Di ṿahrhayṭ - דיא ווארהייט
January 1914
Sunday
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
1
Thursday, 1 January 1914
1 issue
2
Friday, 2 January 1914
1 issue
3
Saturday, 3 January 1914
1 issue
4
Sunday, 4 January 1914
1 issue
5
Monday, 5 January 1914
1 issue
6
Tuesday, 6 January 1914
1 issue
7
Wednesday, 7 January 1914
1 issue
8
Thursday, 8 January 1914
1 issue
9
Friday, 9 January 1914
1 issue
10
Saturday, 10 January 1914
1 issue
11
Sunday, 11 January 1914
1 issue
12
Monday, 12 January 1914
1 issue
13
Tuesday, 13 January 1914
1 issue
14
Wednesday, 14 January 1914
1 issue
15
Thursday, 15 January 1914
1 issue
16
Friday, 16 January 1914
1 issue
17
Saturday, 17 January 1914
1 issue
18
Sunday, 18 January 1914
1 issue
19
Monday, 19 January 1914
1 issue
20
Tuesday, 20 January 1914
1 issue
21
Wednesday, 21 January 1914
1 issue
22
Thursday, 22 January 1914
1 issue
23
Friday, 23 January 1914
1 issue
24
Saturday, 24 January 1914
1 issue
25
Sunday, 25 January 1914
1 issue
26
Monday, 26 January 1914
1 issue
27
Tuesday, 27 January 1914
1 issue
28
Wednesday, 28 January 1914
1 issue
29
Thursday, 29 January 1914
1 issue
30
Friday, 30 January 1914
1 issue
31
Saturday, 31 January 1914
1 issue
Searching...
About this newspaper
Title: Di ṿahrhayṭ - דיא ווארהייט
Available online: 11 November 1905 - 28 February 1919 (4,820 issues; 40,470 pages)
Language: Yiddish
Region: North America
Country: USA
City: New York
Collection: The Jewish Press in the USA / The Yiddish Press Section
Frequency: Daily
Brought to you from the collections of: The New York Public Library
Description:
A Jewish Daily in Yiddish published in New-York. The Wahrheit ("The Truth") was founded by Louis E. Miller, who was one of Abraham Cahan's partners in the foundation of The Forward in 1897. Six years later, in 1903, they parted ways. In 1905 Miller founded The wahrheit, engaging a number of the better Yiddish writers as contributors, among them Chaim Zhitlowsky, Nahman Sirkin and Joel Entin. Aiming to compete with The Forward, he stated at the outset that he would pursue a socialist policy. After a short while he realized his inability to draw readers away from The Forward, and that his best chance to succeed was with the literary and liberal elements. Having abandoned his socialist position, Miller began to stress Jewish nationalism and to promote Jewish Culture. This made The wahrheit the standard bearer of liberal and literary readers. He did lose his radical reading crowd; however, for nearly a decade the more intelligent members of the Jewish middle class supported the newspaper loyally. When World War I started in 1914, Miller was the only Yiddish editor to favor the Allies. Most of his readers, still strongly opposed to Czarist Russia, were antagonized by his position, and many stopped reading and buying the newspaper. The financial backers of the newspaper, alarmed at the prospective loss of their investment, relieved Miller of his editorship. But the damage was done, and The wahrheit never recovered, and in 1919 it was merged with Der Tog. This short forward is based on Jewish Publishing in America: The Impact of Jewish Writing on American Culture by Charles A. Madison, pp. 124-126.
[ + Show More ]
This newspaper is brought to you thanks to:
Tags