Bill Gladstone Genealogy
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Doctorow

by Bill Gladstone • August 26, 2011

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Toronto’s First Synagogue: 1885 Photo

“Of Things Past . . . “

Encyclopedia Judaica: Jews had long history in Rafah

by n-a • March 12, 2025

From the Jewish Virtual Library (Encyclopedia Judaica) Rafah (Ar. Rafaḥ; Heb. Rafi’ah) is a town near the Mediterranean coast at the southern end of Gaza where it borders with Egypt. Rafah is first mentioned in an inscription of the pharoah Seti I (c. 1300 B.C.E.) as Rph; it also appears in other Egyptian sources, in…

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Obit: Solomon Schechter, foremost Jewish scholar (1915)

by Bill Gladstone • January 21, 2025

Dr. SCHECHTER DEAD; NOTED AS A SCHOLAR (Obit from the New York Times, Nov. 20, 1915)

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Solomon Schecter and the Cairo Genizah

by Bill Gladstone • January 20, 2025

A windowless, doorless chamber, set high up into the wall of an antiquated synagogue and accessible only by ladder, is not normally the sort of place to which a traveller dreams of arriving. However, it was precisely such a room that Solomon Schechter, a Cambridge professor of Talmudic literature, was determined to reach when he…

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Jordan Peterson’s journey to ‘We Who Wrestle with God’

by Bill Gladstone • January 16, 2025

Book Review: We Who Wrestle With God (2024) Almost a decade ago, Jordan Peterson listened to his own “still, small voice” and decided to take a strong moral stand, come hell or high water. Peterson was then a relatively obscure professor at the University of Toronto, who also taught at Harvard. His fierce objection to…

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The Maccabees & the Temple Mount

by Bill Gladstone • December 25, 2024

Dan Behat, the former chief archaeologist of Jerusalem, served as a senior lecturer at Bar-Ilan University and has also taught extensively in Canada. He has lectured to Christian groups around the world on Jerusalem in the time of Jesus and was once invited by Pope John Paul II to do so at the Vatican. He…

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Secular Humanism: Jews without God (1999)

by Bill Gladstone • December 24, 2024

From the Globe and Mail, November 1999 Rabbi Sherwin Wine of Birmingham Temple, Detroit, asserts that all of the patriarchs and prophets of ancient Israel are only myths — and so is the God of the Jewish people. Heretical utterances for a rabbi? Certainly, in any previous age. But today Rabbi Wine is the founder…

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A visit to Jerusalem Archaeological Park

by Bill Gladstone • July 5, 2014

From Canadian Jewish News, 2002 Below the southwestern corner of Jerusalem’s Temple Mount, near the archaeological feature known as Robinson’s Arch, lies a random assortment of massive stone building blocks. Though you might not realize it at first, these blocks help bring history to life. They were once part of a parapet wall along the…

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Making girls of Jewish birth into good Canadians

by n-a • November 8, 2012

From Toronto Star Weekly, February 12, 1916 The Jewish Free School at the corner of Cecil and Beverley streets is doing a unique work in Toronto. It was eight years ago that Mr. Edmund Scheuer took over this Sabbath School, under the auspices of the Zionists of Toronto. There were then twenty-one children on the…

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Finding the Biblical David on the road to Beit Guvrin

by Bill Gladstone • December 6, 2011

We were driving southward through Israel’s Shephelah region when our guide pulled the van over to the shoulder and drew our attention to a ridge of hills to the right of us and a roughly parallel ridge to the left. We were south of Beit Shemesh on the road to Beit Guvrin, near the Ha-Ela…

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Hear Mormon Tabernacle Choir in Salt Lake City

by Bill Gladstone • November 22, 2011

Beneath the giant dome of the Mormon Tabernacle, the harmonious voices of the famous Mormon Tabernacle Choir rise into the air, melding sweetly. Whether it’s a Biblical hymn or a medley from The Music Man, each selection sung by the 330-member choir reverberates with a rare purity in this hallowed hall. Established in 1847, the…

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Review: The Bible Is History

by Bill Gladstone • November 21, 2011

Anyone attempting a serious book about the Bible’s status as history steps wilfully into a morass of difficulties. The first is what is meant by the word “Bible”? Is it the Tanach of the Jews (consisting of the 24 books of the Torah, Nevi’im and Ketuvim)? Does it include the later Christian testaments? The solution,…

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Kohelet is a knotty and naughty book

by Bill Gladstone • November 9, 2011

“Futility of futilities! All is futile!” I heard someone mutter recently while glancing up with darkened brow from the pages of Kohelet, the Biblical book also known as Ecclesiastes. The utterance was understandable, since most commentators, if they agree on anything at all about Kohelet, seem in accordance that it is a most vexing and…

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Kitty Wintrob, author of I’m Not Going Back

Genealogy

Genealogy as a labour of love

by Bill Gladstone • December 4, 2025

“I’m working on a book of family history,” Sara Edell Kelman declares, as she shows me her massive collection of archival documents, ketubot, photographs, Yiddish letters and other family memorabilia, spilling out of diverse albums, binders and boxes. “No, it’s more than one book — it’s a series of books. There’s a lot of stuff…

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Bettinger’s DNA Guide still an instructive read (2025)

by Bill Gladstone • August 23, 2025

◊ Note: The keynote speaker at the IAJGS conference on Jewish Genealogy in Fort Wayne, Indiana earlier this month was DNA forensic genealogist Ce Ce Moore, one of the world’s most talented investigators who uses DNA samples to solve serial murders and other crimes, some of which had been considered cold cases for decades. Conference…

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Orphaned century-old photo returns to family

by Bill Gladstone • August 18, 2025

‘More Than Coincidence’ My first glimpse of it was from a distance, but there was something that drew me forward by an almost magnetic process. A large family portrait, perhaps a century old, with three rows of adults and children around a pair of grandparents, all dressed finely, nobody smiling. When I got closer the…

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Orchestrating the American Dream: Bernstein family history

by Bill Gladstone • August 7, 2025

Sam Bernstein, a New England industrialist who acquired the franchise to the Frederics hair-styling machine in the mid-1920s, became a remarkable overnight success after America was seized by a permanent-wave craze at the height of the flapper era. “One day in 1927, I didn’t have a nickel to my name,” he used to say. “The…

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Sephardic Jews in early Canada

by Bill Gladstone • May 28, 2025

One of the most interesting and unusual items pertaining to the Jewish history of confederate and pre-confederate Canada is a two-centuries-old diary in the custody of the National Archives of Canada. The diary belonged to Samuel Jacobs, a European merchant whose ship, the Betsy, was known to have plied the St. Lawrence carrying trade goods…

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Toronto Panorama 1910

Recent Posts

  • Shomrai Shabbos: Fire threatens Torah scroll (1901) December 6, 2025
  • Genealogy as a labour of love December 4, 2025
  • Court ruling prompts overhaul of Canada’s ‘citizenship-by-descent’ laws November 29, 2025
  • Interview: Rabbi Moses Avigdor Chaikin (1916) November 29, 2025
  • Books: Jewish Life in the South African Country Communities November 4, 2025
  • Breaking News: Ottoman Empire releases Jewish hostages (1840) October 14, 2025
  • In Poland, a modern blood libel October 14, 2025
  • ‘He was the Czar’s guest’ October 13, 2025
  • A robust, new history of Jews in Canada (2019) October 13, 2025
  • Rabbi W. Gunther Plaut: An Appreciation October 11, 2025
  • After a half-century, Dead Sea Scrolls coming into the light (1997) September 20, 2025
  • Thousands of Canadians fought in American Civil War (1914) August 28, 2025
  • Bettinger’s DNA Guide still an instructive read (2025) August 23, 2025
  • Journeys of David Toback August 22, 2025
  • Orphaned century-old photo returns to family August 18, 2025
  • Orchestrating the American Dream: Bernstein family history August 7, 2025

Shomrai Shabbos: Fire threatens Torah scroll (1901)

Genealogy as a labour of love

Court ruling prompts overhaul of Canada’s ‘citizenship-by-descent’ laws

Interview: Rabbi Moses Avigdor Chaikin (1916)

Books: Jewish Life in the South African Country Communities

Breaking News: Ottoman Empire releases Jewish hostages (1840)

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