Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

The Defining Decade: Identity, Politics, and the Canadian Jewish Community in the 1960s

Rate this book

The 1960s witnessed a radical transformation in the Canadian Jewish community. The erosion of longstanding barriers of anti-Semitism resulted in increased access for Jews to the economic, political, and social Canadian mainstream. Arguing paradoxically that even as Canada became more accepting, Canadian Jews became more focused on Jewish identity, The Defining Decade examines how the 1960s redefined what it meant to be a Canadian Jew and a Jewish Canadian.

Domestic events such as the Quiet Revolution, the eruption of Neo-Nazi activity, the election of Pierre Elliot Trudeau, and the promise of multiculturalism combined with international affairs such as the Six Day War, Arab rejectionism with regards to Israel, and the explosion of Soviet Jewish activisim to radically reshape Canadian Jewish priorities. In tracing the rapid changes of this tumultuous decade, Harold Troper draws upon a wealth of historical documentation, including more than eighty interviews, to demonstrate that the expression of Canadian Jewishness was an increasingly public - and political - commitment.

384 pages, Paperback

First published August 30, 2010

Loading...
Loading...

About the author

Harold Troper

12 books2 followers

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
2 (33%)
4 stars
1 (16%)
3 stars
3 (50%)
2 stars
0 (0%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 of 1 review
Profile Image for Charles Weinblatt.
Author 5 books44 followers
December 17, 2010
The Defining Decade: Identity, Politics and the Canadian Jewish Community in the 1960’s
by Harold Troper
University of Toronto Press
September, 2010
978-1-4426-1046-0 (pbk.)
978-1-4426-4114-3 (bound)
356 pages
Genre: Non-fiction, History, Canada, 20th Century

Chris Reed, Publicist, 416.978.2239, ext. 248; creed@utpress.utoronto.ca

The Defining Decade: Identity, Politics and the Canadian Jewish Community in the 1960’s
is a very detailed examination of the transformation of the Canadian Jewish community during a tumultuous decade. Although the title includes the words, “in the 1960’s,” it should be noted that this book is a full-blown examination of Canada’s Jewish experience in its entirety. Author Harold Troper delves definitively into the 1960’s, a period of significant unrest and cultural transformation, while describing and analyzing the complete history of Jews in Canada for context. This book would be less valuable without Troper’s detailed examination of the history of the Jewish experience in Canada, a price the reader must pay for context and critical perspective.

In The Defining Decade, Troper has produced a definitive analysis of the diversification, assimilation, revision and perceptions of Canada’s Jewish community. Troper carefully scrutinizes the Jewish communal attachment and involvement with Canadian society.

In prior centuries, Canadian Jews represented little more than a small religious sect that tended to congregate in cities (primarily Montreal and Toronto) and who remained largely segregated and autonomous. They faced varied and significant barriers to participation in Canadian society, compared with their gentile neighbors. But the 20th Century, particularly the years following the Holocaust, produced a sea change for the Jews of Canada. Significant Jewish immigration from Europe and the Middle East created a vast, new category of Canadian Jew, less willing to assimilate than existing Canadian Jews. This was followed by immigration of Russian Jews, again delivering their own unique cultural diversity. All of this change came to a head in the 1960’s, at the same time as the American social and cultural revolution.

The decade of the 1960’s, along with new liberal laws, opened doors for Canadian Jews and created opportunities for societal engagement that did not exist in the past. In prior decades and centuries, Jews were excluded from the higher echelons of Canadian gentry, including government and social integration. Rather than conceal their ethnic and religious heritage, Canadian Jews of the 60’s openly proffered it and they discovered surprisingly little resistance. Yet, despite these new opportunities, Canadian Jews also faced a plethora of obstacles from outside, including a new wave of anti-Semitism, along with anti-Israel sentiment. From within, it brought the dangers of assimilation, including intermarriage and reduced adhesion to orthodox constructs. Steadfast in its proud heritage, Canadian Jews increasingly found themselves fragmented and disparately opinionated.

Troper explores how the concept of Jewish pluralism and social justice was viewed with merit by 1960’s Canadian society, already fairly liberal, even by American standards. The decade of the 60’s was one of significant transformation. Some of the issues Troper examined continue to exist, including anti-Semitism, the role of Jews in separatist Quebec and concern for Israel. Troper concludes that the 1960’s produced a Jewish community that was (and remains) distinctive, confident; politically and socially engaged.

The 1960’s delivered a new Canadian Jewish identity, focused on activism and multi-cultural commitment. And, if the liberal, assimilating decade of the 60’s brought about an increase in intermarriage and a decrease in commitment to the rigid religious structures of the past, the Six Day War produced an awakening and intensification of Jewish identity. Just two decades after the Holocaust, Canadian Jews experienced a renewed pride associated with being Jewish and an intense identification with the perils facing the State of Israel. As with Jews around the world, this bonding with Israel was a new, intense, emotional and enduring condition. It occupied and influenced their intellectual and emotional Canadian Jewish experience.

Troper has drawn upon a vast collection of interviews and historical records as context for The Defining Decade. His references, sources and pictures provide added layers of valuable information. If one can say anything negative about this book, it is in Troper’s deep commitment to the minutia of detailed data. Perhaps the reader cannot sufficiently appreciate the topic without a meticulous comprehension of prior events. Troper’s examination of the Canadian Jewish experience in the 1960’s is delicately detailed, requiring some patience and perseverance on the part of the reader. In return for this patience, the reader is awarded with an outstanding explanation of the transformation of Jews in Canada, from its origins, through the 60’s and into the future.

Reviewer Charles S. Weinblatt is the author of Jacob’s Courage: A Holocaust Love Story (Mazo Publishers 2007). http://jacobscourage.wordpress.com/


Displaying 1 of 1 review