Prosserman Jewish Community Centre

43°45′46″N 79°26′30″W / 43.762884°N 79.44171°W / 43.762884; -79.44171 The Prosserman Jewish Community Centre is a Jewish Community Centre for the Toronto area. It is located along Bathurst Street in the Bathurst Manor neighborhood of Toronto.[1]

History

edit

The Bathurst Jewish Community Centre was founded in 1930 as the YMHA (Young Men's Hebrew Association).[2] In 1953 a new facility was built, the Bloor Street "Y" at Bloor Street and Spadina Avenue. It is still there today, but has been completely renovated and is now called the Miles Nadal JCC.[2] In 1958, a new JCC campus was started to the north on Bathurst Street to meet demand from changing demographics in that corridor.[2] The BJCC eventually contained a range of facilities and programs, including multiple athletic spaces, the Leah Posluns Theatre, Centre Camp, Kolel: The Adult Centre for Liberal Jewish Learning, the Family Resource Centre, and the Koffler Centre of the Arts.

In the late 2000s, the BJCC plans were made to replace the entire complex with new buildings, which is now the Prosserman JCC.[2]

Koffler Centre of the Arts

edit

Opened in 1977 inside the BJCC, the "Koffler Centre of the Arts" is a broad-based cultural institution that was established by Murray and Marvelle Koffler. The Koffler Centre teaches dance, music, and visual arts; presents exhibitions of cutting-edge contemporary Canadian art; and is home to the Helen and Stan Vine Canadian Jewish Book Awards, the Annual Jewish Book Fair, the Koffler Chamber Orchestra, and the Stars of the 21st Century Gala. It presents concerts, film screenings, poetry, spoken word, comedy, and discussions on world issues through the lens of culture.[citation needed]

Leah Posluns Theatre

edit

The Leah Polsuns Theatre was founded in 1977 as a live performance venue at the then BJCC.[3] The 444 seat theatre closed when the BJCC was being re-developed in 2009 and reopened in 2020 at 300+ seats venue at the new Prosserman Jewish Community Centre.[4] The theatre is named for Leah Polsuns (1901-1971), wife of Toronto businessman and philanthropist Louis Polsuns.[5]

Centre Camp

edit

The Camp (The Jack and Pat Kay Centre Camp) located in North York, Toronto, provides outdoor activities for children from 3 to 15 years with a connection to the Jewish community since 1990s.[6][7]

Lipa Green Centre for Jewish Community Services

edit

While not part of the JCC itself, the Lipa Green Centre for Jewish Community Services had a building on the same property as the BJCC. When the BJCC was redeveloped, plans called for the Lipa Green Centre, which had just undergone a major renovation, to connect various bridges and atriums to the main JCC complex.[citation needed]

Sherman Campus/Prosserman JCC

edit

In 2007, the UJA of Greater Toronto announced plans to demolish the BJCC and build a newer, more advanced, larger complex on the same site. The name given to the lot and all of the proposed buildings therein was the "Sherman Campus". In 2009, the BJCC was demolished and, in its place, started construction on the Prosserman Jewish Community Centre. The new JCC was named after a businessman and philanthropist Martin Prosserman (1931-2019), who gifted $12 million to the construction.[8] The first phase (The Donald Gales Family Pavilion) was completed in 2010. The first phase of the Prosserman Centre is considerably smaller than the BJCC and offers very limited programming. It is the current home to the Koffler gallery for the Arts and has absorbed many of the employees and programs offered by the BJCC. However, many more people were laid off when the building was demolished. The Prosserman JCC currently houses a limited health centre. UJA continues to fundraise to begin the second phase of construction.[citation needed]

References

edit
  1. ^ "Jewish Info". Archived from the original on 2011-07-13. Retrieved 2009-12-03.
  2. ^ a b c d UJA Archived July 17, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ "Canadian Theatre Encyclopedia".
  4. ^ "Coming Back to the Arts Since 2020". 20 November 2021.
  5. ^ "Leah Posluns".
  6. ^ "The Jack and Pat Kay Centre Camp Vaughan « Ontario Camps Association". Retrieved 2023-09-23.
  7. ^ "The Jack and Pat Kay Centre Camp". Streets Of Toronto. Retrieved 2023-09-23.
  8. ^ "Penurious to philanthropist: Martin Prosserman dies at 87". 18 April 2019.
edit