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Manny Batshaw Fonds
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Fonds
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1918-2006 (Creation)
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60cm of textual records. 347 photographs.
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Name of creator
Biographical history
Manuel Gilman Batshaw (Manny) was born in Montreal on April 17, 1915. His parents, Tuvieh Batshaw and Golda Batshaw (née Gelman) immigrated to Montreal from Russia in 1903, following the birth of Manny's older brother Harry in 1902 [?]. Harry was followed by Arthur in 1908, Frances in 1910 and finally, Manny. The family had a very limited income. While his father worked outside of the home, Batshaw's mother Goldie ran a small grocery store from their home's living room. From childhood, Batshaw was quite active within the Montreal Jewish community. In 1928, as a bar mitzvah gift from his brother Harry, Batshaw received a membership to the YMHA. Over the years, he moved from member, to club leader, to being in charge of all clubs, and finally, to educational director. It was through this organization that Batshaw had his first experiences in the field of social work. At 15 years old, he joined Young Judea. At 16, he became a counselor at Camp B?nai Brith. In the early 1930s when Batshaw was preparing to attend university, McGill had a quota system in place whereby all Jewish applicants had to have an average of at least 75% (this quota was lower for non-Jews). Despite being incredibly bright, Manny?s average was lower than required due to a learning disability. In 1934 he enrolled at Queen?s University in Kingston, Ontario, determined to bring up his average in order to be able to attend McGill. The next year he received his acceptance and completed his Bachelor of Arts at McGill from 1935-1937. He then enrolled in the Montreal School of Social Work, and worked at the Protestant Family Service Association while attending school. After graduation, he found a job in the Family Service Department at the Baron de Hirsch Institute. In 1938, Batshaw met Rachel Levitt (Rachie). She was also a social worker, nine years his senior. Two years later in 1940, the two were married. In 1942, Batshaw volunteered for the Canadian Armed Forces. He was placed in the Infantry and was made District Social Service Officer in charge of Social Services to the Canadian Armed Forces in the province of Quebec. He began his military career as a Private and by the time the War was over had attained the rank of Captain. After the War he was invited to become the Executive Director of the Red Cross in Montreal. As tempting as the offer was, he wanted to play a larger role within the Jewish community, so he declined. From 1947-1968, the Batshaw family moved quite a bit living in Philadelphia, Hamilton, Atlanta, Newark, New Jersey and New York. In 1968, the Allied Jewish Community Services (AJCS) contacted Batshaw, and asked him to return to Montreal as Executive Director of the organization. He agreed, and remained in that position until 1980. During the "Batshaw Era," fundraising increased five-fold and the organization expanded, made obvious by the many buildings which were constructed, including Cummings House in 1973. He personally helped to reassure the community following the implementation of Bill 65. He insisted on making it the right of all Jewish children to have a Jewish education, he helped to integrate the Francophone Sephardic population into the AJCS, he organized trips for students to visit Israel, and in the face of possible Quebec separation (when many Anglophone Jews were leaving the province), he fought for French Immersion education in Jewish schools. His compassion was felt beyond the walls of AJCS. In 1974, following a news story in The Montreal Gazette regarding the maltreatment of children in a welfare institution in La Prairie, Batshaw convinced Claude Forget, Minister of Health and Welfare for the province of Quebec, to allow him to form a small committee of professionals to go into the institution and make recommendations. The approval arrived the next day on a Thursday, the committee was formed the following day, and by Sunday night, the visit had been completed and the finished report had been delivered to the Minister. The recommendations were published in the local newspapers and soon after almost all of them had been implemented. Obviously impressed, Mr. Forget asked Batshaw to spearhead a thorough examination of the province's 60 other institutions. What followed 11 months later was an 11-volume report, informally titled The Batshaw Committee Report. This led to the enactment of Bill 24, Quebec?s Youth Protection Act. In 1993, when the five Anglophone child welfare institutions of Quebec amalgamated, the new name was an easy choice: Batshaw Youth and Family Centres. After his retirement from AJCS in 1980, Batshaw joined Claridge Inc. at the request of his friend Charles Bronfman as his Consultant on Philanthropy and Jewish Affairs. He retired from this position in 1998.
Custodial history
Scope and content
The Fonds consists of correspondence regarding both personal and business matters, newspaper clippings (both loose and in scrapbooks), publications by AJCS and other Jewish organizations, a published biography of Manuel Batshaw, documents regarding his time as a social worker, photographs, audio and visual materials and awards. There are three series present within the Fonds. Series I covers Mr. Batshaw's personal affairs, and consists mainly of photographs, degrees, certificates, scrapbooks and correspondence. Series II covers Mr. Batshaw's career as a social worker, and currently consists of a summary of the 1975 Batshaw Report, although further accruals are expected. Series III covers Mr. Batshaw's professional work within the Jewish community, and consists of annual reports, publications, awards and photographs.
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Dates of creation, revision and deletion
2015-03-30
Language of description
- French