Washington Jewish Week

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Washington Jewish Week is an independent community weekly newspaper serving the Jewish community of the metropolitan Washington, D.C. area.

Founded in 1930 as the National Jewish Ledger , it is mailed to paying subscribers in Maryland, District of Columbia, and Virginia, and is also sold at local bookstores, newsstands and vending machings. In 2004 it had circulation of 15,000, [1] including paid circulation of 13,000, and unpaid circulation of 2,000. [2]

The newspaper has won a number of Simon Rockower Awards for excellence in Jewish Journalism including the First Place Boris Smolar Award for Excellence in Comprehensive Coverage in 2004, and the First Place Award for Excellence in Editorial Writing in 2005.

Until his death in 1993, the paper was owned by Dr. Leonard Kapiloff. During the 1980s and 1990s, by virtue of its geographic location and the quality of its staff then, it was a very influential paper and regularly broke stories picked up by the mainstream press. Among its staff were Michael Berenbaum, Larry Cohler-Esses, Charles Fenyvesi, "Buzzy" Gordon, Renee Matalon, and Henry Srebrnik.

In January 1986, for example, the paper broke the story of how then Israeli ambassador to the US Meir Rosenne was being bypassed by the Israeli government in its dealings with the Reagan administration in the Iran-Contra affair, where arms were being traded for hostages and money. The Israeli government deliberately kept Rosenne out of the loop because the Israelis didn't want to ruin the ambassador's credibility. When the Washington Jewish Week put that on its front page, Rosenne protested.

In 2004 it was sold by the Better Built Group, Inc. to the newly formed newspaper company HarborPoint Media, LLC. As of 2006 its publisher was Larry Fishbein and its editor was Debra Rubin.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Media Placement Circulation Map, Publications of DC, J Media website. Retrieved on July 5, 2006.
  2. ^ Local Media: Weekly Newspapers - District of Columbia/Metro, The Washington Post website. Retrieved on July 5, 2006.

[edit] External links