Through the generations... a sacred trust
Mark Salber Phillips
Moshe Ben Zvi V'Chava
    Mark Salber Phillips
    Moshe Ben Zvi V'Chava

    Death Date:  Monday, December 30, 2024
    Yahrzeit Date:  29 Kislev 5785
    Funeral Date:  Thursday, January 02, 2025
    Funeral Time:  2:00 PM
    Funeral Place:   Graveside
    Cemetery:   Osgoode Cemetery
    Cemetery Section:  Temple Israel Section
    Shiva Address:
    235 Delaware Avenue, # 1,Toronto, Ontario,M6H 2T7
    Shiva information:  Shiva will begin in Toronto Saturday evening from 6:00 to 9:00 pm with Havdalah at 7:00 pm, continuing Sunday from 2:00 to 4:00 pm and 7:00 to 9:00 pm with an evening service at 7:30 pm. Shiva visits will conclude on Sunday evening, January 5th.
    Notice: 
    Mark Salber Phillips

    15 December 1946 - 30 December 2024

    We mourn the death of Mark Salber Phillips, who died peacefully in Toronto on December 30. His death ended a life devoted to teaching, historical research and writing, and a politics of social justice. Equally important to him were his wife Ruth and his daughters Sarah Casteel and Emma Phillips, whom he loved and supported in innumerable ways.

    Mark was born in Durban, South Africa and spent his childhood in Cape Town. He emigrated to the United States in 1956 after his parents realized that their commitment to a racially equitable practice of medicine would not be possible under apartheid. Mark earned his B.A. in history at Harvard and, with Ruth, went on to pursue graduate work at University of California, Berkeley. Mark had been active in the anti-Vietnam war movement since his undergraduate years, and when he was called up for the draft in 1968 he and Ruth decided to emigrate to Canada - driving across the border sporting a new haircut they hoped would make him look more acceptable to Canadian immigration authorities. Mark and Ruth continued their graduate work at the University of Toronto, where Mark received his PhD in 1970. He was hired to teach history at Carleton University in 1971, with a subsequent appointment at UBC. For four decades, he mentored students, teaching them to respect texts and read them closely as expressions of unique historical periods and cultures. A historian of ideas, Mark's teaching and work were interdisciplinary well before this approach was widely adopted, reflecting his deep love and broad knowledge of literature and art.

    Mark worked initially on the Italian Renaissance. His first book, "Francesco Guicciardini: The Historian's Craft" (1977), examined the work of one of Italy's most important historians. In contrast, his second book, "The Memoir of Marco Parenti: A Life in Medici Florence" (1987), explored the texture of the daily life of a Florentine merchant. A major shift came in the 1980s when he began to work on eighteenth-century British historiography and the Scottish Enlightenment. "Society and Sentiment: Genres of Historical Writing in Britain", 1740-1820 (2000), perhaps his most influential book, was followed a decade later by the work he regarded as his most important, "On Historical Distance" (2013). Beyond these monographs he also published a wide range of important scholarly articles and three co-edited volumes on concepts of tradition, historical distance, and, toward the end of his life, history painting.

    Mark was the recipient of major honours including a Guggenheim fellowship, appointments as a fellow at Princeton's Institute for Advanced Study and three Cambridge colleges, and membership in the Royal Society of Canada. "On Historical Distance" won the 2014 Wallace K. Ferguson prize from the Canadian Historical Association.

    In both his personal and his professional life, Mark was noted for the passion for language that inspired his elegant prose, his teaching of the craft of writing, his incurable love of puns, and his fascination with etymology. He was devoted to his kayak at Bob's Lake and his beloved dogs, most recently Wilkie who brought him great comfort as he battled Alzheimer's.

    In addition to his wife and two daughters, Mark leaves his five grandchildren, Harry, Isaac, and Miriam Casteel and Zelda and Avie Gillespie - to each of whom he leaves a legacy of a love for language and a commitment to "tikkun olam".
    Charity: 
    Ottawa Food Bank (613) 745-7001
    www.ottawafoodbank.ca
    Other Information: 
    Please note, the service will begin in the Chapel on the grounds at Osgoode Cemetery, and the interment will follow immediately afterwards in the Temple Israel section.

    Condolence Messages
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    The Benjamin Family
    As you read these messages, may there be comfort in knowing that others are thinking of you at this time of loss.
    Emma Peacocke
    January 08, 2025
    11:18 AM
    Dear Ruth and Sarah, I am so very sorry to hear about Mark. So many of my happiest memories of graduate school are to do with his scintillating and profound classes, his generosity with his time outside of class, and his warmth and funniness on all occasions. He very kindly invited me over to help me with a funding application (his guidance made it a success), and I remember feeling so torn in my attention, because Mark was going out of his way to lay out important principles for proving the quality, relevance, and importance of one’s research, but Nellie was licking out my ears for me, which surely Mark would never have done. Mark also conscientiously insisted on giving me home-made minestrone afterward – he never saw a graduate student whom he wouldn’t materially assist! Another thing that sticks in my mind is his kindness and politeness, and gently sardonic manner, when it seemed that I had been accessing very dubious websites on his computer – in fact, I was using a currency exchange website for correctly filing conference expenses, but there were certainly a lot of ‘x’s in the website title. Mark’s unflappable kindness lives on, because he is one of the chief models that I and so many others have used for how to treat our own students well. With love and sorrow, Emma
    Stacey Loyer
    January 07, 2025
    07:53 AM
    Dear Ruth and Family, I want to express my sympathies for your loss. I had the good fortune to learn from Mark as both a graduate student and research assistant. I carry memories of his kindness and good humor, and how he encouraged me intellectually to read closely and understand things in new ways. May you find comfort in his memory.
    John and Fiona
    January 06, 2025
    01:21 PM
    Dear Ruth and Family, John and I extend our sincere condolences and offer our help with anything you may need upon your return to our little condo community. Reading of Mark's life - family, academe and other professional successes - makes us wish we had had the opportunity to know him. You will have to let us know sometime what an appropriate haircut for the Canadian border officials is! With full hearts, John and Fiona
    Alex Wetmore
    January 05, 2025
    02:07 PM
    Dear Ruth and family, I am so sorry for your loss and to hear of Mark’s passing. He was a valued mentor during my time at Carleton, as well as being such an engaging mind and impressive scholar. I genuinely learned and gained so much from him. My condolences to you all, and I hope you will find comfort in his memory.
    Kim&Art
    January 04, 2025
    05:00 PM
    Dear Ruth and family, our sincere condolences on the loss of your husband, father, and grandfather. What a remarkable life story! We hope you will find comfort in your shared memories. your new neighbors
    Jenna Stidwill
    January 04, 2025
    03:30 PM
    My heartfelt condolences go out to all of you on the loss of your beloved husband, father, and grandfather. Mark had such a generous soul and love for his family. He touched so many lives during his time. In the days ahead, I hope the wonderful memories of him will comfort you.
    Ariel Isaac and Sequoia
    January 04, 2025
    07:25 AM
    Dear Emma, Zelda, and Avíe: We regret immensely Mark’s passing. We knew him as a loving, gentle, kind and generous man, with an enchanting sense of humour and a deep love of life. We enjoyed his brilliance and wit, and saw the pain of his decline and the fortitude with which he faced it. It is with admiration and delight that we see his humanitarian values, love for social justice, and love for knowledge living in his children and grandchildren. May his memory be for a blessing.
    Ariel Isaac and sequoia
    January 04, 2025
    07:17 AM
    We regret immensely Mark’s passing. We knew him as a gentle, kind and generous man, with an enchanting sense of humour and a deep love of life. We enjoyed his brilliance and wit, and saw the pain of his decline and the fortitude with which he faced it. It is with admiration and delight that we see his humanitarian values living in his children and grandchildren. May his memory be a blessing.
    Corinne Hart
    January 03, 2025
    03:28 PM
    Dear Emma and family, Sending deepest condolences to you all. I never met your dadhusbandgrandfather but knowing Emma shows me clearly what a wonderful man he was. Take care of yourself. Hold your memories tight and may his memory be a blessing.
    Adam Budd
    January 03, 2025
    08:45 AM
    Dear Ruth and family, I am so sorry for your loss. Mark was the most generous teacher and colleague I have ever known. I first met him at CSECS in 2001 when I was a PhD student and his Society and Sentiment had just been published. Let me take you for lunch at the British Library when we will both be there next summer, he said. And he did. We stayed in touch for some 15 years: he was always a kind, thoughtful, and deeply caring mentor. He set an example of tikkun olam in everything he did - and he has inspired so many of us to think and work in ways that deepen and broaden our world. I am grateful to have known him.
    Marcie Frank
    January 03, 2025
    08:30 AM
    Dear Ruth and family, I am so sad to learn of Mark's death. The past few years must have been difficult ones and you have all my sympathies. Mark was an inspiring scholar and a generous interlocutor. He has left an important body of work. I feel privileged to have gotten the chance to know him a bit.
    Phyllis Angel Greenberg
    January 02, 2025
    04:18 PM
    Emma, Zelda, Mark and Avie, Condolences on the passing of your father, father-in-law and grandfather. What an extraordinary person! I learned a lot about him talking with Mark Gillespie at a recent evening at Darchei Noam. He left a powerful legacy to his family and his students and all who knew him. May his memory forever be a blessing.
    Sandra Campbell
    January 02, 2025
    03:06 PM
    Dear Ruth and family, We were saddened to hear of Mark's death - he had a rich life in academe and family. I am convinced that somewhere he and Blair are discussing books once more. May you have every comfort possible in this loss. Sincerely, Sandy and Duncan
    Sarah Waisvisz
    December 31, 2024
    02:55 PM
    Dear Sarah, Ruth, and family; I’m so very sorry for your loss. Mark was such a kind and generous man, just as I know he was an inspiring teacher. I will treasure my memories of being invited to at least two Passover Seders when the grandkids were little and I was Sarah’s graduate student: Mark seemed to get great pleasure out of throwing tiny “frogs” and “locusts” at the children — and thus it was clear that he was a wonderful grandfather, too. May his memory be for a blessing.
    Noelle Duckmann Gallagher
    December 31, 2024
    07:38 AM
    Dear Ruth, Sarah, and Emma, I am so sorry for your loss. Mark changed my life forever when I took an MA course with him at UBC in 2001. For over 20 years, he was my most trusted advisor, my most clear-sighted reader, and a profoundly generous friend. I will miss him deeply. May his memory be for a blessing.