Friends with Benefits: Leon Koerner and Frederick Charles Blair, 1939-1959

Due to the strict immigration measures developed and enforced by Frederick Charles Blair, director of the Immigration Branch 1936-1943, Canada had the poorest record for admittance of Jewish refugees during WWII. Blair’s letters to various government officials are quoted extensively in None Is To...

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Main Author: Lillooet Nördlinger McDonnell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Association for Canadian Jewish Studies/York University Libraries 2016-12-01
Series:Canadian Jewish Studies
Online Access:https://cjs.journals.yorku.ca/index.php/cjs/article/view/39960
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spelling doaj-35d1b41e6ffd46c0938e7e9016697f812021-02-01T16:32:28ZengThe Association for Canadian Jewish Studies/York University LibrariesCanadian Jewish Studies1198-34931916-09252016-12-012410.25071/1916-0925.39960Friends with Benefits: Leon Koerner and Frederick Charles Blair, 1939-1959Lillooet Nördlinger McDonnellDue to the strict immigration measures developed and enforced by Frederick Charles Blair, director of the Immigration Branch 1936-1943, Canada had the poorest record for admittance of Jewish refugees during WWII. Blair’s letters to various government officials are quoted extensively in None Is Too Many, and have been perceived to reveal his intrinsic distaste for Jews. That Blair, like many among the Canadian elite, was an antisemite is hard to refute. And yet his relationship with Jewish-refugee and lumber-baron Leon Koerner begs closer examination of what it meant to be an antisemite in Canada during the WWII era. Hailing from an industrialist upper-middle-class Jewish family from Czechoslovakia, Koerner was able to use his expertise in the forest industry to persuade the upper echelons of the Canadian government to ignore his Jewish origins and to allow himself and members of his extended family entry into Canada. Despite Blair’s negative predisposition towards Jews, from the time of Koerner’s arrival into Canada until Blair’s death in 1959, the two men maintained a friendly correspondence. This article elucidates the nuances of gentile antisemitism prevalent among members Canada’s elite by examining the relationship between F.C. Blair and Leon Koerner, as documented by letters dated 1939-1959.https://cjs.journals.yorku.ca/index.php/cjs/article/view/39960
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lillooet Nördlinger McDonnell
spellingShingle Lillooet Nördlinger McDonnell
Friends with Benefits: Leon Koerner and Frederick Charles Blair, 1939-1959
Canadian Jewish Studies
author_facet Lillooet Nördlinger McDonnell
author_sort Lillooet Nördlinger McDonnell
title Friends with Benefits: Leon Koerner and Frederick Charles Blair, 1939-1959
title_short Friends with Benefits: Leon Koerner and Frederick Charles Blair, 1939-1959
title_full Friends with Benefits: Leon Koerner and Frederick Charles Blair, 1939-1959
title_fullStr Friends with Benefits: Leon Koerner and Frederick Charles Blair, 1939-1959
title_full_unstemmed Friends with Benefits: Leon Koerner and Frederick Charles Blair, 1939-1959
title_sort friends with benefits: leon koerner and frederick charles blair, 1939-1959
publisher The Association for Canadian Jewish Studies/York University Libraries
series Canadian Jewish Studies
issn 1198-3493
1916-0925
publishDate 2016-12-01
description Due to the strict immigration measures developed and enforced by Frederick Charles Blair, director of the Immigration Branch 1936-1943, Canada had the poorest record for admittance of Jewish refugees during WWII. Blair’s letters to various government officials are quoted extensively in None Is Too Many, and have been perceived to reveal his intrinsic distaste for Jews. That Blair, like many among the Canadian elite, was an antisemite is hard to refute. And yet his relationship with Jewish-refugee and lumber-baron Leon Koerner begs closer examination of what it meant to be an antisemite in Canada during the WWII era. Hailing from an industrialist upper-middle-class Jewish family from Czechoslovakia, Koerner was able to use his expertise in the forest industry to persuade the upper echelons of the Canadian government to ignore his Jewish origins and to allow himself and members of his extended family entry into Canada. Despite Blair’s negative predisposition towards Jews, from the time of Koerner’s arrival into Canada until Blair’s death in 1959, the two men maintained a friendly correspondence. This article elucidates the nuances of gentile antisemitism prevalent among members Canada’s elite by examining the relationship between F.C. Blair and Leon Koerner, as documented by letters dated 1939-1959.
url https://cjs.journals.yorku.ca/index.php/cjs/article/view/39960
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