Difference between revisions of "Zionist Review"
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*[[Gabriel Cohen]]<ref name="ZYB"/> | *[[Gabriel Cohen]]<ref name="ZYB"/> | ||
* Circa 1930's - [[Moshe Pearlman]] 'editor of the Zionist Review in the 1930's, working out of the London offices of the [[Jewish Agency]]. He spent a year in a kibbutz in 1936 and subsequently published his first book, ''Collective Adventure''.' He went on to become 'a well-known author, the first [[Israel Defense Force]] [[IDF Spokesperson's Unit|official spokesman]], founder and first director of the Israel Government Press Office, and an early director of Israel Radio', He 'was a close adviser to Prime Minister [[David Ben Gurion]]. He was recalled to the army in the Six Day War, when he served with his friend, [[Moshe Dayan]].'<ref>[http://archive.jta.org/article/1986/04/07/3003903/moshe-pearlman-dead-at-75 Moshe Pearlman Dead at 75], ''Jewish Telegraphic Agency'', 7 April 1986. </ref> | * Circa 1930's - [[Moshe Pearlman]] 'editor of the Zionist Review in the 1930's, working out of the London offices of the [[Jewish Agency]]. He spent a year in a kibbutz in 1936 and subsequently published his first book, ''Collective Adventure''.' He went on to become 'a well-known author, the first [[Israel Defense Force]] [[IDF Spokesperson's Unit|official spokesman]], founder and first director of the Israel Government Press Office, and an early director of Israel Radio', He 'was a close adviser to Prime Minister [[David Ben Gurion]]. He was recalled to the army in the Six Day War, when he served with his friend, [[Moshe Dayan]].'<ref>[http://archive.jta.org/article/1986/04/07/3003903/moshe-pearlman-dead-at-75 Moshe Pearlman Dead at 75], ''Jewish Telegraphic Agency'', 7 April 1986. </ref> | ||
+ | *[[S Temkin]]<ref>''[[Zionist Year Book]]'', 1972, p. 100</ref> | ||
* 1941-1948 - Dr. [[S. Levenberg]]<ref>[http://www.aim25.ac.uk/cgi-bin/vcdf/detail?coll_id=3251&inst_id=1&nv1=search&nv2= LEVENBERG, Dr Schneier, fl 1930-1991, Zionist], AIM25 Archives. </ref> | * 1941-1948 - Dr. [[S. Levenberg]]<ref>[http://www.aim25.ac.uk/cgi-bin/vcdf/detail?coll_id=3251&inst_id=1&nv1=search&nv2= LEVENBERG, Dr Schneier, fl 1930-1991, Zionist], AIM25 Archives. </ref> | ||
* 1948-1950 - [[David Krivine]] editor of the ''Zionist Review'' 'Born in Harrogate, Yorkshire, in 1919, Krivine studied at Oxford, and was wounded twice during World War II as an officer in the Royal Tank Regiment... He ...made aliya in 1950. During the 1950s he served as Israel's representative to the International Labor Office and was a technical adviser to then prime minister David Ben-Gurion from 1957-58.' Krivine 'joined the [[Jerusalem Post|Post]] in 1959 as an economic correspondent' and was 'a member of The Jerusalem Post editorial staff for over 30 years'<ref>Jerusalem Post Reporter 'Post' veteran David Krivine dies, ''The Jerusalem Post'' October 4, 1992, Sunday</ref> | * 1948-1950 - [[David Krivine]] editor of the ''Zionist Review'' 'Born in Harrogate, Yorkshire, in 1919, Krivine studied at Oxford, and was wounded twice during World War II as an officer in the Royal Tank Regiment... He ...made aliya in 1950. During the 1950s he served as Israel's representative to the International Labor Office and was a technical adviser to then prime minister David Ben-Gurion from 1957-58.' Krivine 'joined the [[Jerusalem Post|Post]] in 1959 as an economic correspondent' and was 'a member of The Jerusalem Post editorial staff for over 30 years'<ref>Jerusalem Post Reporter 'Post' veteran David Krivine dies, ''The Jerusalem Post'' October 4, 1992, Sunday</ref> |
Revision as of 19:58, 19 January 2013
The Zionist Review was the official publication of the Zionist Federation. It was published between May 1917 and June 1927; 1934-1952 and 1982-1995. It was replaced by the Jewish Observer and Middle East Review between 1952 and 1977.
Closure - 1952
The American Jewish Yearbook 1953, reported:
- The replacement of the thirty-year-old Zionist Review by the Jewish Observer and Middle East Review under the editorship of Jon Kimche was a frank acknowledgment that a specifically Zionist organ could no longer stimulate readership and win solvency in Britain. The new journal, sponsored by the Zionist Federation, was inaugurated in March 1952, and represented a departure from the house organ style of its predecessor in favor of one of wider political significance. An interesting innovation was the Zionist Year Book, the first issue of which was published in October 1951.[1]
Editors
- 1917-19 - Albert Montefiore Hyamson Joint Editor, Zionist Review[2]
- Leon Simon[3]
- 1920-1926 and 1934-1938 - Paul Goodman,[4]
- Rev. Maurice Perlzweig (1895-1985)[5] Co-editor.
- Gabriel Cohen[3]
- Circa 1930's - Moshe Pearlman 'editor of the Zionist Review in the 1930's, working out of the London offices of the Jewish Agency. He spent a year in a kibbutz in 1936 and subsequently published his first book, Collective Adventure.' He went on to become 'a well-known author, the first Israel Defense Force official spokesman, founder and first director of the Israel Government Press Office, and an early director of Israel Radio', He 'was a close adviser to Prime Minister David Ben Gurion. He was recalled to the army in the Six Day War, when he served with his friend, Moshe Dayan.'[6]
- S Temkin[7]
- 1941-1948 - Dr. S. Levenberg[8]
- 1948-1950 - David Krivine editor of the Zionist Review 'Born in Harrogate, Yorkshire, in 1919, Krivine studied at Oxford, and was wounded twice during World War II as an officer in the Royal Tank Regiment... He ...made aliya in 1950. During the 1950s he served as Israel's representative to the International Labor Office and was a technical adviser to then prime minister David Ben-Gurion from 1957-58.' Krivine 'joined the Post in 1959 as an economic correspondent' and was 'a member of The Jerusalem Post editorial staff for over 30 years'[9]
- Circa 1951 - Arthur Saul Super (b 1 July 1908, d 1979, Editor[10]) Editor of the Zionist Year Book in 1953.[11]'Super had come to South Africa in 1960 as editor of the Zionist Record, but left journalism to join the ministry of the Johannesburg United Progressive Jewish congregation in January 1964.'[12] In the 1950s he was 'deputy editor' of the Jerusalem Post.[13]
- Abraham Baum[3]
- Prior to early 1960s - Haim Lewis, former editor of the Zionist Review (London) 'arrived in Johannesburg in September [1963] to become editor of the Zionist Record.[14]
- Circa 1995 - Joseph Finklestone (Sep. 25, 1924-Jan. 1, 2002) In 1997, he wrote 'so meagre are the resources of the Zionist Federation that it is unable to publish regularly its famous journal Zionist Review.'[15]
Notes
- ↑ 'Britain' American Jewish Yearbook 1953, 1953, p. 238
- ↑ UCL Archives Hyamson; Albert Montefiore (1875-1954)
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 Zionist Year Book, 1972, p. 97
- ↑ UCL Archives RefNo GASTER/1/A/GOO/5 Goodman; Romana (fl. 1907); née Manczyk; Goodman; Paul (1875-1949)
- ↑ Maurice Samuelson Oldest Zionist Paper Closed Jewish Telegraphic Agency, 29 December 1977.
- ↑ Moshe Pearlman Dead at 75, Jewish Telegraphic Agency, 7 April 1986.
- ↑ Zionist Year Book, 1972, p. 100
- ↑ LEVENBERG, Dr Schneier, fl 1930-1991, Zionist, AIM25 Archives.
- ↑ Jerusalem Post Reporter 'Post' veteran David Krivine dies, The Jerusalem Post October 4, 1992, Sunday
- ↑ Zionist Review, 3 August 1951, p. 8
- ↑ Arthur Saul Super Zionist Year Book 1953, Amazon
- ↑ North Africa, American Jewish Yearbook, 1965, p.494
- ↑ Aryeh Newman 'Letters', Jerusalem Post December 11, 2012 Tuesday
- ↑ North Africa, American Jewish Yearbook, 1965, p.496
- ↑ Joseph Finklestone, 'Zionism and British Jews', in Stephen Massil (ed) The Jewish Year Book 1997, London: Valentine Mitchell, 1997, p.xxx