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Dorothy Dworkin
Canadian nurse and activist (1889–1976) / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Dorothy Dworkin (née Goldstick; 1889/1890 – 13 August 1976) was a Canadian nurse, businesswoman and philanthropist. She was the first professionally trained nurse in Toronto's Jewish community and among its most prominent healthcare advocates. She led the fundraising campaign for the city's first Jewish hospital and is considered the matriarch of Mount Sinai Hospital. Through her family travel business, she helped thousands of Eastern European Jews immigrate to Canada and escape the Holocaust. Dworkin worked with many community charities and was a strong supporter of the Jewish trade unions through the city's Labour Lyceum. She was also the publisher and editor of a Yiddish newspaper and produced a Yiddish radio program. In 2009, she was recognized as a Person of National Historic Significance in Canada.
Dorothy Dworkin | |
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![]() Dworkin in nurse's uniform ca. 1909 | |
Born | Dvora Goldstick 1889/1890 |
Died | (1976-08-13)13 August 1976 Toronto, Ontario, Canada |
Spouse | Henry "Harry" (Chanan) Dworkin
(m. 1911; death 1928) |
Children | Ellen "Honey" Dworkin |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Nursing, medical entrepreneurship and philanthropy |
Institutions | Mount Sinai Hospital |