Jump to content

United Jewish People's Order

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from United Jewish Peoples Order)
United Jewish People's Order
FormationApril 1926; 98 years ago (1926-04)
Legal statusActive
Headquarters585 Cranbrooke Avenue
Toronto, Ontario
Official languages
Yiddish, English
Executive Director
Sarena Sairan
AffiliationsCPA, CSJO, IFSHJ, IISHJ, IJV Canada, JVP
Websiteujpo.org
Formerly called
Jewish Labour League Mutual Benefit Society

The United Jewish People's Order is a Jewish cultural, political and educational fraternal organization in Canada. It is secular and socialist. The UJPO traces its history to the founding of the Jewish Labour League Mutual Benefit Society in 1926.

History

[edit]

Early history

[edit]

After the Russian Revolution and the creation of the Communist Party, divisions within the Arbeiter Ring became increasingly bitter. In Toronto, the pro-Bolshevik women withdrew from the Ring in 1923, forming the Jewish Working Women's League (Yiddish Arbeiter Froyen Farein).[1] When it was clear that control of the organization would stay in the hands of those critical of the Revolution, the men also withdrew and formed the Jewish Labour League Mutual Benefit Society in 1926, which became a social and intellectual home for Jewish Communists.[2] The Canadian Workers' Circle was similarly formed in Montreal and Winnipeg. The two organizations merged on 4 October 1945 to form the UJPO.[3]

At its peak in the 1940s and 1950s, the UJPO had more than 2,500 members nationwide with branches established in Hamilton and Niagara Falls, Calgary, and Vancouver, among others. The UJPO's leadership included well-known Jewish Communists and pro-Soviet activists, including Sholem Shtern, J. B. Salsberg, Joseph Zuken, Annie Buller, Sam Carr, and Fred Rose.[4] The UJPO was active in supporting Jewish settlement in Birobidzhan through the Canadian Biro-Bidjan Committee.[4]

Cold War era

[edit]

The Toronto branch of the UJPO was originally housed in the Jewish Workers' Cultural Centre on Brunswick Avenue, just north of Kensington Market, and then for many years in its own building on Christie Street, overlooking Christie Pits.[5] UJPO's headquarters in Montreal were in the Morris Winchevsky Cultural Centre on de l'Esplanade Avenue from 1947 onwards. UJPO Montreal also operated the Morris Winchevsky Yiddish School on Villeneuve Street West and operated summer camps such as the Nitgedeiget. The UJPO headquarters included, as a unique feature, a second story balcony with a five-foot-tall parapet modelled on the balconies in Moscow's Red Square from which Soviet leaders would address the crowd below.

On January 27, 1950, the group's Montreal headquarters were closed under the Padlock Law, with boxes of seized books, files and organizational material carted away by the Quebec Provincial Police. Following the raid, the building was sold to the Farband, a Labour Zionist organization, which used the building from 1951 until 1968, with the first floor being occupied by Glatt's, a kosher butcher from 1962 until the 2010s.[6][7] In 1951, the UJPO was expelled from the Canadian Jewish Congress for opposing German re-armament,[8] not to be re-admitted until 1995.[9]

After 1955, Sam Carr, a former organizer for the Labor-Progressive Party (as the Communist Party of Canada was known), became active in the UJPO and was elected National Secretary in 1964, a position he would hold until 1986.[10] During the crisis resulting from the release of the Secret Speech in 1956, prominent Party member J. B. Salsberg returned from a trip to the Soviet Union, where he found rampant Party-sponsored antisemitism and suppression of Jewish culture.[11] Salsberg's findings were rejected by the Communist Party (then known as the Labour-Progressive Party) and led to his suspension from its leading bodies. Ultimately, the crisis resulted in the departure from the Communist Party of the UJPO, Salsberg, Robert Laxer and many of the Party's Jewish members in 1956.[11]

In 1959 about one third of the UJPO's membership (including long-time leader J. B. Salsberg) left to start a new organization called the New Fraternal Jewish Association, feeling that the UJPO was not critical enough of the Soviet Union.[12] In the years following World War II, as the Jewish community moved north along Bathurst Street, the UJPO moved in 1960 to its current location at the Winchevsky Centre in the Bathurst and Lawrence area.[13]

Recent history

[edit]

UJPO's sections in Winnipeg and Toronto continue to engage in a wide variety of political and cultural activities. UJPO Toronto's social justice committee has been active in organizing campaigns and speakers on a wide range of issues including labour and refugee rights; anti-racism and allyship; LGBTQ rights and opposition to homophobia and transphobia; aboriginal land rights and indigenous justice; Black Lives Matter; opposition to the Israeli "occupation" and bombing of Gaza; the campaigns to prevent the prosecution and extradition of Canadian academic Hassan Diab; and numerous campaigns against Islamophobia and anti-Semitism. The organization's Indigenous Solidarity Working Group has been active in reaching out to local Indigenous groups to promote Settler-Indigenous Solidarity. Continuing the organization's decades-long mission to promote Yiddish culture, UJPO-Toronto organizes a monthly drop-in singing group, Zing! Zing! Zing! and a Yiddish learning and discussion group, Red Yiddish. While the membership of UJPO has a wide range of views on Israel/Palestine, the organization has long opposed the Israeli Occupation and promoted Palestinian rights. In 2011, the United Jewish Appeal and Canadian Jewish Congress severed their relations with UJPO's Winchevsky Centre in Toronto after the organization hosted a panel discussion featuring, among other speakers, anti-Zionist activist and Auschwitz survivor Hajo Meyer, a member of the International Jewish Anti-Zionist Network.[14]

Activities

[edit]

The UJPO has branches in Winnipeg, Hamilton, and Toronto, where it operates the Winchevsky Centre, named after the famed Jewish socialist poet Morris Winchevsky. The Toronto branch sponsors several groups including the Morris Winchevsky School which holds classes at the 918 Bathurst; the drop-in singing group, Zing! Zing! Zing!, and the Yiddish learning group, Red Yiddish. UJPO Toronto also owns Camp Naivelt, a socialist Jewish cottage community in Brampton, Ontario. For decades, the Vancouver branch published a national progressive Jewish magazine Outlook, and the Winnipeg section runs a number of cultural and educational activities.[15][11]

The now defunct Toronto Jewish Folk Choir held well attended concerts, several of which included long-time UJPO supporter and friend Paul Robeson, featuring Yiddish and Hebrew music. Another contribution to music made, indirectly, by the UJPO was the founding of the folk group The Travellers, which originated at Camp Naivelt in the 1950s.[16] Zal Yanofsky—the son of prominent political cartoonist Avrom Yanovsky—spent his childhood years at Camp Naivelt and would later go on to found the Loving Spoonful with John Sebastian in 1964. Pete Seeger and a number of other prominent folk music figures including Phil Ochs often visited and sang at Camp Naivelt.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Reiter, Ester (Spring 2002). "Secular Yiddishkait: Left Politics, Culture, and Community". Labour/Le Travail. 49. Canadian Committee on Labour History: 121–146. doi:10.2307/25149216. JSTOR 25149216.
  2. ^ Lambertson, Ross (Spring 2001). ""The Dresden Story": Racism, Human Rights, and the Jewish Labour Committee of Canada". Labour/Le Travail. 47. Canadian Committee on Labour History: 48. JSTOR 25149113.
  3. ^ Elazar, Daniel J.; Brown, Michael; Robinson, Ira, eds. (2003). "Secular Organizations". Not Written in Stone: Jews, Constitutions, and Constitutionalism in Canada. University of Ottawa Press. pp. 181–184. JSTOR j.ctt1ckpg27.18.
  4. ^ a b Srebrnik, Henry Felix (2008). Jerusalem on the Amur: Birobidzhan and the Canadian Jewish Communist Movement, 1924–1951. McGill-Queen's University Press. OCLC 632050111.
  5. ^ Tulchinsky, Gerald (2013). Joe Salsberg: A Life of Commitment. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-1-4426-1432-1.
  6. ^ Smith, Stephen (19 February 2017). "Collapsed Mile End building once targeted by anti-communist Padlock Law". CBC News. Montreal.
  7. ^ Moses, Zev (20 April 2012). "A balcony under threat in Balconville". Third Solitude Series. Museum of Jewish Montreal.
  8. ^ "United Jewish People's Order".
  9. ^ Reiter, Ester; Usiskin, Roz (30 May 2004). Jewish Dissent in Canada: The United Jewish People's Order. Forum on Jewish Dissent. Winnipeg: Association of Canadian Jewish Studies.
  10. ^ Momryk, Myron (Autumn 2011). "Ignacy Witczak's Passport, Soviet Espionage and the Origins of the Cold War in Canada". Polish American Studies. 68 (2). University of Illinois Press: 82. JSTOR 23075179.
  11. ^ a b c Tulchinsky, Gerald (Fall 2005). "Family Quarrel: Joe Salsberg, the 'Jewish' Question, and Canadian Communism". Labour/Le Travail. 56. Archived from the original on 14 February 2012.
  12. ^ Abella, Irving (1977). "Portrait of a Jewish Professional Revolutionary: The Recollections of Joshua Gershman". Labour/Le Travail. 2. Canadian Committee on Labour History: 184–213. doi:10.2307/25139902. JSTOR 25139902.
  13. ^ "Our History: 80 Years Strong". The Winchevsky Centre. Archived from the original on 5 February 2012. Retrieved 21 November 2018.
  14. ^ "UJA, CJC sever ties with Winchevsky Centre". The Canadian Jewish News. 10 February 2011.
  15. ^ "Who We Are" (PDF). United Jewish People's Order. 2004. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 March 2016.
  16. ^ Gladstone, Bill (14 October 2016). "Archives house valuable artifacts of Canada's Jewish left". The Canadian Jewish News.
[edit]