Jewish group seeks removal of anti-Semite’s name from Quebec street, park
MONTREAL — A man who sought to prevent Jewish people from ever buying his land should lose the honour of having a street and park named after him, a Jewish advocacy group said Tuesday in a public call to the city of St-Jean-sur-Richelieu.
About 40 kilometres south of Montreal, on a small residential island in the Richelieu River, is Waegener Street. At the end of that road is Waegener Park. Both are named after Alphonse Waegener, who tried in the 1960s to prevent Jews from ever acquiring the titles to the land he owned on that island.
It was recently revealed in Quebec Superior Court that Waegener had registered a real estate covenant decades ago, stating the “purchaser and his representatives” of the land, “may not dispose of or rent the said lot to persons of the Jewish race.”
A judge revoked those conditions in November after they were brought to the court’s attention by a notary, who discovered them in the course of his work for a client who had sold land subject to Waegener’s covenant.