Isa Milman uses historical and personal awakening, and archival sleuthing,
to create a “kaddish” – a Jewish prayer of mourning and commemoration –
for a prairie community that now exists only through remembrance.
Prairie Kaddish begins with the author’s serendipitous discovery of the
Jewish graveyard at Lipton, Saskatchewan, a community whose existence
she’d previously been unaware of. The incident triggers an exploration
both archival and personal, for information about these people, and what their
lives must have been like, and the resulting work of remembrance, which makes
up this book.
Kaddish is the Jewish prayer for the dead, recited at the burial, during the seven
days of mourning, and every year on the anniversary of the death. Every Jew
knows Kaddish, it is the universal prayer.
There are no more Jewish colonies, no more Jewish farmers on the prairies. Prairie Kaddish is an elegy for all that no longer exists, except through remembrance.