Jewish Continuity and the Canadian Census
Keywords:
Demography and Social StudiesAbstract
Some researchers view acculturation—the assimilation of a minority culture into a dominant culture—as a force that undermines the continuity of Jewish communities. Other researchers view acculturation as an adaptive mechanism that permits Jewish communities to survive and flourish in modern environments. This paper examines what national counts of Canadian Jews can tell us about these competing interpretations of the effect of acculturation. It focuses on Canada’s 2011 and 2021 national population counts in an effort to decipher whether they point to continuity or decline. The paper finds that both processes are reflected in recent census data, with continuity the predominant outcome.
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Canadian Jewish Studies/ Études juives canadiennes is a journal dedicated to the open exchange of information; therefore the author agrees that the work published in the journal be made available to the public under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommerrcial-No Derivative Woks 4.0 Unported License. The publisher (Association for Canadian Jewish Studies / Association des études juives canadiennes) recognizes the author's intellectual property rights. The author grants the publisher first serial publication rights and the non-exclusive right to mount, preserve and distribute the intellectual property. The journal is digitized and published on the open access website http://pi.library.yorku.ca/ojs/index.php/cjs/index.