Haynt — (Yidishes tageblat 1906 08) was a Yiddish daily newspaper, published in Warsaw from 1906 till 1939. Newspaper Yidishes tageblat was founded in 1906 by Zionist Shmuel Yankev Yatskan, a former contributor to the Hebrew language paper Ha Tsefirah.… … Wikipedia
TASHRAK — (Heb. 1926–1872; תּשר״ק), most common pseudonym of Israel Joseph Zevin, a humorist and pioneer of the Yiddish press in America. Born in Horki (Belorussia), Zevin immigrated to the U.S. in the late 1880s. From 1893 until his death he was on the… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
Kasriel Hirsch Sarasohn — (auch: Hersch; auch: Sarahsohn; * 1835 im Powiat Suwalski, heute Polen, als Sohn eines Rabbiners; † 12. Januar 1905 in New York) war ein US amerikanischer Publizist und Philanthrop. Sarasohn wanderte 1866 von Russland kommend in die Vereinigten… … Deutsch Wikipedia
BUBLICK, GEDALIAH — (1875–1948), U.S. Yiddish journalist and Orthodox Zionist leader. Bublick was born in Grodno, Russia. He began his literary career in 1899 with an article on Jewish nationalism that appeared in the Hebrew periodical Ha Shilo aḥ. In 1901 he helped … Encyclopedia of Judaism
LIEBERMAN, CHAIM — (Herman; 1890–1963), Yiddish essayist and literary critic. Born in Kolki (Volhynia), he immigrated to the U.S. in 1905. His first articles, on education, appeared in the New York Yiddish daily Yidishes Tageblat. On the eve of World War I, he… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
LUTZKY, A. — LUTZKY, A. (pseudonym of Aaron Zucker; 1894–1957), Yiddish poet. Born in Dimidovke (near Lutsk), Ukraine, he was privately educated and prepared for a career as a cantor. Before arriving in the U.S. in 1914, Lutzky had visited Warsaw and recited… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
SARASOHN, KASRIEL HERSCH — (1835–1905), Yiddish and Hebrew newspaper publisher. Born in Suwalki province, Russia, he settled in New York in 1871, and in the following year founded a weekly paper, Di New Yorker Yidishe Tsaytung, which was unsuccessful. Two years later he… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
WARSAW — (Pol. Warszawa), originally capital of the Masovia region; from the 16th century, capital of Poland. Jews were apparently living in Warsaw by the end of the 14th century, but the first explicit information on Jewish settlement dates from 1414. In … Encyclopedia of Judaism
PRESS — This article is arranged according to the following outline: introduction in australia and new zealand in belgium in canada in czechoslovakia in england yiddish press in france in germany and austria between the two world wars after world war ii… … Encyclopedia of Judaism