The Forward

Founded 1897

The Jewish Daily Forward (Forverts) is an American Yiddish periodical that was launched on April 22, 1897, in New York City by the socialist activists Abraham (Abe) Cahan and Louis Miller. Initially, the Forverts was a Yiddish socialist daily newspaper that emerged as a successor to the socialist newspaper Di arbeter tsaytung. It promoted socialist ideas and trade unionism among Yiddish-reading Jewish immigrants. In 1903, Cahan became the sole editor in chief and remained in this position until 1951. With a circulation of 120,000 copies in 1912 and more than 275,000 by the early 1930s, the Forverts was for decades the most widely read and influential Yiddish newspaper in the world. In addition to socialist and progressive editorials on political and social matters, it offered advice columns aiming to ease immigrant adaptation with practical insights, English lessons, a rich selection of Yiddish literary writing: stories, essays, and serialized novels, and news coverage of American and world affairs of interest to Jewish readers. Over time, its political line shifted from revolutionary socialist to support for Roosevelt’s Democratic Party and New Deal and concerns for the situation and fate of the Jewish people came to loom larger in its coverage. Now known as the Forward, the periodical continues to be published online in English and Yiddish. 

Entries in the Posen Library by This Creator

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Forverts Excursion and Raffle

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The heading of this advertisement for an “excursion” offered by the Yiddish daily newspaper Forverts reads: “From where are you a landsman?” (i.e., What town did you come from in the old county?). It…

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Jewish Women on Strike

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The entire city is talking about the tumult, the uproar in the Jewish Quarter that began after the price of meat started to rise. The prices for meat not only went up in the Jewish Quarter. The Trusts…

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A Bintel Brief

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Dear Editor,I am a Russian revolutionist and a freethinker. Here in America I became acquainted with a girl who is also a freethinker. We decided to marry, but the problem is that she has Orthodox…

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A Bintel Brief

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Dear Editor,I am one of those unfortunate girls thrown by fate into a dark and dismal shop, and I need your counsel.Along with my parents, sisters and brothers, I came from Russian Poland where I had…