Baltimore Jewish Times

The Baltimore Jewish Times
Type Weekly magazine
Owner Alter Communications, Inc.
Founder David Alter
Publisher Andrew A. Buerger
Editor Andrew A. Buerger
News editor Neil Rubin
Founded 1919
Headquarters 1040 Park Avenue, Suite 200, Baltimore, MD 21201
Circulation 10,000
Sister newspapers STYLE magazine
ISSN 0005-450X
OCLC number 3981984; 42077559
Official website jewishtimes.com

The Baltimore Jewish Times is a subscription-based weekly community publication serving the Jewish community of Baltimore.

History

Baltimore's oldest and largest Jewish publication,[1] it has been described as "the largest weekly in Maryland and one of the most respected independent Jewish publications in America",[2] and "one of the premier independent Jewish newspapers in the country." [3]

The newspaper was founded in 1919 by David Alter, and at one time it was the largest Jewish publication in the country. [4] Alter built a seven newspaper chain, but only two survived the Great Depression, including the Baltimore Jewish Times.[3]

In 1972, the paper was taken over by Charles "Chuck" Buerger, the grandson of the founder, and in 1974 he was joined by Gary Rosenblatt as editor. The two expanded the scope of the paper's coverage, as well as the size; in the 1980s the paper regularly exceeded 200 pages, and circulation peaked at over 20,000. In the 1980s the two also acquired The Detroit Jewish News and The Atlanta Jewish Times, which were given similar makeovers.[3]

Rosenblatt left in 1993 to become editor of New York's The Jewish Week.[3] Buerger started the Palm Beach Jewish Times in November 1994, and a Boca Raton/Delray Beach edition in August 1996.[5]

Buerger died in 1996, and the paper was taken over by his son Andrew. In 1998 Andrew Buerger sold off the Florida newspapers,[5] and in 2000 he sold the Detroit and Atlanta papers to Jewish Renaissance Media.[6]

Phil Jacobs, a Baltimore native and former Jewish Times reporter who had been serving as editor of the Detroit paper, was named Executive Editor of the Baltimore Jewish Times in 1997. During his tenure, the paper published a series of investigative reports on child molestation by members of the rabbinate, and revealed that he had been molested himself as a child. The series won critical acclaim, but was also outrage from some members of the Orthodox community, who disputed some of the accusations made. Jacobs' experience writing the series and living through the controversy it raised in his community was chronicled in Standing Silent, a 2010 documentary film by director Scott Rosenfelt (producer of Mystic Pizza and Home Alone, among others).

In 2006 the paper won the 2005 Simon Rockower Awards for Excellence in News Reporting and Writing about Scientific and Technological Innovation Out of Israel from the American Jewish Press Association.[7]

Jacobs left the Baltimore Jewish Times in June 2011 to become editor of Washington Jewish Week. Andrew Buerger is now editor and publisher, and runs the publication's parent company, Alter Communications, which also produces Baltimore STYLE magazine and a number of custom publications.

In 2011, the Baltimore Jewish Times -- which readers and advertisers also refer to as the JT -- is undergoing a major redesign and becoming more magazine-like, with coated glossy stock, a smaller page size and more color photography and graphics. The new edition is set to be launched August 26, 2011.

Notes

  1. ^ About Us, Baltimore Jewish Times website. Retrieved July 12, 2006.
  2. ^ Echo Media - Baltimore Jewish Times. Retrieved July 12, 2006.
  3. ^ a b c d David, Michael. Publisher of 6 Jewish weeklies, Charles Buerger, dies at 58, j., November 15, 1996.
  4. ^ Dechter, Gadi.Foxy Meets Orthodoxy, Baltimore City Paper, March 15, 2006.
  5. ^ a b De Marco, Donna. Jewish Times sells off its papers in Florida, Baltimore Business Journal, May 1, 1998.
  6. ^ Jewish Times owner sells two newspapers, Baltimore Business Journal, February 11, 2000.
  7. ^ Simon Rockower 2005 Awards for Excellence in Jewish Journalism, American Jewish Press Association website. Retrieved July 12, 2006.

External links