Holocaust Survivors in Canada

Holocaust Survivors in Canada

Author: Adara Goldberg

Publisher: Univ. of Manitoba Press

Published: 2015-09-11

Total Pages: 476

ISBN-13: 0887554946

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In the decade after the Second World War, 35,000 Jewish survivors of Nazi persecution and their dependants arrived in Canada. This was a watershed moment in Canadian Jewish history. The unprecedented scale of the relief effort required for the survivors, compounded by their unique social, psychological, and emotional needs challenged both the established Jewish community and resettlement agents alike. Adara Goldberg’s Holocaust Survivors in Canada highlights the immigration, resettlement, and integration experience from the perspective of Holocaust survivors and those charged with helping them. The book explores the relationships between the survivors, Jewish social service organizations, and local Jewish communities; it considers how those relationships—strained by disparities in experience, language, culture, and worldview—both facilitated and impeded the ability of survivors to adapt to a new country. Researched in basement archives and as well as at Holocaust survivors’ kitchen tables, Holocaust Survivors in Canada represents the first comprehensive analysis of the resettlement, integration, and acculturation experience of survivors in early postwar Canada. Goldberg reveals the challenges in responding to, and recovering from, genocide—not through the lens of lawmakers, but from the perspective of “new Canadians” themselves.


Sustaining Memories: Stories of Canadian Holocaust Survivors

Sustaining Memories: Stories of Canadian Holocaust Survivors

Author: Multiple authors

Publisher:

Published: 2020-01-14

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9781988065571

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The Azrieli Foundation established the Sustaining Memories Project to help survivors write their stories. A unique partnership between survivors and volunteer writing partners who were trained to work with Holocaust survivors on recording and transcribing their stories, volunteers spent countless hours on these testimonies. The strength of the bonds that form when a volunteer and a survivor create a memoir, of the emotional challenges that a survivor faces in the telling and the understanding, and the insight that the listener experiences were all part of an incredible journey. Excerpts of these co-written memoirs, never before published, are produced in this anthology to give readers a wide range of understanding of the varieties of experiences of Holocaust survivors. Sustaining Memories gives voice to Canadian Jews who suffered through ghettos, camps, hiding, fighting in the underground, as refugees in foreign countries or passing as non-Jews in daily fear of betrayal. Following their liberation, survivors often had to congregate in displaced persons camps, where many married, had children and waited years for countries to offer them new homes. Some would end up in the detention camps of Cyprus on their way to pre-state Israel; others found themselves locked behind the Iron Curtain for decades. Between 1946 and the 1980s, they all built new lives in Canada.


The Tailor Project

The Tailor Project

Author: Andrea Knight

Publisher:

Published: 2020-10-20

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9781772601442

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The remarkable story of approximately 2,500 Jewish tailors and their families who immigrated to Canada between 1948 and 1949 through the Garment Workers' Scheme in the aftermath of the Holocaust.


By Chance Alone

By Chance Alone

Author: Max Eisen

Publisher: Harlequin

Published: 2020-01-07

Total Pages:

ISBN-13: 1488059748

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An award-winning, internationally bestselling Holocaust memoir in the tradition of Elie Wiesel’s Night and Primo Levi’s Survival in Auschwitz In the spring of 1944, gendarmes forcibly removed Tibor “Max” Eisen and his family from their home, brought them to a brickyard and eventually loaded them onto crowded cattle cars bound for Auschwitz-Birkenau. At fifteen years of age, Eisen survived the selection process and was inducted into the camp as a slave laborer. More than seventy years after the Nazi camps were liberated by the Allies, By Chance Alone details Eisen’s story of survival: the backbreaking slave labor in Auschwitz I, the infamous death march in January 1945, the painful aftermath of liberation and Eisen’s journey of physical and psychological healing. Ultimately, the book offers a message of hope as the author finds his way to a new life.


Victory Over Nazism

Victory Over Nazism

Author: Bronia Sonnenschein

Publisher:

Published: 1999

Total Pages: 162

ISBN-13:

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A collection dedicated to Bronia Sonnenschein, a Holocaust survivor, now living in Canada. Contains her own eyewitness accounts, excerpts from her correspondence, public speeches mentioning her experience, and some other materials pertaining to the Holocaust. Sonnenschein was born in Vienna; during World War II she was in the Lodz ghetto, and from August 1944 in the concentration camps of Auschwitz and Stutthof, in a labor camp near Dresden, and in Theresienstadt.