None Is Too Many: Canada and the Jews of Europe, 1933-1948

None Is Too Many: Canada and the Jews of Europe, 1933-1948

None Is Too Many: Canada and the Jews of Europe, 1933-1948

None Is Too Many: Canada and the Jews of Europe, 1933-1948

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Overview

Winner of the National Jewish Book Award (Holocaust Category)

Winner of the Canadian Historical Association John A. Macdonald Prize

Featured in The Literary Review of Canada 100: Canada’s Most Important Books

[This] is a story best summed up in the words of an anonymous senior Canadian official who, in the midst of a rambling, off-the-record discussion with journalists in 1945, was asked how many Jews would be allowed into Canada after the war … ‘None,’ he said, ‘is too many.’

From the Preface

One of the most significant studies of Canadian history ever written, None Is Too Many conclusively lays to rest the comfortable notion that Canada has always been an accepting and welcoming society. Detailing the country’s refusal to offer aid, let alone sanctuary, to Jews fleeing Nazi persecution between 1933 and 1948, it is an immensely bleak and discomfiting story – and one that was largely unknown before the book’s publication.

Irving Abella and Harold Troper’s retelling of this episode is a harrowing read not easily forgotten: its power is such that, ‘a manuscript copy helped convince Ron Atkey, Minister of Employment and Immigration in Joe Clark’s government, to grant 50,000 “boat people” asylum in Canada in 1979, during the Southeast Asian refugee crisis’ (Robin Roger, The Literary Review of Canada). None Is Too Many will undoubtedly continue to serve as a potent reminder of the fragility of tolerance, even in a country where it is held as one of our highest values.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781442663855
Publisher: University of Toronto Press
Publication date: 08/14/2012
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 384
File size: 4 MB

About the Author

Irving Abella is the J. Richard Shiff Chair for the Study of Canadian Jewry and a professor in the Department of History at York University.


Harold Troper is professor at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education at the University of Toronto. The co-author of None is Too Many: Canada and the Jews (with Irving Abella), his most recent book is The Defining Decade: Identity, Politics, and the Canadian Jewish Community in the 1960s.

Table of Contents

Introduction to New Edition

Preface

Acknowledgement

  1. Where They Could Not Enter
  2. The Line Must be Drawn Somewhere
  3. Der Feter Yiuv ist bei uns
  4. The Children Who Never Came
  5. Ottawa or Bermuda? A Refugee Conference
  6. In the Free and Civilized World
  7. One Wailing Cry
  8. A Pleasant Voyage
  9. Conclusion

Epilogue

Note on Sources

Notes

Index

What People are Saying About This

Bob Rae

“Very few books have had the impact of Irving Abella and Harold Troper's groundbreaking book. Our understanding of anti-Semitism, Canada's racist immigration policies, and our collective failure to save lives, were all transformed by None Is Too Many.”

Howard Adelman

“This is a must-read in Canadian history, not only because of the record of the negative effect on Jews when Canadian help was most needed, but because Abella and Troper's book had such an impact on Canada's future intake of refugees, notably the admission of Indochinese refugees in 1979 and 1980.”

Rabbi Yael Splansky

“Of all of Canada's monuments erected to memorialize the Shoah, none is more impactful than this book. Not made of metal or stone, but of hard truths, it stands the test of time. Abella and Troper's masterpiece of scholarship has proven to be imposing enough to influence our country and every reader's place in it.”

Rabbi Baruch Frydman-Kohl

“Forty years ago, None Is Too Many became a classic of scholarship and a surprising bestseller that played a role in changing Canadian public policy regarding immigration, anti-Semitism and multiculturalism. The superb foreword and afterword by contemporary scholars describes how the book opened up a new type of interdisciplinary history, disclosed a dark Canadian past and created a future for hundreds of thousands of refugees. Dedicated to the memory of co-author Irving Abella and courageous publisher Malcolm Lester, this book remains relevant in a time when intolerance and illiberalism are growing around the globe.”

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