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OverviewMoroccan Jews in France and Canada provides an extensive exploration of the post-colonial migrations of Moroccan Jews to France and Canada. Yolande Cohen, herself a migrant, and her collaborators draw on vivid oral histories to uncover the emotional journeys of departure and exile. Why did Moroccan Jews leave? When and how did this migration unfold? After the establishment of Israel and the Palestinian-Israeli wars, most Moroccan Jews migrated to Israel. Yet a significant more Westernized, minority settled in France and Canada, supported by transnational Jewish organizations. In Montreal, a city with an important multi-ethnic Jewish community, speaking French became crucial for their integration. By tracing these journeys and analyzing the language of exile, Moroccan Jews in France and Canada reveals the deep traumas underlying this historic migration. A powerful and essential account shedding light on a little-known diaspora and its complex legacy. The English and French version of this title, though distinct, complement each other to offer a more comprehensive look at the topic. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Yolande Cohen , Sara Cohen Fournier , Noureddine Harrami , Martin MessikaPublisher: University of Ottawa Press Imprint: University of Ottawa Press ISBN: 9780776645155ISBN 10: 0776645153 Pages: 156 Publication Date: 12 November 2025 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Not yet available This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release. Table of ContentsReviewsDrawing on archival records and oral histories, Cohen and her co-authors track the mobility and experience of Moroccan Jews from their hometowns to Montreal and, in parallel, to France. With analytic rigor, ethnographic detail, and careful historiographic framing, the essays show how migration reshapes citizenship and home in North America. This collection is an indispensable anthropological and historical reference on Moroccan Jewish migration, settlement, and belonging in Québec and France.--Aomar Boum, Maurice Amado Chair in Sephardic Studies and Resident Member of the Academy of the Kingdom of Morocco ""University of California, Los Angeles."" In a brilliant retrospective, Canadian historian Yolande Cohen revisits her life-long fascination with the mid-century resettlement of Moroccan Jews in Montreal, where they not only found refuge, but also novel expressions for their own rich heritage. Elaborated with scientific data as well as highly personal recollections, her story of the integration of African-born Jews into an unfamiliar multicultural environment is a tale of amazing adaptability on one side, and open-hearted generosity on the other.--Susan Gilson Miller, Professor Emerita of History ""University of California, Davis."" Author InformationYolande Cohen (Author) Yolande Cohen is Full Professor of Contemporary History at the Universite du Quebec Montreal and Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada. Knight of Quebec's Ordre national and of France's Legion d'honneur, she received an honorary doctorate from Universite de Montreal and the 2024 ACFAS Andre-Laurendeau prize for humanities, arts and letters. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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