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Moroccan Jews in France and Canada

(Hardback)

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Publishing Details

Full Title:

Moroccan Jews in France and Canada

Contributors:

By (Author) Yolande Cohen
Contributions by Sara Cohen Fournier
Contributions by Noureddine Harrami
Contributions by Martin Messika
Contributions by Stephanie Tara Schwartz

ISBN:

9780776645155

Publisher:

University of Ottawa Press

Imprint:

University of Ottawa Press

Publication Date:

29th January 2026

Country:

Canada

Classifications

Readership:

Professional and Scholarly

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Population and migration geography

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

166

Dimensions:

Width 152mm, Height 229mm

Description

In this volume are gathered articles published by Yolande Cohen and her team, offering for a first time a global perspective on Moroccan Jews post-colonial migrations to France and Canada. Having herself migrated from Morocco to Montreal, she is uniquely attuned to the difficulties of living through such a massive exile. Why did they leave Morocco When did this migration happen And how can we analyze their journey

She explores the many vivid memories of departures that she encountered when collecting oral histories of migrants both in France and in Quebec. She finds the deep attachment some of them have to their King and to Morocco, making it an exception in the Arab Muslim world. The main disruptive forces in the displacement of these populations were French colonialism and its emancipatory promises and Zionism, both messianic and modern.

After the establishment of the State of Israel and the subsequent Israel-Arab wars, most of them joined in the mass exodus of Jews from Arab lands, leaving their countries to go to Israel. With the ending of the French colonial empire and the decolonization process, a minority of westernized Jews went to France and to Canada, with the help of transnational Jewish organizations.

In Montreal, a city with a strong multi-ethnic Jewish Community, those migrants understood the crucial aspect of French language as an essential factor of integration. Yet, analyzing their trajectories and the words they used to represent their exile, allows us to understand the underlying traumas of their exiles.

Author Bio

Yolande 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 Ordre national, and of France Legion d'honneur, she has received an Honorific Doctorate from Universite de Montreal and ACFAS Andre Laurendeau 2024 prize for human sciences, arts and letters. Fervent adept of oral history, she has shown the multiple facets of women's and gender history in France and Canada and developed a unique historical perspective of Moroccan Jews' complex migrations patterns in the post-Shoah period.

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