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Sudbury

Syrian, Middle East immigrants developed northern Ontario, museum curator says

Syrians and other immigrants from the Middle East had a profound impact on northern Ontario, according to the curator of the museum in Timmins, Ont.

Timmins Museum curator Karen Bachmann says Syrians were opening businesses in the north in early 1900s

Venetian Sweets, located on the street corner in this picture from 1936, was owned and operated by the Ansara family from Syria. (Supplied by Timmins Museum)

Syrians and other immigrants from the Middle Easthad a profound impact on northern Ontario, according to the curator of the museum in Timmins, Ont.

Using assessment rolls and other directories from the early 1900s, Karen Bachmann said that among the Finns, Germans, Italians and other European immigrants, were people fromSyria, as well as people identified in historical documents as Hebrew.

"They were doing things like opening up businesses. [They were] merchants and saloon keepers, hotel owners, people who were selling to the mining community," she said.

Bucovetsky Bros. stores were located across northeastern Ontario. They were a Russian-Jewish family. (Supplied by Timmins Museum)

Last week, Timmins-James Bay MP Charlie Angus posted on Facebook, saying "Syrians built northern Ontario," pointing out communities likeCobalt, Kirkland Lake, Cochrane and Timmins.

By 1925, Bachmann said Timmins had a population of 15,000 about 150 people listed on a directorythat year were from Syria and 200 were identified as Jewish.

The immigrants largely worked as local entrepreneurs, she said, adding that immigrants frommodern-day Siberia, the Netherlands, China and what is now known asYugoslavia also played important roles.

"We're already welcoming all of the world to us," she said. "I don't see why we can't be doing so now."

This synagogue in Timmins, Ont. was started by the Jewish community in the city. (Supplied by Timmins Museum)

Immigration from the Middle East started in earnest after the First World War, Bachmann said, during the breakdown of the former Ottoman Empire.

"All of the breaking up of the Middle East at that point [created] what we know now as the Middle East, but that was a very tumultuous time," she said.

"So these were people who needed to get out of there," she said. "They made the move and a lot of them went to Montreal [or]Toronto and then came up to northern Ontario because there were opportunities here."

A town like KirklandLake even had its own Syrian community centre at the time,Bachmannsaid.

"There was a respect for these people ... they were a part of the community," she added.

"It wasn't a segregated kind of thing."

Eastern European, Scandinavian, Italian, likely English and French immigrants likely made up this mining crew at the Timmins, Ont. Hollinger Mine in 1912. (Supplied by Timmins Museum)