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OTTAWA: Whitton's controversial past under microscope again

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  • OTTAWA: Whitton's controversial past under microscope again

    Ottawa Citizen, Canada
    May 3, 2011 Tuesday
    Final Edition


    Whitton's controversial past under microscope again

    Former mayor an anti-Semite, say Jewish groups opposed to city plan to
    name archives building after her

    BY: Joanne Chianello, Ottawa Citizen

    The controversial views of former Ottawa mayor Charlotte Whitton will
    once again be front and centre this week as Jewish groups oppose city
    council's proposal to name the new archives building after the woman
    who some say was an anti-Semite who lobbied to keep Jewish orphans out
    of Canada during the Second World War.

    Council's finance and economic development committee will consider
    today a proposal to name the new facility "Charlotte Whitton Archives
    and Library Building." The council chambers at the old City Hall on
    Sussex Drive was named after Whitton, but as that complex is now owned
    by the federal government, the current council is considering
    transferring the name to the new archives.

    The Canadian Jewish Congress says that would be "more than objectionable.

    "There's a process here, and the reason the process is in place is to
    ensure that everyone has a level of comfort renaming this building,"
    argues Bernie Farber, chief executive of the CJC. "And now it is quite
    clear what Charlotte Whitton's history was, and now they can correct
    the mistake they made in the past."

    According to the 1982 book by Irving Abella and Harold Troper, None is
    Too Many, Whitton lobbied against a proposal to allow eastern European
    orphans, most of whom were Jewish, into Canada in the late 1930s, even
    though other groups were in favour. As secretary of the Canadian
    Welfare Council, the authors said that Whitton was an "influential
    voice" in Ottawa.

    Fraidie Martz's book, Open Your Hearts: The Story of the Jewish War
    Orphans in Canada, says Whitton espoused a "scientific" racism that
    viewed groups such as Jews and Armenians as "undesirable" immigrants.

    Farber acknowledges that anti-Semitism "was rife" in Europe as well as
    North America during those times.

    "But to actively lobby against ensuring that Jewish orphan refugees
    that could have been saved not come to this country, that is pure,
    active anti-Semitism," he says. "That is acting out on your hatred.
    That's what she did, and she was in a position do to so."

    Whitton was the first female mayor of a major Canadian city and served
    as Ottawa's top elected official from 1951 to 1956, and again from
    1960 to 1964. She has a long list of honours attached to her name,
    including Officer of the Order of Canada, which she received in 1967.

    Her accomplishments are well-documented in the council committee's
    report, except for one thing: her controversial role in keeping Jewish
    children out of Canada.

    "Politicians can only be as good as the reports that are given to them
    in order to make a decision," Farber says. "If this is the report
    that's given to them, I can see why this would be seen as a pro forma
    kind of move."

    Dave Mullington's biography of Whitton -Charlotte: The Last
    Suffragette -mentions the incident in passing when discussing
    Whitton's efforts to bring British children to Canada during the
    Second World War.

    "Charlotte, who had earlier opposed the acceptance of European child
    refugees, most of whom were Jewish and whose evacuation was supported
    by the Canadian National Committee on Refugees under Cairine Wilson,
    now welcomed British youngsters," Mullington wrote. (Wilson was
    Canada's first female Senator.)

    However, he pointed out in a letter to the Citizen last year that the
    women of Toronto's B'nai Brith organization named her their Woman of
    the Year in 1964. In that same letter, Mullington also says that
    Whitton's lobbying efforts against the Jewish orphans "appears to be
    greatly exaggerating her efforts."

    That was the same year that Whitton refused a $500,000 gift from
    Ottawa's grocery magnate, Bert Loeb, for a cancer centre at the Civic
    Hospital. Whitton said the city could not afford the upkeep of the
    addition; she was the only one on city council who thought so. Critics
    said that Whitton couldn't bear the idea of a Jewish name on the
    Ottawa hospital. (Loeb gave the money to a grateful Carleton
    University instead.)

    Yet she was a supporter of Lorry Greenberg, Ottawa's first Jewish mayor.

    "She's a woman of contradictions," Mayor Jim Watson says. "That's the
    difficult situation. Even within the Jewish community, there are
    divisions. People who served with her ... claim she is not
    anti-Semitic, and there are those in the Jewish community who do feel
    that way."

    When the former council chamber was named after Whitton in the 1970s,
    Whitton's role in lobbying against the admittance of Jewish orphans
    hadn't yet come to light. Still, Watson says that naming the new
    archives after her "is not condoning her controversial and
    unacceptable views."

    The mayor says he has "thought long and hard about it. I do see that
    there is a divisive and contradictory opinion on whether she was
    anti-Semitic. My hope is that council will look at her overall
    contributions, the good and the bad, and recognize that she's possibly
    the most well-known, most often quoted, most remembered mayor of our
    city."

    A number of public delegates are expected to speak against the
    proposal at committee today, including Vera Gara, past chair of the
    Ottawa Jewish Federation's Holocaust remembrance committee and a
    Holocaust survivor.




    From: A. Papazian
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