Jacques F. Ferrand

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Jacques F. Ferrand or Jacques Friedland (actually Isaak Friedland ; * 1898 ; † unknown) was a Franco-German journalist, author, radio operator and editor.

Live and act

Friedland published the magazine Ich under the pseudonym Wallenstein in the German Empire in 1920/21 . After the seizure of power by the Nazis , he went in 1933 into exile in Paris, where he under the pseudonyms F. Jacques Ferrand, Jacques (Jack) Friedland, Jack Iwo, Frank Frey and Jacques P. Terre published, and he was co-editor of the Phoenix Library in Paris. During this time he corresponded with Salomo Friedlaender (also living in Paris) , who published articles in the Phönix series.

In 1940 he emigrated to New York City, where he worked for the Council's Foreign Language Radio Division and was secretary of the American Nobel Memorial Committee. After his return to France he worked as a journalist under the name Jacques Friedland ; He was arrested in the late 1940s as editor-in-chief of the communist weekly Regards on charges of espionage for the Soviet Union .

Publications

  • Jacques Friedland: Une caméra dans le Vercors . Editions hier et aujourd'hui, 1948
  • Jacques Friedland: Les guerilleros attaquent . Les Éditeurs réunis, 1952

Individual evidence

  1. Michaela Enderle-Ristori: Market and intellectual power field: literary criticism in the feature pages of Pariser Tageblatt and Pariser Tageszeitung (1933-1940) M. Niemeyer, Tübingen 1997, pp. 95ff.
  2. a b Mynona: The Creator; George grosz; Tarzaniade; The anti-Babylonian tower; The laughing Job . edited by Hartmut Geerken, Detlef Thiel. ...
  3. ^ A b Salomo Friedlaender : Letters from Exile: 1933-1946. Edited by Hartmut Geerken , Mainzer series; Vol. 54 Mainz: v. Hase and Koehler, 1982 ISBN 3775810307 / 3-7758-1030-7
  4. ^ Common Ground, Volumes 8-10, Cover Common Council for American Unity, 1948
  5. ^ The Screen Writer, Volume 2, ed. Screen Writers Guild, Incorporated, 1946
  6. Four active communists who worked for the publications France D'abord and Regards were arrested, including Jacques Friedland, editor-in-chief of Regards, Bernard Jouenne, a draftsman, and Yves Moreau, editor-in-chief of France d'abord . See also: David J. Dallin: The Soviet Espionage: Principles and Practices . Verlag für Politik und Wirtschaft, 1956, p. 357, or 1949 in Der Spiegel, Volume 3, Issues 1–26, 1981 and in Report of Proceedings , Volume 2. Ed. World Federation of Trade Unions, 1949