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The Jews of Toronto: A History To 1937
Indigo
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The Jews of Toronto: A History To 1937
By None
Current price: $24.99


By None
The Jews of Toronto: A History To 1937
Current price: $24.99
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Size: Paperback
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The present-day Jewish community of Toronto, its character, its institutions, and to an extent its attitudes, was shaped by the events of the formative one hundred years between the 1830s and 1937. In the first full-scale study of an urban Jewish community in Canada, historian Stephen Speisman traces the origins, settlement patterns, and often peculiar problems, encountered by the immigrant Jew during that period.
The adjustment to the Canadian experience, the tensions between various community components, the strained relationship with the population at large, and the determination to preserve traditional practices and established authority contributed to a life of relative isolation for Toronto Jewry while at the same time forces were working within it to propel local Jews into Canadian society. The Jews of Toronto: A History to 1937 is a unique contribution to the documented record of Toronto’s past, and an invaluable study of the development of immigrant Jewry in Canada.
The present-day Jewish community of Toronto, its character, its institutions, and to an extent its attitudes, was shaped by the events of the formative one hundred years between the 1830s and 1937. In the first full-scale study of an urban Jewish community in Canada, historian Stephen Speisman traces the origins, settlement patterns, and often peculiar problems, encountered by the immigrant Jew during that period.
The adjustment to the Canadian experience, the tensions between various community components, the strained relationship with the population at large, and the determination to preserve traditional practices and established authority contributed to a life of relative isolation for Toronto Jewry while at the same time forces were working within it to propel local Jews into Canadian society. The Jews of Toronto: A History to 1937 is a unique contribution to the documented record of Toronto’s past, and an invaluable study of the development of immigrant Jewry in Canada.


















