Sylva Gelber

1910–2003

by Michael Brown

In Brief

Sylva Gelber was born into a Canadian Zionist family and left Canada for Palestine in 1932. A friend introduced Gelber to American Zionist leader Henrietta Szold, who decided to enroll Gelber as the first student in her new School of Social Work in 1933. Gelber was subsequently involved with the Jewish National Council’s Jerusalem welfare bureau, the Hadassah Medical Organization, and British Palestine’s Department of Labor. Gelber left Palestine in 1948 after her romantic involvement with a British officer soured her Jewish friendships. Upon returning to Canada, she became a distinguished political advocate for women’s rights. Between 1968 and 1975 she served as director of the Women’s Bureau of the Canada Department of Labor and as the Canadian representative to the UN Commission on the Status of Women. 

Family & Education

The first graduate of the Social Work School of the Va’ad Le’umi, now the Baerwald School of Social Work of the Hebrew University, Sylva Gelber was born into a Zionist family. Her father was Louis Gelber (1878–1968) and her mother Sara Gelber née Morris (d. 1954). Louis and his brother Moses (1876–1940) were successful textile wholesalers who had immigrated to Toronto in 1896 from the town of Berezhany in Austrian Galicia. They and their children were among Canada’s foremost supporters of Jewish nationalism. Gelber’s cousin Edward (1904–1971), Moses’s son, was a lawyer and a rabbi who devoted his life to serving the Jewish community. Among other posts, he was president of the Zionist Organization of Canada (ZOC) and co-chair of Israel Bonds of Canada for a number of years before moving to Israel with his family in 1956. Gelber had four brothers: Lionel (1907–1989), who acted as political advisor to the Jewish Agency Office in New York between 1945 and 1948; Marvin (1912–1990), who, in those same years, worked as a lobbyist urging the Canadian government to support the nascent state of Israel and over the years was involved with the Palestine Economic Corporation, the Canadian Friends of the Hebrew University, and the ZOC; Arthur (1915–1998), who was a president of the Toronto Zionist Council, a founder of the Canada-Israel Cultural Foundation, and active in other Zionist organizations; and Sholome (1918-2001), an ordained rabbi who assisted in organizing “illegal” immigration to Palestine while working with UNRWA in the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. Gelber never married.

Gelber was educated at Havergal Ladies College in Toronto, an exclusive girls’ school that admitted few Jews in the 1920s. Summers were spent at Camp Modin in Maine, an early Jewish and Hebrew educational camp, the alumni of which included members of the American-Jewish communal elite. Her application to Barnard College in 1929 was rejected because “the Jewish quota was already filled.” She took courses at Columbia, New York University, and the University of Toronto that did not lead to a degree. After a stint as a columnist for the Jewish Standard, a Toronto Zionist publication then edited by Meyer Weisgal (1894–1977), she left for Palestine in 1932.

Yishuv Years

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Canadian Career & Legacy

Gelber had left a country in which few women and no Jews could enter the public service. She returned at the moment when Canada was opening up, in part because of embarrassment regarding the country’s actions during the Holocaust. Gelber embarked upon a career of distinguished public service. From 1950 to 1968 she worked as a health insurance consultant to the Government of Canada Department of National Health and Welfare. From 1968 to 1975 she served as director of the Women’s Bureau of the Canada Department of Labor, and from 1970 to 1974 she was the Canadian representative to the UN Commission on the Status of Women. Gelber was especially celebrated and gained national recognition for her role as an advocate of women’s rights. She was a pioneer in the introduction of equal-pay legislation, maternity leave, and women’s pension benefits into Canadian politics. Concurrently she served as special advisor to the Canadian UN General Assembly delegation and as Canadian delegate to International Labor Organization conferences. 

Gelber held honorary degrees from Queen’s, Memorial, Guelph, Trent, and Mount St. Vincent’s universities. She was awarded the Canadian Centennial Medal in 1967 and made an officer of the Order of Canada in 1975. She served on the boards of governors of Trent University and the Canadian Human Rights Foundation. In 1978 she served as vice-president of the latter. She was also on the board of the Canada-Israel Cultural Foundation, which her brother, Arthur, had helped to establish. 

One of Gelber’s greatest passions was music. She was founder and president of the Sylva Gelber Music Foundation, which provides financial assistance to young Canadian classical musicians. She also endowed an award for talented students at the Rubin Academy of Music and Dance in Jerusalem through the Canada-Israel Cultural Foundation. Gelber wrote a memoir of her Yishuv experiences called No Balm in Gilead in 1989. She died in Ottawa in 2003.

Selected Works

No Balm in Gilead: A Personal Retrospective of Mandate Days in Palestine. Montréal: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2014.

The Rights of Man and the Status of Women. Ottawa: Canada Women’s Bureau, Dept. of Labor, 1973.

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How to cite this page

Brown, Michael. "Sylva Gelber." Shalvi/Hyman Encyclopedia of Jewish Women. 27 February 2009. Jewish Women's Archive. (Viewed on June 13, 2026) <https://qa.jwa.org/encyclopedia/article/gelber-sylva>.