Social Activities


Looking back on their years growing up Jewish in Peterborough, community members recalled both formal and informal social and recreational activities. Childhood memories that persisted through the years could be small things: walking into the house on Friday and smelling the chicken soup cooking, or having to stop a game of road hockey because it was time to go to shul.

Joel Moldaver remembered that there would be two-for-one specials on ice cream sodas around Passover time. The children always hoped that the Passover period would be completed in time for them to get the specials. There were also the events of the life cycle to celebrate together: Brit Milahs, Bar Mitzvahs, weddings. As well, special gatherings and farewell parties were important social events for the community. Thanks to a series of small articles written by Rabbi Fine, we can know something about these celebrations, especially during the years between 1927 and 1939.

The next step was taken in 1928, when Hadassah appointed a committee under Mrs. B. Chesler to raise funds to buy a building. In 1933, a house on Aylmer Street that had belonged to community member Abraham Swartz was purchased. The house was remodelled and renovated to make suitable as a synagogue building. At this time, the community changed its name from the Peterborough Jewish Society to Congregation Beth Israel.


French Fries and Ice Cream
French Fries and Ice Cream

Laura Bowman reminisces about the thrill of eating french fries and ice cream on Shabbat with her childhood friend Margaret Florence.

Interview with Laura Bowman, 24 July 2007, Sharon Gubbay Helfer. OJA, Oral History #330.

Click here to watch the video