Constellation Similarity Assertions

Wiesenfeld, Leon

Leon Wiesenfeld (1885-1971) was born Leib Wiesenfeld in Rzeszow, Galicia (now Poland), on February 7, 1885. In 1906, following five years in the United States where he gathered information about the difficulties facing Polish Jewish immigrants, he embarked on a career in journalism, writing for Yiddish, Polish, and German language newspapers in Germany and the Austro-Hungarian Empire. In 1912(?), he founded a Yiddish weekly newspaper, Justice, which he edited until the outbreak of World War I when he joined the Austrian army. Following the war, Wiesenfeld founded another Yiddish weekly, Yiddishe Folkzeitung ( Jewish People's Newspaper ), which was dedicated to combating anti-semitism in Poland.

Wiesenfeld married Esther Amsterdam, a school teacher from his home town of Rzeszow, in 1911. The couple immigrated to the United States in 1920, settling first in New York City where Wiesenfeld joined the staff of the Jewish Daily Forward. He left the Forward after only a few months because he disagreed with the newspaper's socialist and non-Zionist editorial policies. Wiesenfeld then worked for the Jewish World of Philadelphia and the Jewish Journal in Brooklyn, New York.

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Wiesenfeld, Leon, 1885-1971

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6w97m4w (person)

Polish American author and newspaper editor, of Cleveland, Ohio. From the description of Papers, 1911-1971. (Rhinelander District Library). WorldCat record id: 28493955 Polish Jew and journalist who emigrated to America with his wife, Esther Amsterdam. They settled in Cleveland in 1925 and Leon became a publisher and editor of several Jewish publications, as well as the Anglo-Jewish magazine, the Jewish Voice Pictorial. His wife's niece, Sandra Amsterdam, came to live with t...

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