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Holocaust Survivors In Canada Offers Cautionary Tale, Says Author

Holocaust-Survivors_Group-Passover-seder-in-Montreal-4-April-1944_GRAYSCALE_Photo-provided-by-Ariel-GordonThe Manitoban

But after 1950, with the expansion of immigration law to permit the arrival of more Jewish immigrants, government social service provision was stronger and the Jewish community was larger and more prepared for new arrivals. “They came to social services that were more developed, social workers who had better training, and also organizations and communities that had a better sense of the distinct needs of this particular immigrant group,” Goldberg said of the second wave.

Posted in: History on 10/02/2015 | Link to this post on IFP |
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