Littérature scientifique sur le sujet « Jewish War Veterans of Canada »

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Articles de revues sur le sujet "Jewish War Veterans of Canada"

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Geheran, Michael J. « Remasculinizing the Shirker : The JewishFrontkämpferunder Hitler ». Central European History 51, no 3 (septembre 2018) : 440–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s000893891800064x.

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AbstractThis article examines the impact of Nazi persecution on the gender identity of German-Jewish veterans of World War I. National Socialism threatened to erase everything these Jewish men had achieved and sacrificed. It sought to destroy the identity they had constructed as soldiers in the service of the Fatherland, as well as the high status they had earned asFrontkämpfer(front-line fighters) in the Great War, upon which their sense of masculinity identity rested. Although diminished and disempowered by Nazi terror, Jewish veterans were able to orient themselves toward hegemonic ideals of martial masculinity, which elevated military values as the highest expression of manhood, giving them a space to assert themselves and defy the Nazi classificationJew. For the Jewish men who fought in World War I, the Nazi years became a battle to reclaim their status and masculine honor. They believed that the manner in which they handled themselves under the Nazis was a reflection of their character: as men who had been tried and tested in the trenches, their responses to persecution communicated their identity as soldiers, as Jews, and as Germans.
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Burgard, Antoine. « ‘The fight on educating the public to equal treatment for all will have to come later’ : Jewish Refugee Activism and Anti-Immigration Sentiment in Immediate Post-War Canada ». London Journal of Canadian Studies 34, no 1 (14 novembre 2019) : 103–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.14324/111.444.ljcs.2019v34.006.

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Canadian immigration policy of the 1930s and 1940s was the most restrictive and selective in the country’s history, making it one of the countries to take the smallest number of Jewish refugees fleeing the Nazi persecution. After the war, Canada slowly opened its borders, but only through small token gestures in 1947 and 1948. This article explores how the main Canadian Jewish organization lobbied for the welcoming of more Jewish refugees and migrants in the immediate aftermath of the war. It examines how their perception of the public’s anti-Jewish immigrant sentiment and of the Canadian immigration policy’s discriminatory mechanisms informed their strategies. During that period, the Canadian Jewish Congress prioritized constant and subtle action with the government instead of trying to set up mass mobilization campaigns. This strategic shift is an overshadowed but essential chapter of both Jewish and human rights histories in Canada. This article invites a re-evaluation of Jewish activism’s role in ending ethnic selection in the Canadian immigration policy and promoting refugee rights. It contributes to broadening our understanding of how minority groups lobbied and worked with hostile media and authorities.
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Campbell, Lara. « “We who have wallowed in the mud of Flanders” : First World War Veterans, Unemployment and the Development of Social Welfare in Canada, 1929-1939 ». Journal of the Canadian Historical Association 11, no 1 (9 février 2006) : 125–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/031134ar.

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Abstract During the Great Depression, First World War veterans built on a history of post-war political activism to play an important role in the expansion of state-sponsored social welfare. Arguing that their wartime sacrifices had not been properly rewarded, veterans claimed that they were entitled to state protection from poverty and unemployment on the home front. The rhetoric of patriotism, courage, sacrifice, and duty created powerful demands for jobs, relief, and adequate pensions that should, veterans argued, be administered as a right of social citizenship and not a form of charity. At the local, provincial, and national political levels, veterans fought for compensation and recognition for their war service, and made their demands for jobs and social security a central part of emerging social policy.
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Crim, Brian E. « Comrades Betrayed : Jewish World War I Veterans under Hitler Michael Geheran ». Holocaust and Genocide Studies 35, no 3 (1 décembre 2021) : 476–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/hgs/dcab042.

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Nielsen, Philipp. « Comrades Betrayed : Jewish World War I Veterans under Hitler by Michael Geheran (review) ». Antisemitism Studies 7, no 1 (mars 2023) : 208–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.2979/ast.2023.a886000.

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Organ, Barbara. « Open Your Hearts : The Story of the Jewish War Orphans in Canada ». Studies in Religion/Sciences Religieuses 28, no 2 (juin 1999) : 259–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/000842989902800232.

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Struthers, James. « “They suffered with us and should be compensated” : Entitling Caregivers of Canada's Veterans ». Canadian Journal on Aging / La Revue canadienne du vieillissement 26, S1 (2007) : 117–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/cja.26.suppl_1.117.

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ABSTRACTThis article examines the struggle to win lifetime eligibility for selected home care benefits provided through the Veterans Independence Program (VIP) for veterans' widows in recognition of their years of unpaid caregiving – a policy change eventually implemented between 2003 and 2004. It explores how arguments on their behalf shifted from discourses of dependency, cost-saving, and compassion to ones of entitlement and commemoration between 1981 and 2004 as the large cohort of Second World War veterans and their wives moved towards the end of their lives. This policy victory for veterans' widows marked a historic shift in mandate for Veterans Affairs Canada and an important recognition by the state of unpaid caregiving as a form of national service. If Canadians are to learn from this example, however, it must be through seeing all caregiving labour – not just that of veterans' wives – as equally heroic and worthy of compensation.
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R. Scott Sheffield. « Veterans' Benefits and Indigenous Veterans of the Second World War in Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and the United States ». Wicazo Sa Review 32, no 1 (2017) : 63. http://dx.doi.org/10.5749/wicazosareview.32.1.0063.

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Engel, Charles C., Kenneth C. Hyams et Ken Scott. « Managing future Gulf War Syndromes : international lessons and new models of care ». Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B : Biological Sciences 361, no 1468 (24 mars 2006) : 707–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2006.1829.

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After the 1991 Gulf War, veterans of the conflict from the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, Australia and other nations described chronic idiopathic symptoms that became popularly known as ‘Gulf War Syndrome’. Nearly 15 years later, some 250 million dollars in United States medical research has failed to confirm a novel war-related syndrome and controversy over the existence and causes of idiopathic physical symptoms has persisted. Wartime exposures implicated as possible causes of subsequent symptoms include oil well fire smoke, infectious diseases, vaccines, chemical and biological warfare agents, depleted uranium munitions and post-traumatic stress disorder. Recent historical analyses have identified controversial idiopathic symptom syndromes associated with nearly every modern war, suggesting that war typically sets into motion interrelated physical, emotional and fiscal consequences for veterans and for society. We anticipate future controversial war syndromes and maintain that a population-based approach to care can mitigate their impact. This paper delineates essential features of the model, describes its public health and scientific underpinnings and details how several countries are trying to implement it. With troops returning from combat in Afghanistan, Iraq and elsewhere, the model is already getting put to the test.
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Chanco, Christopher. « Refugees, Humanitarian Internationalism, and the Jewish Labour Committee of Canada 1945–1952 ». Canadian Jewish Studies / Études juives canadiennes 30 (26 avril 2021) : 12–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.25071/1916-0925.40182.

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This article examines the humanitarian internationalism of the Jewish Labour Committee of Canada (JLC) between 1938 and 1952. Throughout WWII, the JLC sent aid to European resistance movements, and in its aftermath participated in the “garment workers’ schemes,” a series of immigration projects that resettled thousands of displaced persons in Canada. Undertaken independently by the Jewish-Canadian community, with the assistance of trade unions, the projects worked to overcome tight border restrictions and early Cold War realpolitik. In doing so, the JLC united Jewish institutions, trade unionists, social democrats, and anti-fascists across Europe and North America. It also acted in a pivotal moment in the evolution of Canada’s refugee system and domestic attitudes toward racism. As such, the JLC’s history is a microcosm for the shifting nature of relations between Jews, Canada, and the left writ large. Cet article examine l’internationalisme humanitaire du Jewish Labour Committee du Canada (JLC) entre 1938 et 1952. Tout au long de la Deuxième Guerre mondiale, le JLC a envoyé de l’aide aux mouvements de résistance européens et a participé, après l’armistice, aux « garment workers’ schemes », une série de projets d’immigration qui ont permis de réinstaller des milliers de personnes déplacées au Canada. Entrepris indépendamment par la communauté juive canadienne et avec l’aide de syndicats, ces projets ont permis de surmonter les restrictions frontalières et la realpolitik du début de la guerre froide. Ce faisant, le JLC a réuni des institutions juives, des syndicalistes, des sociaux-démocrates et des antifascistes de toute l’Europe et de l’Amérique du Nord. Il a également agi à un moment charnière de l’évolution du système canadien d’octroi de l’asile et des attitudes de la population à l’égard du racisme. En tant que telle, l’histoire du JLC est un microcosme de la nature changeante des relations entre les Juifs, le Canada et la gauche au sens large.
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Thèses sur le sujet "Jewish War Veterans of Canada"

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Schroeder, Elfrieda Neufeld. « Fragmented identity, a comparative study of German Jewish and Canadian Mennonite literature after World War II ». Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 2001. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk3/ftp04/NQ60565.pdf.

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Comartin, Justin. « Humanitarian Ambitions - International Barriers : Canadian Governmental Response to the Plight of the Jewish Refugees (1933-1945) ». Thèse, Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/10393/23992.

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From 1933 to 1945, thousands of European Jews attempted to gain access to Canada in order to escape Nazi oppression. This thesis examines Canada’s immigration records and policies during this period. In addition to bringing light to key issues concerning popular Canadian perceptions of Jewish immigrants and refugees in the thirties and forties, this history raises important questions about the Canadian government and ethical responsibility in a time of war; about the relationship between government policy and provincial politics; and about the position taken by Canada’s longest serving Prime Minister, William Lyon Mackenzie King, and his Cabinet. The author’s research brings attention to Irving Abella and Harold Troper’s work, None is too Many, which, since its publication in 1982, has stood as the authoritative work on the subject. A variety of important issues which are not treated in detail in this earlier monograph are examined in depth in this analysis: The prevalence of anti-Semitism in French and English Canada, and the Canadian immigration record are treated in Chapter 2. Chapter 3 and 4 investigate accusations that William Lyon Mackenzie King, Ernest Lapointe, Frederick Charles Blair, and Vincent Massey harboured anti-Semitic views. It is found that such charges suffer from a serious lack of evidence. Although sometimes the language used by these men in their correspondence and letters can be shocking to the modern reader, it was the colloquial language during their lives. Furthermore, their personal documents often exhibit evidence of sincere sympathy for the Jews of Europe, and frustration with Canadian popular opinion. The author concludes that collective memory of the Holocaust has affected perceptions concerning the Canadian immigration record during the period in question. Anti-immigration sentiment was strong in Canada during the Depression. Nevertheless, as the Canadian Government became increasingly aware of the persecution of Jews within the Reich, particularly following the events of Kristallnacht in November of 1938, measures were put into place to ease Jewish immigration to Canada, such as including refugees among the admissible classes of immigrants. The Canadian Government did not begin to receive information concerning the extermination of European Jewry until 1942. By this time, there was hardly anything Canada could do. Heinrich Himmler had forbidden Jewish emigration from the Reich in October of 1941, the war was in full swing by 1942, and ships carrying refugees and PoWs were not safe from U-boat attacks. From 1933 to 1945 Canada allowed 8,787 Jews into the country. However, all immigration to Canada was slowed during this time. Consequently, Jews, in actuality, represented a higher percentage of immigrants arriving in Canada, at this time, than they had from 1923 to 1932. This illustrates Canada’s doors we not closed specifically to Jewish refugees during the Depression and Second World War.
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Gervais, Deanne Marie. « Intergenerational life review group with Canadian World War II veterans and Canadian peacekeepers ». Thesis, 2001. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/11530.

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The following research study was an ethnographic case study of an intergenerational life review/guided autobiography group consisting of four World War II veterans, five peacekeepers and one member who was a World War II veteran, a Korean veteran and a peacekeeper. The group members ranged in age from 30 to 82. All ten group members participated in a six week life review program (LRP) followed by an individual audio-taped interview. This interview was followed up by a validation interview. The purpose of this research was twofold. There were the research goals coupled with the goals, and intended benefits to, the participants. These goals and benefits often overlapped. The research goal was to answer four questions posed at the beginning of the study. They were: 1) What are the specific competencies, skills and knowledge needed for successful re-entry into civilian life? 2) Can these skills, competencies, and knowledge be successfully passed on in an intergenerational LRP involving both World War II veterans and peacekeepers? 3) Will the intergenerational passing on and receiving of these competencies, skills and knowledge lead to increased feelings of efficacy on the part of both World War II veterans and peacekeepers? 4) What changed for the individual during the course of the program and do they view their lives differently after the guided autobiography/life review experience? The goals, or intended benefits, to the participants were not formulated before the study but instead the method of grounded theory was employed. Grounded theory can be described as "a general methodology for developing theory that is grounded in data, systematically gathered and analyzed" (Strauss & Corbin, 1994, p. 278). Evidence emerged for two of Birren and Deutchman's (1991) seven outcomes. Those two outcomes were: 1) recognition of past adaptive strategies and application to current needs and problems and 2) development of friendships with other group members. Ten new outcomes were also identified. They were: 1) normalization of one's reactions to trauma or to events (e.g. re-entry); 2) the receipt of specific advice, ideas, or assistance; 3) engendering of hope; 4) relief or emotional release in telling one's story; 5) feeling heard/being listened to; 6) relating/commonality with others; 7) new awareness or heightened awareness of one's contributions and/or abilities; 8) new awareness or heightened awareness of others' contributions and/or abilities; 9) positive feelings obtained from others' responses to one's story; and 10) a new appreciation of one's life through comparison with other group members' lives.
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Smith, Nathan. « Comrades and Citizens : Great War Veterans in Toronto, 1915-1919 ». Thesis, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/1807/65491.

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This is a history of returned soldiers of the Great War in Toronto covering the period from when they began returning home in 1915 through to the end of demobilization in late 1919. Based largely in newspaper research, the focus is the discourse of returned men, as they were frequently called, and the role they played in Toronto and in Canada more broadly. The dissertation examines veterans' attitudes, the opinions they expressed, the goals they collectively pursued, the actions they took and their significance as actors and symbols in the public sphere. The study shows that during and immediately after the war returned soldiers played a prominent role in public debate over conscription and wartime politics, the status of non-British immigrants in Canada, the Red Scare and re-establishment policy. In exploring these topics the study elaborates on the identities veterans collectively adopted and constructed for themselves as comrades and citizens. Class, definitions of masculinity, British-Canadian ethno-nationality and experience as soldiers all affected formulations of veteran citizenship and comradeship. Returned soldiers' representations of their citizenship resonated powerfully in Canadian society. The experiences and symbolism of returned soldiers generated interest in civilian society that granted them easy access to the public sphere and encouraged pro-war politicians to use returnees to promote the war effort. Veterans took advantage of their access to the press and public stages to broadcast their own views and claim that their service gave them special rights to intervene in public affairs. Comradeship was vitally important to returned soldiers and set them apart from civilians, but it was neither a simple nor stable category. Veterans' debates and the history of veterans' associations testify to the fact that collective service in the war did not erase civilian identities and create a stable platform for united collective activism after the war. Furthermore, comradeship sometimes existed uneasily with the rights and responsibilities of citizenship. Parliamentary methods were fundamental to veterans' activism, but their politics were also performative, often pursued and proclaimed at street level, and a minority of veterans threatened and engaged in violence they claimed was justified.
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Targa, RYAN. « From Governors to Grocers : How Profiteering Changed English-Canadian Perspectives of Liberalism in the Great War of 1914-1918 ». Thesis, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/1974/8299.

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The war against Germany was perceived by the majority of English Canadians as a necessity to defend the British Empire, democracy and justice. However, it became increasingly evident to the public that some individuals were being permitted to prosper, while others — particularly those of the working class — endured immense hardship. These individuals who prospered at a level judged excessive became known as "profiteers." Initial criticisms of profiteering were connected to graft, jobbery and patronage apparent in government military purchases. However, as public sacrifices intensified, the morally acceptable extent to which individuals and businesses could profit came to be more narrowly defined. Criticisms of profiteering expanded to challenge the mainstream liberal notions of private wealth and laissez-faire policies as being inequitable and undemocratic. The federal government's unwillingness to seriously implement measures against profiteering led to rising discontent. Consequently, working-class English Canadians aspired to form a 'new democracy' that was worth the sacrifices of the war.
Thesis (Master, History) -- Queen's University, 2013-09-19 19:02:13.077
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Livres sur le sujet "Jewish War Veterans of Canada"

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Michelle, Spivak, Zweiman Robert M et Jewish War Veterans of the United States of America., dir. Jewish War Veterans of the United States. Paducah, KY : Turner Pub., 1996.

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1938-, Neary Peter, et Granatstein J. L, dir. The Veterans Charter and post-World War II Canada. Montreal : McGill-Queen's University Press, 1998.

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Brier, Judy. Prairie perspectives : Our Jewish veterans remember World War II. [Saint Paul, Minn.] : Jewish Historical Society of the Upper Midwest, 2007.

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Henderson, R. J. Ephemera of German prisoners of war in Canada and the Veterans' Guard of Canada. Regina : R.J. Henderson, 2009.

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Poulin, Grace. Invisible women : WWII Aboriginal servicewomen in Canada. Thunder Bay, On : Ontario Narive Women's Association, 2007.

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Cormier, Ronald. The forgotten soldiers : Stories from Acadian veterans of the Second World War. Fredericton, N.B : New Ireland Press, 1992.

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Johnston, Mac. Corvettes Canada : Convoy veterans of WWII tell their true stories. Mississauga, Ont : Wiley, 2008.

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Johnston, Mac. Corvettes Canada : Convoy veterans of WWII tell their true stories. Mississauga, Ont : Wiley, 2008.

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Cohen, Jerome D. Jews in American military history and the Jewish War Veterans of the United States of America. Washington, DC : National Museum of American Jewish Military History, 1996.

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Broadfoot, Barry. The veterans' years : Coming home from the war. Vancouver : Douglas & McIntyre, 1985.

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Chapitres de livres sur le sujet "Jewish War Veterans of Canada"

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Berkowitz, Michael. « Kristallnacht in Context : Jewish War Veterans in America And Britain and the Crisis of German Jewry ». Dans American Religious Responses to Kristallnacht, 57–84. New York : Palgrave Macmillan US, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230623309_4.

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Tóth, Marcell. « A Vitézi Rend és a földkérdés ». Dans Fontes et Libri, 249–61. Szeged, Hungary : Szegedi Tudományegyetem, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.14232/btk.2023.sje.22.

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In our study, we examine the practice of land donation and other land grants that benefited the Order of Vitéz. The members of the Order of Vitéz, established in 1920, were veterans of the First and Second World War who had earned certain commendations due to their personal bravery. Membership in the order was hereditary. From the very beginning, the purpose of the order was to ensure that the interwar political system had stable support from a social stratum loyal to the government even during possible rebellions. To ensure this, the initial plan was to give all members, especially the ones with a background in agriculture, plots of land. Originally, there were only two types of such plots. Free ones, which were donated by the head of state, and the self-founded one, when a Vitéz created a plot from his own property. Later, eight more types of Vitéz plots were established: in most cases, these plots were either acquired at a discounted price, with loans paid for decades, or they could be rented cheaply. The claimants also received Vitéz plots from land holdings in the territories reannexed to Hungary between 1938 and 1941, as well as from the ones confiscated from 1939 due to the Jewish laws. Although the Order of Vitéz acquired a significant amount of territory, it could not give plots to all its members even as late as 1944.
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Martynowych, Orest T. « 6 Sympathy for the Devil : The Attitude of Ukrainian War Veterans in Canada to Nazi Germany and the Jews, 1933–1939 ». Dans Re-Imagining Ukrainian-Canadians, sous la direction de James Mochoruk et Rhonda L. Hinther. Toronto : University of Toronto Press, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/9781442686861-007.

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Barris, Ted. « 13 Returning Home : The Canadian Veterans’ Experience ». Dans Canada and the Korean War, 234–46. University of British Columbia Press, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.59962/9780774870528-017.

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Morton, Desmond. « The Canadian Veterans’ Heritage from the Great War ». Dans The Veterans Charter and Post-World War II Canada, 15–31. McGill-Queen's University Press, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9780773566965-005.

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Granatstein, J. L. « A Half-Century On : The Veterans’ Experience ». Dans The Veterans Charter and Post-World War II Canada, 224–31. McGill-Queen's University Press, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9780773566965-015.

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Geheran, Michael. « Jewish Frontkämpfer and the Nazi Volksgemeinschaft ». Dans Comrades Betrayed, 91–116. Cornell University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501751011.003.0005.

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This chapter examines the changes to Jewish war veterans' legal status after the Nuremberg Laws in 1935 and the ways in which many of these men tried to retain their sense of Germanness in the face of intensifying state-sponsored terror and persecution. Although the Nazis succeeded in banning Jews from the civil service and most veterans' organizations, this did not mean that Jewish veterans were abruptly cast to the margins of German public life. Not all Germans shared Himmler's radical vision of a racially purified Volksgemeinschaft. This inconsistency in experience — persecution on the one hand, and limited solidarity with the German public on the other — obscured the gravity of the Nazi threat, leading many Jewish veterans to contemplate accommodation with the Third Reich.
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Neary, Peter. « Canadian Universities and Canadian Veterans of World War II ». Dans The Veterans Charter and Post-World War II Canada, 110–48. McGill-Queen's University Press, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9780773566965-010.

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Troper, Harold, et Morton Weinfeld. « Jewish-Ukrainian Relations in Canada Since World War II and the Nazi War Criminal Issue ». Dans Antisemitism in Canada, 279–300. Wilfrid Laurier Press, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.51644/9780889208414-013.

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Geheran, Michael. « Epilogue ». Dans Comrades Betrayed, 206–14. Cornell University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501751011.003.0008.

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The book closes with a short glimpse into the history of Jewish veterans after 1945, as the survivors of the camps returned to Germany, outlining ruptures and continuities in comparison with the pre-Nazi period. Jewish veterans imposed different narratives on their experiences under National Socialism. As the past receded into the distance, it became a concern for the survivors to engage with the past, which they variously looked back on with nostalgia, disillusionment, or bitter anger. Although National Socialism threatened to erase everything that Jewish veterans of World War I had achieved and sacrificed, sought to destroy the identity they had constructed as soldiers in the service of the nation, as well as bonds with gentile Germans that had been forged under fire during the war, threatened to sever their connections to the status they had earned as soldiers of the Great War and defenders of the fatherland, their minds, their values and their character remained intact. Jewish veterans preserved their sense of German identity.
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Actes de conférences sur le sujet "Jewish War Veterans of Canada"

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Brooker, Jennifer, et Daniel Vincent. « The Australian Veterans' Scholarship Program (AVSP) Through a Career Construction Paradigm ». Dans Tenth Pan-Commonwealth Forum on Open Learning. Commonwealth of Learning, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.56059/pcf10.4380.

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In Australia, 6000 military personnel leave the military each year, of whom at least 30% become unemployed and 19% experience underemployment, figures five times higher than the national average (Australian Government 2020). Believed to be one of life's most intense transitions, veterans find it difficult to align their military skills and knowledge to the civilian labour market upon leaving military service (Cable, Cathcart and Almond 2021; AVEC 2020). // Providing authentic opportunities that allow veterans to gain meaningful employment upon (re)entering civilian life raises their capability to incorporate accrued military skills, knowledge, and expertise. Despite acknowledging that higher education is a valuable transition pathway, Australia has no permanently federally funded post-service higher education benefit supporting veterans to improve their civilian employment prospects. Since World War II, American GIs have accessed a higher education scholarship program (tuition fees, an annual book allowance, monthly housing stipend) (Defense 2019). A similar offering is available in Canada, the UK, and Israel. // We are proposing that the AVSP would be the first comprehensive, in-depth study investigating the ongoing academic success of Australia's modern veterans as they study higher and vocational education. It consists of four distinct components: // Scholarships: transitioning/separated veterans apply for one of four higher education scholarship options (under/postgraduate): 100% tuition fees waived // $750/fortnight living stipend for the degree duration // 50/50 tuition/living stipend // Industry-focused scholarships. // Research: LAS Consulting, Open Door, Flinders University, over seven years, will follow the scholarship recipients to identify which scholarship option is the most relevant/beneficial for Australian veterans. The analysis of the resultant quantitative and qualitative data will demonstrate that providing federal financial support to student veterans studying higher education options: Improves the psychosocial and economic outcomes for veterans // Reduces the need for financial and medical support of participants // Reduces the national unemployed and underemployed statistics for veterans // Provides a positive return of investment (ROI) to the funder // May increase Australian Defence Force (ADF) recruitment and retention rates // Career Construction: LAS Consulting will sit, listen, guide, and help build an emotional connection around purpose, identity, education and employment opportunities back into society. So, the veteran can move forward, crystalise a life worth living, and find their authentic self, which is led by their values in the civilian world. // Mentoring: Each participant receives a mentor throughout their academic journey.
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