by Judith Levin Cantor
Michigan State University Press, 2001
eISBN: 978-1-62895-028-1 | Paper: 978-0-87013-598-9
Library of Congress Classification F558.2.J5C36 2001
Dewey Decimal Classification 977.4004924

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ABOUT THIS BOOK

Since the earliest days of the British fur trade, Jewish pioneers have made Michigan their home. Judith Levin Cantor's Jews in Michigan captures the struggles and triumphs of Michigan's Jews as they worked to establish farms, businesses and synagogues, sparking commercial and residential development throughout the state, and even into the far reaches of the Upper Peninsula. Cantor celebrates both urban and rural immigrants, who supplied essential goods and services to those in lumbering, mining, and automobile manufacturing. She also deals honestly with questions of anti-Semitism and prejudice. Cantor's book shows how, in the quest to build strong communities, Jewish residents also helped create the foundations of the Michigan we know today.