2020. Retrieved June 29, 2021.
  105. ^ "Mcgill University – Hillel College Guide". June 28, 2017. Archived from the original on June 28, 2017. Retrieved June 26, 2021.
  106. ^ "Concordia University Sir George And Loyola Campus – Hillel College Guide". June 28, 2017. Archived from the original on June 28, 2017. Retrieved June 26, 2021.
  107. ^ "Economic Life | Multicultural Canada". Multiculturalcanada.ca. Archived from the original on August 13, 2011. Retrieved November 22, 2011.
  108. ^ Hiebert, Daniel (1993). "Jewish Immigrants and the Garment Industry of Toronto, 1901–1931: A Study of Ethnic and Class Relations". Annals of the Association of American Geographers. 83 (2): 243–271. doi:10.1111/j.1467-8306.1993.tb01934.x. JSTOR 2563495. Retrieved December 16, 2021.
  109. ^ Kay, Jonathan (January 23, 2019). "The story of Jewish immigrants to Canada, and how they prospered". The Canadian Jewish News. Retrieved December 16, 2021.
  110. ^ Godwin, Matthew (September 12, 2017). "A legacy worth fighting for: the Left and the Jewish community". PressProgress. The Broadbent Institute. Retrieved December 16, 2021.
  111. ^ Frager, Ruth A.; Patrias, Carmela (2015). "Ethnic, Class and Gender Dynamics among Jewish Labour Activists and Jewish Human Rights Activists". Canadian Jewish Studies / Études juives canadiennes. 21 (1): 143–160. Retrieved December 16, 2021.
  112. ^ Berton, Pierre. "No Jews Need Apply". Maclean's. St. Joseph Communications. Archived from the original on December 16, 2021. Retrieved December 16, 2021.
  113. ^ Abella, Irving (2000). "Presidential Address: Jews, Human Rights, and the Making of a New Canada". Journal of the Canadian Historical Association / Revue de la Société historique du Canada. 11 (1): 3–15. doi:10.7202/031129ar. S2CID 154741819. Retrieved December 16, 2021.
  114. ^ Nigro, Mario; Mauro, Clare. "The Jewish Immigrant Experience and the Practice of Law in Montreal, 1830 to 1990". CanLII. Retrieved December 16, 2021.
  115. ^ Neuman, Keith. "2018 Survey of Jews in Canada". Environics Institute. Retrieved July 4, 2021.
  116. ^ Hogan, Stephanie. "Who is Canada's middle class?". CBC. CBC Radio-Canada. Retrieved September 22, 2021.
  117. ^ Curtis, Christopher G. "Bronfman Family". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Historica Canada. Retrieved September 22, 2021.
  118. ^ Niosi, Jorge. "Reichmann Family". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Historica Canada. Retrieved September 22, 2021.
  119. ^ "Canada's Richest People: The Complete Top 100 Ranking". Canadian Business. St. Joseph Communications. Archived from the original on October 23, 2019. Retrieved September 22, 2021.
  120. ^ "Community Profiles – Jewish Canada". Jewish Federations of Canada. JFC-UIA. Archived from the original on July 9, 2021. Retrieved July 4, 2021.
  121. ^ Shahar, Charles. "2011 National Household Survey Analysis The Jewish Population of Canada (Parts 3 and 4)" (PDF). Jewish Federations of Canada – UIA. Retrieved July 4, 2021.

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Data based on a study by Jewish People Policy Institute (JPPI).
  2. ^ Data based on a study by Jewish People Policy Institute (JPPI).

Bibliography

[edit]

Primary sources

[edit]
  • Jacques J. Lyons and Abraham de Sola, Jewish Calendar with Introductory Essay, Montreal, 1854
  • Le Bas Canada, Quebec, 1857
  • People of Lower Canada, 1860
  • The Star (Montreal), December 30, 1893.

Further reading

[edit]

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainSinger, Isidore; et al., eds. (1901–1906). "Canada". The Jewish Encyclopedia. New York: Funk & Wagnalls.

[edit]