During his lengthy career in public service, he worked diligently to bring together members of Quebec’s linguistic and religious communities. Concordia honoured him with an honorary doctorate in 1993.
“It’s impossible to overstate Victor’s stature in Quebec society or the magnitude of his life’s achievements,” says Bram Freedman, Concordia’s vice-president of Advancement and External Relations. “It’s equally impossible to capture his warmth or his indefatigable energy for a very public life that spanned nearly a century. Mentor to many, wise counsel, he defined the term ‘eminence grise.’”
In Goldbloom’s honorary degree citation, Concordia Professor Martin Kusy, BComm 69, described him as “a man committed to environmental and public health and the promotion of interfaith dialogue.”
Goldbloom published his memoir, Building Bridges, in 2015. In its preface, Montreal Mayor Denis Coderre wrote, “If politics is the art of compromise, then Victor is an exceptional artist. Victor is a model, a rock, an example to follow.”
Goldbloom is survived by his wife, Sheila, and their children, Michael Goldbloom, Jonathan Goldbloom and Susan Restler.
Michael Goldbloom, principal of Bishop’s University, told the Canadian Jewish News that he had been urging his father to write his story for 15 years. “But he was busy, too focused on looking to the future to have time for the past,” Michael Goldbloom said.