Writing on Jews in the Canadian forces focuses on the contributions of Jewish men with little or no acknowledgement of the service of Jewish women. Similarly, scholarship on Canadian women in the military forces of the Second World War is virtually silent on Jewish women’s contributions, and anthologies of servicewomen’s experiences rarely include the accounts of Jewish servicewomen. This article gives voice to the important role played by Jewish women in the Canadian Second World War forces and highlights how the military experience of these Jewish women was uniquely shaped by their gender and ethnicity
This article analyses the federal government pension files of forty Canadian women who nursed for th...
This article examines how Jewish-Canadian identity was inscribed and negotiated on the bodies of Ash...
In 1944, the Canadian Army held an art exhibition in Ottawa. Among the 33 exhibitors were five women...
The Jewish community’s involvement in the Canadian war effort during the Second World War has been a...
Background: The following presentation explores the roles and experiences of Canadian Jewish women o...
A close study of the early contacts between Canadian Jewish soldiers and survivors reveals many of t...
Public history poster on Canada’s military past about the Canadian servicewomen in World War II by s...
This paper examines the Canadian Jewish response to the Holocaust during the Second World War. Rathe...
Military service, seen as the ultimate test of citizenship, was a challenge to minority groups in Ca...
It is appropriate, thirty-six years after the publication of None Is Too Many, to reconsider 1944 fr...
Hannah Director (1886-1970) is a noteworthy, but overlooked, figure in Jewish Canadian historiograph...
This paper focuses on the role of Jews in the Red Army in general and during WWII in particular. His...
This paper focuses on the role of Jews in the Red Army in general and during WWII in particular. His...
Abstract only availableWomen have always been a part of the Israeli military. From the first wars fo...
Review of Double Threat: Canadian Jews, the Military, and World War II by Ellin Bessne
This article analyses the federal government pension files of forty Canadian women who nursed for th...
This article examines how Jewish-Canadian identity was inscribed and negotiated on the bodies of Ash...
In 1944, the Canadian Army held an art exhibition in Ottawa. Among the 33 exhibitors were five women...
The Jewish community’s involvement in the Canadian war effort during the Second World War has been a...
Background: The following presentation explores the roles and experiences of Canadian Jewish women o...
A close study of the early contacts between Canadian Jewish soldiers and survivors reveals many of t...
Public history poster on Canada’s military past about the Canadian servicewomen in World War II by s...
This paper examines the Canadian Jewish response to the Holocaust during the Second World War. Rathe...
Military service, seen as the ultimate test of citizenship, was a challenge to minority groups in Ca...
It is appropriate, thirty-six years after the publication of None Is Too Many, to reconsider 1944 fr...
Hannah Director (1886-1970) is a noteworthy, but overlooked, figure in Jewish Canadian historiograph...
This paper focuses on the role of Jews in the Red Army in general and during WWII in particular. His...
This paper focuses on the role of Jews in the Red Army in general and during WWII in particular. His...
Abstract only availableWomen have always been a part of the Israeli military. From the first wars fo...
Review of Double Threat: Canadian Jews, the Military, and World War II by Ellin Bessne
This article analyses the federal government pension files of forty Canadian women who nursed for th...
This article examines how Jewish-Canadian identity was inscribed and negotiated on the bodies of Ash...
In 1944, the Canadian Army held an art exhibition in Ottawa. Among the 33 exhibitors were five women...