My latest article for Read Alberta on the province’s literary past.
Stories of Jewish Mewata
For the past year, I’ve had the great pleasure of working with Calgary-born, Montreal-based writer Norman Ravvin to create the walking tour “Stories of Jewish Mewata” for Historic Calgary Week.
Norm's family has deep roots in Mewata, going back to the 1920s when his grandparents lived and ran Mewata Confectionary in the neighbourhood now known as Downtown West.
With precious little to go on, we went looking for traces of the area’s Jewish families who once called this place home.
If you missed the walk and you’re curious to know more, look for Norm’s forthcoming article in the September 2023 edition of the Jewish Historical Society of Southern Alberta’s Discovery newsletter. You might also check out his wonderful essay on old Mewata in his Hidden Canada: An Intimate Travelogue published in 2001 by Red Deer Press.
Below you’ll find links to a few interesting sites and a map of key spots in our talk, superimposed on an air photo of the area taken in 1961 — as Norm describes it “a very intact moment” in Mewata’s ever-changing history.
Thanks to Historic Calgary Week and to the Jewish Historical Society of Southern Alberta for helping us make “Stories of Jewish Mewata” happen.
Norman Ravvin’s author website
Norman Ravvin’s new book Who Gets In: An Immigration Story
Norman Ravvin in conversation with Aritha van Herk, 2023
City of Romance: The Literary World of 1920s Calgary
A digital literary map of Calgary
Building Community: A Tour of Historic Jewish Calgary
Lucien Lieberman’s “The Lieberman Saga”
Jack Switzer’s “Calgary’s Jews Star as Symphonic Conductors, Musicians, Patrons, Teachers”
Land of Promise: The Jewish Experience in Southern Alberta
Alan Lynas’s “Memories of a Young Boy Growing Up in West End”
“The Evolution of Mewata Park & West End" video of aerial views, 1924-2021
Norm’s grandparents’ 7th Avenue home reimagined in Bragg Creek
Winnifred Eaton Lived Here
801 Royal Avenue SW is one of the many Calgary addresses the writer Winnifred Eaton Reeve called home, and for the longest period of time, from 1938 to 1954. The house was a key stop in the two Winnifred walking tours I led this month.
On the first walk, I toured a few of Winnifred’s descendants as well as Winnifred scholars in town for the “Onoto Watanna’s Cattle @ 100” conference held July 26 to July 29 at the University of Calgary and the Calgary Chinese Cultural Centre. On the second tour (for Historic Calgary Week), I guided a group of Calgarians curious about the city’s literary world and one of its fascinating personalities.
Below you’ll find links to further information mentioned during the tour and photos of two of the sites we visited.
Winnifred Eaton Reeve: A Chinese-Albertan Writer in the Era of Exclusion
A pandemic passage from Winnifred’s 1922 Alberta novel CATTLE
Invisible Publishing’s centenary edition of CATTLE
Diana Birchall’s 2001 biography of Winnifred
Winnifred’s digitized papers at the University of Calgary Libraries
The Reno, Nevada divorce colony
A profile of Winnifred in the South China Post
The University of Calgary’s Reeve Theatre
My book Calgary through the Eyes of Writers
My Calgary Atlas Project map — City of Romance: The Literary World of 1920s Calgary
My Storied City Literary Walking tour (2020)
Karen Gummo’s “Torment & Triumph in the 1920s”
Yeehaw!
My latest for Read Alberta: https://readalberta.ca/articles/a-day-at-the-calgary-stampede-with-alberta-writers/