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Preface and Acknowledgments

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My thirty-seven year journey to publish this book began in 1970 after I had assumed my first rabbinical position in Windsor, Ontario. At that time, I had also decided to study for my doctorate and was looking for a suitable topic on which to base my dissertation. Apart from my love of history, what ultimately prompted me to decide to research the background of the Windsor Jewish community was a meeting with Arthur B. Weingarden, then the president of my congregation, which included a visit to the grave of Moses David, the founding father of Windsor’s Jewish community. A whole new world opened up for me when Mr. Weingarden told me that he had in his files some interesting background material on this man and that he was willing to share it with me.

It was during my tenure as spiritual leader of Congregation Beth El that I began writing the early history of Windsor’s Jewish community for my doctorate, which was awarded in 1977. In the early 1980s, a publisher not only suggested that the manuscript be rewritten in a style more suitable for publication, but also encouraged me to further update the manuscript since my research ended in 1940. Within a few years, however, I had embarked on a new rabbinical assignment in California, forcing the project to be put on hold, at least for the time being.

The incentive to complete this project was renewed in 1993, when my family and I came back to the Detroit-Windsor area. I now had easy access to local libraries and other research facilities. Research into some fifty years was required and I was fortunate that my new professional responsibilities allowed me enough spare time to truly focus on this venture. I tackled it with renewed energy and much enthusiasm.

Several histories broadly describing Canada’s Jewish scene had been written and published in the past, but very few had dealt with specific Jewish communities such as Windsor. Despite its comparatively small size, I do believe that its members played an important role in the development of southwestern Ontario.

This book is a two-hundred-year chronicle of the events that took place in Windsor. While writing it, every effort was made to accurately reconstruct the events based on available information provided from a variety of sources and any errors are totally unintentional. In particular, although every effort has been made to trace all the Jews who settled in the Windsor area, either shortly before or soon after the turn of the century, we regret that we were unable to establish the identities of everyone. Every effort has been made with available records and recollections to properly list the names of these early settlers, but errors do occur. Some of the people in question may have changed their names and/or religion, and the descendants of others may not have been aware of our search. I deeply regret any errors I may have made and apologize in advance for any omissions or inaccuracies in regard to family relationships.

I was fortunate to have access to ample data documenting the life and times of pioneer settler, Moses David, and his relationship with Detroit and Montreal. However, I found only scant primary material about others who inhabited the Windsor area at that time. Having chosen to cover the period between 1790 and 1940 for my doctoral dissertation, I perused all available newspaper accounts and existing archives of that era. To chronicle the years from 1940 until the end of the century, I had at my disposal the minutes of board meetings of several organizations — the Windsor Jewish Community Council, the I. L. Peretz Shule, Congregation Beth El, and some pertaining to Shaar Hashomayim Synagogue. I am indebted to Harvey Kessler and Donna Petoran of the Windsor Jewish Federation; to Anna Mae Gumprich, Lorraine Victor, Katerina Stecko, and Connie Cullen of Congregation Shaar Hashomayim; and to Rabbi Jeffrey Ableser, Carol McDowell, and Mary Zaltz of Congregation Beth El for making these records available to me. I would like to take this opportunity to thank Miriam Beckerman for translating the I. L. Peretz Shule minutes from Yiddish into English. Regarding the activities of congregations Tifereth Israel and Shaarey Zedek, I had to rely on oral testimonies from members of these institutions. I wish to express my thanks to them all. I want to extend my appreciation to the Windsor Star for permitting me to use their photos, the Windsor Community Museum, the Shaar Hashomayim Synagogue, the Jewish National Fund, Michael Sumner, and Sara Kirzner. I also thank Martin Gervais for permission to liberally use material from Alan Abram’s book Why Windsor? An Anecdotal History of the Town of Windsor and Essex County (Wilson and Black Moss Press, 1981).

Several individuals were instrumental in making the entire project become a reality. I owe a debt of gratitude to Arthur B. Weingarden for his constant encouragement and support.

Many oral histories were recorded and transcribed for my doctoral dissertation on the early years of Windsor’s Jewish community. I would like to express my thanks to all those who granted me interviews or so willingly responded to my many questions. I would like to thank Ruth Booth, Elaine Cohen, Judy Frank, and George and Donna Lane for their research assistance.

While chronicling the last sixty years, I was greatly assisted by the following men and women who generously supplied me with new material or filled in obvious gaps in my story:

Rabbi Jeffrey Ableser, Pam Albert, Senator David Croll, Rhonda Ellis, Rabbi Edward Feigelman, Gerald Freed, David Glaser, the Honourable Herb Gray, Larry Greene, Rabbi Ira Samuel Grussgott, Diana Giunta, William Hurwitz, Rabbi Miriam Jerris, Dr. Marilyn Miller Kronmal, Sandi Malowitz, the Honourable Mr. Justice Saul Nosanchuk, Burt Pazner, Richard Rosenthal, Rabbi Yosie Rosenzweig, Amy Shafron, Isaac (Izzy) Sigal, Kurt Weinberg, Arthur B. Weingarden, Rabbi Sherwin Wine, Anne Winograd, and Shalamas Zimmerman.

I also wish to commend librarians Maggie Bacon, Ann Swaney, Charla Kramer, and Rochelle Hammontree at the Helen and Mark Osterlin Library at Northwestern Michigan College for their efforts on my behalf, as well as for so hospitably offering me the use of their computers during my frequent visits to Traverse City.

This manuscript has gone through many rewritings over the years. Some years ago, Lesley Wyle became my editor and did an outstanding job with the initial reworking of the manuscript. Throughout the editorial process, she offered me valuable suggestions and ideas with regard to content and style and brought conflicting textual information to my attention.

I appreciate the services provided by a select group of readers I consulted on this project. They include Rabbi Jeffrey Ableser, Belle Adler, Arthur Barat, Herb Brudner, Joseph Burk, Carl Cohen, Jackie Eisenberg, Larry Greene, Nancy (Klein) Helm, Fred Katzman, Harvey Kessler, Jack Shanfield, Isaac (Izzy) Sigal, Rabbi Dr. Samuel Stollman, Paula and Harold Taub, Arthur B. Weingarden, Milton Whiteman, and the Honourable Mr. Justice Carl Zalev. Thanks to their familiarity with Windsor’s history between 1940 and 2000, they not only were able to verify several facts, but also provided me with a great deal of new information about that period.

I extend sincere thanks to Christine Bonhomme for the superb job she did arranging appointments for me, doing extensive fact-checking, transcribing interviews, transferring corrections, and painstakingly co-ordinating all footnotes and checking them for accuracy.

I am also especially grateful to Dr. Larry Kulisek, Professor Emeritus of History at the University of Windsor, for agreeing to write the Foreword for this book. He suggested new ways that this manuscript should be arranged, provided valuable information on how best to connect Windsor communal life in general to the events of the Jewish community. He truly helped my story come to life by reorganizing the wealth of material gathered from so many different sources. Without his patience, diligence, and commitment, this project never could have been brought to fruition.

My thanks to Kirk Howard, president of Dundurn Press, for agreeing to publish this manuscript and for his efforts in bringing it into book form. From my initial discussion with Malcolm Lester, he was an invaluable resource that helped steer this process step-by-step and stood by me until its conclusion. He introduced me to Andrea Knight, who did the final editing. I want to thank her for her many hours of work in adjusting the text and footnotes to conform to the same style and ensure the fewest possible errors. As a historian herself, I am much indebted to her for her valuable work.

I would like to make particular mention, with my sincere thanks, of the most generous support I received from the Morris and Beverly Baker Foundation. These funds helped cover some of the expenses incurred in connection with this project.

Last but not least, I wish to thank my dear wife, Carol, for the love and encouragement she showed me during the very long time it took to research, write, and complete this book. I also commend her for her patience, having had to put up with countless boxes of reference material and other files used in this study that cluttered our various homes for a considerable length of time. She now can reclaim all that space and bring our house back to normal!

Farmington Hills, Michigan

J.V.P.

The Jews of Windsor, 1790-1990

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