Leila Marshy is the daughter of a Palestinian refugee who went and married a Newfoundlander. She lived in Cairo before, during and after the First Intifada and worked for the Palestinian Red Crescent and Medical Aid for Palestine. In Montreal, she has been a filmmaker, an app designer, a marketer, a baker and a chicken farmer. In 2011, she founded a ground-breaking community group bringing Hasidic and non-Hasidic neighbours together in dialogue, and was campaign manager for the first Hasidic woman to hold office in the world.
Her first novel The Philistine (LLP, 2018) was shortlisted for the Rakuten Kobo Emerging Writer Prize and is currently in development for a feature film. In 2025 she edited the anthology Razing Palestine: Punishing Solidarity and Dissent in Canada (Baraka Books) with a Foreword by Gabor Maté. Also published in 2025 by Baraka Books, her first collection of stories, My Thievery of the People, was short listed in 2025 for the QWF Paragraphe Hugh MacLennan Literary Award for Fiction and in 2026 won the Writers Trust Danuta Gleed Literary Award. She is Editor at Baraka Books and lives in Montreal.


