In 1901, honours student, Jacob Pinsler, finished first in his graduating class at Dufferin Elementary School, but was denied a scholarship on the grounds that his father was not a property owner contributing taxes to the Protestant School Board. The Pinsler Scholarship Case was a catalyst to a storm of controversy that launched a thirty-year campaign to break the stranglehold of legislation denying legal rights to Jewish children attending Protestant schools. The case also provoked debates about the need for independent Jewish schools.
At the turn of the twentieth century, Quebec’s confessional and religiously organized school system, mandated by the British North America Act of 1867, Article 92, only accommodated Catholics and Protestants, and had yet to be adapted to address the needs of Jewish students. Since the Hebrew Free School Controversy of the 1890s, Jewish children had been relegated to Protestant schools. Increasing immigration and rising Jewish enrollment unmatched by proportionate funding to the Protestant panel led to Protestant resentment over the perception that they were subsidizing the education of “outsiders.” While the Protestant School Board was willing to grant Jewish students limited rights, the extension of such privileges was restricted due to concerns that growing numbers of Jewish students were undermining the schools’ Protestant character. Jews were considered “guests” of the Protestant system and were therefore not legally entitled to awards or scholarships.
Jacob Pinsler’s father’s status as a tenant and not a ratepayer made the boy ineligible for the scholarship, an act that came to represent the many indignities the Jewish community felt they faced in the Protestant school system. The Pinsler family sued the Protestant School Board, requesting that the court compel the board to grant Jacob the scholarship.
Despite efforts by Montreal Jewish lawyer Samuel W. Jacobs, who took the Pinsler case to court in 1903, the judge ruled in favour of the Protestant School Board, reaffirming that Quebec’s schools were “confessional” and not “public.” To protest this verdict, a mass meeting was held at the Baron de Hirsch Institute, unprecedented in how the diverse elements of the Jewish community were represented. With the community decision to appeal for a modification of Quebec’s Education Act, lawyer Maxwell Goldstein met with Protestant commissioners, who appeared amenable to certain administrative changes. These meetings led to the Quebec government passing the Act of 1903, which entrenched Jews within the Protestant system, but also reaffirmed the 1867 BNA Act.
While the 1903 Act equated Jews and Protestants for educational purposes, and required Jewish ratepayers to pay taxes to the Protestant panel, Jewish students and parents ultimately received few rights. Jews were still prevented from serving on school boards, few Jewish teachers were employed, and in many places Jewish students were still required to attend Protestant religious instruction while being denied days off for Jewish holidays. These issues and other related tensions were magnified during the “Jewish School Question” debates of the 1920s.
Compiled by Marian Pinsky
Sources
Behiels, Michael D. Quebec and the Question of Immigration: from Ethnocentrism to Ethnic Pluralism,1900-1985. Ottawa: Canadian Historical Association, 1991.
King, Joe, and Johanne Schumann. From the Ghetto to the Main: the Story of the Jews of Montreal. Montreal: Montreal Jewish Publication Society, 2001.
MacLeod, Roderick, and Mary Anne Poutanen. "'Honorary Protestants': Jewish Pupils and the Protestant Boards." A Meeting of the People: School Boards and Protestant Communities in Quebec, 1801-1998. Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press, 2004. 195-222.
Rosenberg, Michael. Ethnicity, Community, and the State; the Organizational Structures, Practices and Strategies of the Montreal Jewish Community's Day School System and its Relations with the Quebec State. PhD Dissertation. Ottawa: Carlton University, 1995.
Shuchat, Wilfred. The Gate of Heaven: the Story of Congregation Shaar Hashomayim of Montreal, 1846-1996. Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press, 2000.
Tulchinsky, Gerald. "The Third Solitude: A.M. Klein’s Jewish Montreal, 1910-1950." Journal of Canadian Studies 19.2 (1984): 96-113.
*Images courtesy of the Congregation Shaar Hashomayim Museum and Archives and the Jewish Public Library Archives.
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