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229:('Banner of Labour'). The earlier name was deemed insufficiently "Soviet" in character. The editorial office and printing house were installed in the former synagogue in downtown Tashkent. On April 8, 1931, the newspaper became an organ of the Central Bureau of the Bukharan Jewish Sections of the Central Committee of the
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had a very limited readership, with just 150-200 copies of each issue being printed by hand and distributed within the Jewish quarter of the city. Haim
Kalantrov headed the publication during its early phase. Ilevumani Pinkasov was the first editor of the publication. In 1926, the newspaper became an
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had some 380 local correspondents) and a literary supplement. As of 1932-1933, circulation reached its peak at around 7,000 (which considering that the
Bukharan Jewish community in its totality numbered about 20,000 individuals, implying that most Bukharan Jewish households subscribed to the
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was able to afford to shift to mechanical printing, whereby the circulation increased to 1,000 copies. Half a year later, the print doubled to 2,000 copies. In June 1929, Aharon Saidov, returning from studies at the
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By 1935, circulation had dropped to about 5,000 copies per issue. In its later phase, the newspaper stopped using the term 'Bukharan Jews', changing to 'Central Asian Jews'.
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in June 1938. Aminov, Pinkasov and
Kalantrov suffered repression, and on June 6, 1938, Saidov was arrested. Batchaev was arrested in early July 1938.
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government to switch fully to Latin script. When it did switch to Latin script, it initially avoided the use of Latin
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and the
Organizational Commission on National Minorities of the Central Executive Committee of the Uzbek SSR.
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From "Mercy" to "Banner of Labour": the
Bukharan Jewish press in late Tsarist and early Soviet Central Asia
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newspaper). By this point, the newspaper was distributed among
Bukharan Jewish communities across
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readership gradually grew, reaching 700 copies per issue within a two-year span. In 1928,
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Cacophonie d'empire. Le gouvernement des langues dans l'empire russe et en URSS
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Zakharova, Larissa & Arel, Dominique & Cadiot, Juliette. (2009).
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On
November 16, 1925, the first issue of the lithographed publication
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in 1938, shortly before the closure of the newspaper. Publishing of
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In April 1930, the editorial office of the publication was moved to
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The
Linguistic Challenge: Bukharan Jews and Soviet Language Policy
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The newspaper continued to carry articles printed in the
Hebraic
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Rise and Fall: Bukharan Jewish
Literature of the 1920s and 1930s
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400:Елена Коровай: иной взгляд. Бухарские евреи в русской культуре
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press, news from Bukharan Jewish community life (at one point
237:(Muhib) was the executive secretary of the publication.
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The newspaper contained news stories translated from
276:Yunatan Kurayev was named as the chief editor of
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43:, issue of November 7, 1930 (anniversary of the
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154:('Enlightenment') began publishing from
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430:. Centre Georges Pompidou, 1991. p. 24
169:. Menashe Aminov became the editor of
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16:Bukharian Jewish newspaper (1925–1938)
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353:עיתונות יהודית בשפה הטג’יקית־יהודית
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548:Newspapers disestablished in 1938
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464:Loy, T., & Levin, Z. (2022).
63:, issue of May 26, 1938, in the
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223:and the newspaper was renamed
127:Jewish newspaper published in
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486:Le Monde sépharade - Histoire
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252:as per Jewish writing rules.
231:Communist Party of Uzbekistan
411:Меер Рахминович Беньяминов.
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131:from 1925 to 1930, and in
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93:), initially known as
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563:Communist newspapers
489:. Editions du Seuil.
472:Central Asian Survey
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415:. с.н., 1983. p. 14
187:began switching to
135:from 1930 to 1938.
235:Mordekhai Batchaev
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45:October Revolution
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349:Yad Ben Zvi
215:(1930–1938)
144:(1925–1930)
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296:References
246:Uzbek SSR
156:Samarkand
129:Samarkand
125:Bukharian
123:), was a
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133:Tashkent
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