Type | Weekly |
---|---|
Owner(s) | Grand Rabbi Y. A. Korff |
Publisher | Jewish Advocate Publishing Corp |
Editor | Dr. Brett M. Rhyne |
Founded | 1902 |
Language | English |
Headquarters | 15 School Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02108 |
Circulation | 40,000 |
ISSN | 1077-2995 |
Website | The Jewish Advocate |
The Jewish Advocate is a weekly Jewish newspaper serving Greater Boston and the New England area. It was established in 1902, and is the oldest continuously-circulated English-language Jewish newspaper in the United States. Before May 28, 1909, it was briefly known as The Jewish Home Journal and then as The Boston Advocate.
Based in downtown Boston, in the former Boston Post daily newspaper building (which, in its cellars four stories underground, still contains the century-old pulleys-and-lifts system equipment for the publishing presses of those days) overlooking what was known in the late 19th and early 20th centuries as "newspaper row", The Jewish Advocate has published weekly every week since its founding over one hundred ten years ago. The paper is the primary Jewish newspaper for the Greater Boston and Eastern Massachusetts metropolitan area, and for much of New England, with subscribers in all 50 states and 14 foreign countries. It is available both in paper form and online.
The Advocate was founded by Jacob de Haas, executive secretary to the Austrian journalist and founder of modern political Zionism, Theodor Herzl. Having founded the Vienna newspaper Die Welt and the First Zionist Congress in Basel in 1897, Herzl sent de Haas to Boston several years later to start a newspaper which would inculcate Judaism into the community and progress the cause of the re-establishment of the Jewish faith and a Jewish state. The paper has been owned by only two families since that time.
In 1917 de Haas became national executive director of the newly organized Zionist Organization of America at the invitation of Louis D. Brandeis, who had just become president of the ZOA, and ownership of The Jewish Advocate passed to Alexander Brin, who, as a national reporter for the former Boston Traveler daily newspaper, had become well-known through his coverage of the Leo Frank case in Atlanta, Georgia. A year later The Advocate played a leading role in supporting the appointment of Brandeis as the first Jewish justice on the Supreme Court of the United States, and nearly thirty years later in the establishment of Brandeis University.