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Download QR code; Print/export ... New York. The Tageblatt (1885-1928) [3] ... Dos Yiddishe Licht, replaced with Beleichtungen; Canada
Metro New York (free daily) Mott Haven Herald; New York Amsterdam News (weekly) New York Daily News (daily) New York Law Journal (weekly) The New York Observer (weekly) New York Post (daily) The New York Times (daily) Newsday (daily) Norwood News (bi-weekly) Nowy Dziennik (Polish-language daily) Queens Chronicle (weekly) Queens Teens Voices ...
Jewish Post of New York: English New York 1974–Present 21,000 [1] New Jersey Jewish News: English New Jersey 1946–2020 24,000 [2] Weekly The Jewish Week: English New York 1875–Present 55,000 [3] Weekly UJA funded Yated Ne'eman: English Monsey, New York 1987–Present 20,000 [4] Weekly Der Yid: Yiddish 1953–Present 25,000 [5] Weekly ...
22.8 New York. 22.9 Ohio. 22.10 ... Download QR code; Print/export ... This is a list of free daily newspapers published around the world, organized by country. ...
Di Tzeitung (Yiddish: די צייטונג; the newspaper) is a Yiddish weekly newspaper published in New York City, [1] founded in 1988 and edited by Abraham Friedman, a Satmar Hasidic Jew, from Borough Park, Brooklyn, New York. It is published weekly, on Wednesdays.
The Amsterdam News (also known as New York Amsterdam News) [3] is a weekly Black-owned newspaper serving New York City.It is one of the oldest newspapers geared toward African Americans in the United States and has published columns by such figures as W. E. B. Du Bois, Roy Wilkins, and Adam Clayton Powell Jr., and was the first to recognize and publish Malcolm X.
It was published in Yiddish, the language of the majority of eastern European Jewish immigrants who settled on the Lower East Side of New York. [1] The paper took on a more liberal slant in 1916, when Jacob Fishman became editor, replacing Peter (Peretz) Wiernik. After resigning as editor in 1938, Fishman continued his daily column, "From Day ...
The newspaper is published by Der Yid Inc, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit. [1] It is widely read within the broader Yiddish-speaking Haredi community. It uses a Yiddish dialect common to Satmar Hasidim, as opposed to " YIVO Yiddish", which is standard in secular and academic circles.