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Jewish Post of New York (weekly) The Jewish Press (weekly) The Jewish Voice (weekly) The Jewish Week (weekly) Kanzhongguo (Chinese language weekly) The Korea Times (daily) Long Island Press (monthly) The Main Street WIRE (bi-weekly) Metro New York (free daily) Mott Haven Herald; New York Amsterdam News (weekly) New York Daily News (daily) New ...
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 ...
By 2010, it was still considered the leader among English-language newspapers in the Orthodox communities in the greater New York City area, with a weekly circulation of nearly 50,000 copies. [1] According to Haaretz, the online version of The Jewish Press had a readership of 2 million views each month. [13]
The largest-circulation Yiddish weekly in the United States, [7] Der Algemeiner Journal emphasized Jewish community news, with a politically independent viewpoint, including reporting on tensions between rival Hasidic sects. Although Jacobson was a Lubavitcher Chasid, [8] according to The New York Times, he "defied easy categorization." [3]
The Jewish Week won two first-place awards from the American Jewish Press Association in 2021. [14]In 2016, The Jewish Week became a finalist for awards in two categories by the Deadline Club, the New York City chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists, for its series on the battle to improve secular education in chasidic schools.
Forverts was a successor to New York's first Yiddish-language socialist newspaper, Di Arbeter Tsaytung (The Workman's Paper), a weekly established in 1890 by the fledgling Jewish trade union movement centered in the United Hebrew Trades, as a vehicle for bringing socialist and trade unionist ideas to Yiddish-speaking immigrants, primarily from ...
The Jewish Voice (TJV) is a conservative weekly newspaper based in Manhattan, New York, that was founded in 2003 as The Jewish Sephardic Voice. [citation needed] The Jewish Voice has a pro-Israel editorial outlook. It covers Israeli and American news (the latter focused on New York and, to a lesser extent, New Jersey and Florida).
After a discussion, consensus to merge this page with List of Jewish newspapers was found. ... New York. The Tageblatt (1885-1928) [3] Der Algemeiner Journal ...