Jewish people's voice
The Jüdische Volksstimme was a German-language Jewish newspaper that first appeared in Brno and later in Vienna, Budapest, Prague and Lemberg . It was edited by Max Hickl (1900–1920), Robert Stricker and Berthold Feiwel . It appeared weekly from February 1900; It was discontinued in 1934.
The newspaper changed its name briefly to the Viennese Jewish People's Voice and was aimed primarily at the Jewish workers and craftsmen. The Jüdische Volksstimme initially had its main market in the eastern regions of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy , but it soon became the second major national newspaper with a program devoted to the increasingly militant anti-Semitism and Zionism .
literature
- Josef Fraenkel (Ed.), Robert Stricker (London, 1950), p. 78; Jewish People's Voice (March 15, 1930), 30th anniversary issue.
Web links
- Editions digitized by the Austrian National Library : Jüdische Volksstimme (online at ANNO ). (Years 1906–1912, incomplete)
- Jewish people's voice in the Compact Memory digitization projectat the University Library in Frankfurt am Main
- YIVO Institute for Jewish Research
Individual evidence
- ^ Dieter J. Hecht: Robert and Paula Stricker. In: Chilufim. Journal for Jewish Cultural History. 7, 2009, pp. 169–178, here p. 170 ( limited preview in the Google book search).