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Alice Parizeau
Alice Parizeau
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Alice Parizeau OC (née Alicja Poznańska; 25 July 1930 – 30 September 1990) was a Polish-Canadian writer, essayist, journalist and criminologist.

Key Information

Early life

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Her parents were Stanislaw Poznański (1894 - 1943) and Rebeka (Bronislawa Breina) Kestenberg (1892-1943) Polish Jews murdered in the Holocaust, both in Otwock, Poland according to the testimony of Kestenberg's brother, Yehuda Adam Kestenberg, recorded in Yad Vashem.[1] Stanislaw Poznański was the son of Karol Poznański and grandson of Izrael Poznański, a famous Polish-Jewish businessman, textile magnate and philanthropist (Philanthropy) in Łódź.

Born in Łuniniec, Poland, as a young girl Poznańska was associated with the Polish Home Army during the 1944 Warsaw Uprising during World War II, which led to her internment in the Bergen-Belsen prisoner of war camp and her receipt of a war medal following the war.[2]

Following the war Poznańska went to Paris to study at the Sorbonne, earning degrees in literature, law and political science. In 1955 she visited a friend from the Sorbonne in Quebec, where she accepted a short contract which would turn into a lifelong stay. She married economist and politician Jacques Parizeau the following year.

Though of Jewish background, and interned in Bergen Belsen during the Holocaust, Alice Poznanska's funeral was held at a Catholic church.[3]

Career

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As a Quebecer, Parizeau was strongly associated with Montreal's intellectual and sovereigntist scenes, respectively. While best known as a novelist and journalist — she wrote for Cité libre, La Presse, Châtelaine, Le Devoir, La Patrie and Maclean's — Parizeau held a number of other positions. These included civil servant with the City of Montreal, researcher for Société Radio-Canada and, most notably, criminology researcher,[4] lecturer and secretary-general of the Centre international de criminologie comparée at the Université de Montréal, where she served for many years as the de facto assistant director to Denis Szabo, founder of modern criminology in Quebec.

Parizeau's writing was known for its outstanding storytelling and sensitive treatment of themes relating both to the Quebec people, which she portrayed in romantic terms congruent with the sovereignty movement's ideals, and life in and exile from Poland. She won the Prix européen de l'Association des écrivains de langue française in 1982 for her novel Les lilas fleurissent à Varsovie (translated as The Lilacs are Blooming in Warsaw). In 1987, she was made an Officer of the Order of Canada. Many members of the Quebec sovereignty movement, including the press, criticised her for accepting an honour from the Governor General of Canada.

Memorials

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In 1990, Parizeau died of cancer in Outremont, Quebec, leaving her husband, Jacques, and two children, Isabelle, a lawyer, and Bernard, a doctor. The École Alice Parizeau in Montreal and the Bibliothèque Alice-Parizeau in Saint-Esprit, Quebec were named in her honour.

Works

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  • Les solitudes humaines (1962)
  • Voyage en Pologne (1963)
  • Fuir (1963)
  • Survivre (1964)
  • Une Québécoise en Europe rouge (1965)
  • Rue Sherbrooke Ouest (1967)
  • Les lilas fleurissent à Varsovie (1981)
  • Côte-des-Neiges (1983)[5]
  • Blizzard sur Québec (1987)

See also

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References

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Sources

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Alice Parizeau is a Polish-Canadian journalist, novelist, and essayist known for her autobiographical novels depicting wartime experiences in Poland and themes of exile, identity, and integration in Québec society. Born Alice Poznanska on July 25, 1930, in Luniniec, Poland, she spent her childhood in Kraków and served as a liaison officer in the Polish Home Army during World War II, later being interned in the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp after the Warsaw Uprising. Following liberation, she moved to Paris, where she pursued studies in the humanities in 1948 and obtained degrees in political science and law in 1953. She emigrated to Montréal in 1955, where she built a multifaceted career in journalism, literature, and academia. In Québec, Parizeau contributed to numerous publications including La Presse, Le Devoir, Châtelaine, and Cité libre, and worked as a researcher for Radio-Canada. From 1970, she was affiliated with the criminology department at the Université de Montréal. She was married to Jacques Parizeau, who later served as Premier of Québec, and participated actively in sovereigntist intellectual circles in Montréal. Her literary output includes early novels such as Voyage en Pologne (1962), Fuir (1963), and Rue Sherbrooke ouest (1967), but she achieved particular acclaim with her autobiographical trilogy: Les lilas fleurissent à Varsovie (1981), which won the Prix européen de l’Association des écrivains de langue française in 1982, followed by La charge des sangliers (1982) and Ils se sont connus à Lwow (1985). Later works include Blizzard sur Québec (1987) and Nata et le professeur (1988). Diagnosed with terminal cancer in 1988, she documented her final years in a diary published posthumously as Une femme (1991). She was appointed an Officer of the Order of Canada and died on September 30, 1990, in Montréal.

Early Life

Childhood in Poland

Alice Parizeau was born as Alicja Poznańska on July 25, 1930, in Łuniniec, Poland (now in Belarus), to Polish Jewish parents. She spent her childhood in Kraków.

World War II Survival

Alice Parizeau, born Alicja Poznańska in 1930 to a Polish-Jewish family in Łuniniec, Poland, faced intense persecution under Nazi occupation during World War II. Her parents died during the war; sources indicate they were murdered in the Holocaust around 1943. As a young girl, she survived by becoming actively involved in the Polish resistance. She served as a liaison officer for the Armia Krajowa (Polish Home Army), the primary underground resistance organization. This role allowed her to contribute to anti-Nazi efforts while navigating the dangers of her Jewish identity amid widespread persecution. In 1944, at age fourteen, she participated in the Warsaw Uprising against German forces. After the uprising's suppression, she was arrested and imprisoned in the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. She endured the camp's brutal conditions until its liberation by Allied troops in April 1945, surviving to the end of the war in Europe.

Immigration to Canada

Following her liberation from the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp at the end of World War II, Alice Parizeau relocated to Paris, where she pursued and completed her higher education, obtaining a certificate in political science and a law degree in 1953. She emigrated to Canada in 1955, settling in Montréal, Quebec. As a Holocaust survivor and recent immigrant from Poland via France, she established her new life in Quebec, adapting to the cultural and linguistic environment of her adopted province.

Education

Studies in Criminology and Social Sciences

Alice Parizeau pursued her higher education in Paris following World War II, earning a certificat en sciences politiques and a licence en droit in 1953. These degrees in political science and law formed the core of her formal training in social sciences and related disciplines, equipping her with analytical tools for understanding societal structures and justice systems. After immigrating to Montreal in 1955, Parizeau did not pursue additional formal degrees but transitioned into the field of criminology through professional engagement at the Université de Montréal. From 1970, she was affiliated with the Département de criminologie and held a research position there, applying her background in social sciences to criminological inquiry. This period marked her shift toward specialized work in criminology without documented enrollment as a student for advanced degrees at the university.

Career

Journalism and Media Contributions

Alice Parizeau began a significant career in journalism shortly after immigrating to Montreal in 1955, contributing to several major Quebec publications. She collaborated with newspapers and magazines including La Presse, Le Devoir, Cité libre, Châtelaine, La Patrie, and Maclean's, where she produced essays and articles. Her journalistic output frequently addressed social issues, with a particular emphasis on criminology, the protection of abused children, and broader aspects of Quebec society. She also worked as a freelance contributor and researcher for Radio-Canada. Parizeau remained active in journalism primarily from the 1960s through the 1980s, using her media platform to engage with public debates on justice and social welfare.

Literary Career

Alice Parizeau began her literary career in the early 1960s, shortly after immigrating to Montreal in 1955, with publications that combined essays and early novels reflecting her Polish origins and adaptation to Quebec life. Her first works appeared in 1962, including the essay collections Les solitudes humaines and Voyage en Pologne, followed by the novel Fuir in 1963. These initial publications marked her transition from journalism to creative writing, establishing her voice in Quebec literature through introspective pieces that bridged her wartime experiences in Poland with observations of her new environment. During the 1960s and 1970s, Parizeau's output evolved from shorter reflective and semi-autobiographical works to more structured novels addressing contemporary social realities. Notable early novels such as Survivre (1964), Rue Sherbrooke ouest (1967), and Les militants (1974) demonstrated her growing focus on narrative fiction while continuing to explore themes of displacement and identity. She published primarily with Quebec houses including the Cercle du Livre de France, which supported her transition to longer fictional forms. Her career reached its peak in the 1980s with the publication of an autobiographical trilogy centered on her Polish wartime experiences, beginning with Les lilas fleurissent à Varsovie (1981), which received the Prix européen de l’Association des écrivains de langue française in 1982, followed by La charge des sangliers (1982) and Ils se sont connus à Lwow (1985). This trilogy brought her significant recognition in Quebec and broader French-language literary circles for its storytelling ability and depiction of complex individual and collective destinies amid historical tragedy. Parizeau's writing consistently explored themes of survival and courage in the face of war and suffering, personal and cultural identity shaped by exile, and the integration of immigrants into Quebec society. Her narratives often highlighted women's resilience within these broader historical and social contexts, contributing to her place among Quebec authors addressing memory, displacement, and societal adaptation.

Criminology Research and Publications

Alice Parizeau was actively involved in criminological research through her association with the Centre international de criminologie comparée at the Université de Montréal, where she participated in studies on comparative criminality between Canada and Eastern European countries, social deviance and control in Inuit communities at Frobisher Bay, the role and status of chief judges in Canada, presentence reports, and the theoretical and practical dimensions of dejudiciarisation. In 1970, she prepared a report for the Commission d’enquête Prévost examining the administration of penal justice in Quebec. Her work emphasized the individual—whether child or detainee—in relation to social institutions, with a consistent focus on human rights and critiques of institutional responses to deviance. She served as secretary to the editorial board of the journal Criminologie starting in its eighth year, took responsibility in 1975 for producing its annual issue of nearly 200 pages with a small editorial committee, and spearheaded its transition to a semiannual publication in 1977; she continued managing the periodical until 1982, handling proofreading, international promotion, and authoring approximately a dozen articles, some written urgently to fill gaps. In 1977, she edited a volume for the International Center for Comparative Criminology titled The Criminal Personality, which included research summaries on recidivists' personality traits, criminal careers, and distinctions between habitual and situational offenders. Parizeau co-authored with Denis Szabo the book Le traitement de la criminalité au Canada (Presses de l’Université de Montréal, 1977), a comprehensive analysis of Canadian penal policy framed by the philosophy of social defense; it traces the shift from punitive approaches to prevention and rehabilitation, critiques historical penitentiary failures such as high recidivism and inadequate offender classification, and discusses developments in parole, probation, suspended sentences, and post-penal assistance, drawing on major inquiries like Archambault (1938), Fauteux (1956), and Ouimet (1969). An English edition, The Canadian Criminal Justice System (Lexington Books, 1977), similarly describes the structure of Canadian criminal justice, including provincial enforcement roles, federal criminal legislation, and differences from U.S. practices in police procedures and judicial appointments. Her publications on youth-related issues within criminology include L’Adolescent et la société (1972), Ces jeunes qui nous font peur (1974), L’Envers de l’enfance (1976), and Protection de l’enfance : échec ? (1979), which address neglected or troubled children, propose concrete solutions, and reflect her broader concern for vulnerable individuals navigating institutional systems.

Personal Life

Marriage and Family

Alice Parizeau married Jacques Parizeau in 1956, after meeting him during a stay in Quebec the previous year. The couple settled in Montreal and raised two children, Bernard and Isabelle. Their family life was centered in Outremont, a borough of Montreal, where Alice resided until her death in 1990. Her husband's career as an economist and his increasing involvement in Quebec politics, including roles in the Parti Québécois starting in the late 1960s, shaped the family's public and private context during their marriage. The couple's shared life in exile proved productive, as reflected in her writings that touched on their existence together in Quebec.

Notable Works

Fiction and Novels

Alice Parizeau's fiction draws heavily from her personal experiences as a survivor of World War II in Poland and her immigration to Quebec, forming the foundation of her literary achievements. She is best known for her trilogy of autobiographical novels that recount her life amid the violence and tragedy of wartime Poland, portraying a saga marked by courage, permanent suffering, and complex human destinies. The trilogy consists of Les lilas fleurissent à Varsovie (1981), which won the Prix européen de l’Association des écrivains de langue française in 1982; La charge des sangliers (1982); and Ils se sont connus à Lwow (1985). These works highlight Parizeau's talent as a storyteller, sustaining reader suspense through elaborate staging of collective and individual fates rooted in historical trauma. Her novels frequently explore themes of survival, love, identity, and the realities of Quebec society, often reflecting immigrant experiences and cultural adaptation. Earlier and additional novels include Rue Sherbrooke ouest (1967), which addresses immigrant life in Montreal; Côte-des-Neiges (1983); Blizzard sur Québec (1987), paying tribute to regional pioneers; and Nata et le professeur (1988), which intertwines a love story with the horrors of the 1943 Katyn Massacre. Through these works, Parizeau examines the interplay between personal resilience and broader social contexts, blending autobiographical elements with reflections on human endurance and belonging.

Non-Fiction and Essays

Alice Parizeau produced a substantial body of non-fiction work centered on criminology, juvenile delinquency, child protection, and criminal justice policies in Canada, informed by her role as a professor and researcher in the Université de Montréal's Department of Criminology starting in 1970. Her publications in this field, mostly from the 1970s and early 1980s, offered analyses of societal responses to crime, youth behavior, and state intervention in family matters. Key criminology titles include Le traitement de la criminalité au Canada (1977), co-authored with Denis Szabo, which examines approaches to criminality within the Canadian system. Ces jeunes qui nous font peur (1974), co-authored with Marc-André Delisle, addresses societal fears surrounding delinquent youth and their treatment. Other significant contributions encompass L'adolescent et la société (1972), a comparative study with Denis Szabo and Denis Gagné where she authored a major section, as well as La déjudiciarisation (1976), exploring theoretical and practical aspects of diverting cases from formal judicial processes. Works such as Protection de l'enfant : échec? – famille, État et les droits de l'enfance (1979) and Le placement familial de l'enfance (1976) critically examined child rights, family dynamics, and state roles in protection and placement. Parizeau also authored earlier non-fiction in the form of travel reportages and essays reflecting her Polish origins and observations of Eastern Europe under communism. Notable examples are Voyage en Pologne (1962) and Une Québécoise en Europe "rouge" (1965), which combined personal narrative with social commentary on political and cultural realities. Her posthumously published Une femme (1991) presented a personal memoir in logbook form, chronicling her life experiences and final illness. These non-fiction writings complemented her journalistic essays in outlets such as Châtelaine, Cité libre, Le Devoir, and others, where she engaged with social and cultural issues.

Death and Legacy

Death

Alice Parizeau died on September 30, 1990, in Outremont, Quebec, at the age of 60 following a battle with cancer. Her death occurred in Montreal after a period of illness that affected her later years, during which she had continued her writing and public engagements as her health permitted. Her funeral was held on October 3, 1990, at the Saint-Germain church in Outremont, drawing over a thousand attendees to pay their respects.

Legacy and Influence

Alice Parizeau's legacy endures in Quebec literature as a prominent voice in francophone writing that bridged Polish wartime experiences with immigrant life in Quebec. Her autobiographical trilogy—Les lilas fleurissent à Varsovie (1981), La charge des sangliers (1982), and Ils se sont connus à Lwow (1985)—earned widespread readership for its depiction of survival, solidarity, and suffering during World War II, with the first volume receiving the Prix européen de l’Association des écrivains de langue française in 1982. Literary critics recognized her significance, with Réginald Martel placing her among the five Quebec authors who marked the 1980s for reflecting both a "pays perdu" and "pays trouvé." Her works contributed notably to immigrant narratives in Quebec literature, portraying the emotional tensions of exile, integration, and attachment to one's origins while embracing an adopted homeland. This theme resonated in novels set in Quebec contexts, such as Côte-des-Neiges and Blizzard sur Québec, highlighting her role in enriching multicultural perspectives within francophone writing. In terms of women's writing, Parizeau's prolific output and personal resilience as an author facing terminal illness—documented in her posthumous diary Une femme (1991)—exemplified determination and passion, influencing portrayals of women as agents of reason, action, and social commitment. Parizeau received formal recognition for her literary and journalistic contributions with her appointment as an Officer of the Order of Canada in 1987. Posthumously, her impact is evident in commemorative tributes, including the 1991 collective volume Les Adieux du Québec à Alice Parizeau and the donation of her archives to the Université de Montréal in 2001. Institutions bearing her name, such as the École Alice Parizeau in Montreal's Cartierville borough and the Bibliothèque Alice-Parizeau in Saint-Esprit, reflect ongoing community acknowledgment of her cultural presence. Her legacy also extends to criminology through advocacy for child protection, including her role in founding the Société québécoise de protection de l’enfance et de la jeunesse and publications like L’Envers de l’enfance (1966) that raised public awareness of abused children.
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