Jewish Outlook

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The Jewish Outlook was an American

National Jewish Hospital. The Outlook opposed both Zionism and Orthodox Judaism.[1]

Its first publisher was Samuel Priess. In the paper's early years, Rabbi William S. Friedman of Temple Emanuel was editor. Friedman was also a founder of National Jewish Hospital.[2]

The Outlook regularly criticized the

Denver Jewish News.[4][5] In an opinion piece for the Outlook, Friedman criticized JCRS's plan to "help anyone afflicted with this dread disease and sent to Colorado" as "quixotic and chimerical" as well as "unwise and ill-advised."[1]

In 1907, Rabbi Montague N.A. Cohen of Temple Emanuel in

Denver Jewish News
was founded.

References

  1. ^ a b c National Endowment for the Humanities. "The Jewish outlook" – via chroniclingamerica.loc.gov.
  2. ^ "The History of National Jewish Health". nationaljewish.org.
  3. , page 246
  4. ^ "Collection: Jewish Consumptives' Relief Society Records | Archives @ DU Catalog".
  5. ^ "Charles Spivak: Pioneer Jewish Doctor of Denver, Colorado – JMAW – Jewish Museum of the American West".
  6. ^ The Centennial History of the Jews of Colorado, 1859-1959, by Allen D. Breck, The University of Denver Department of History Series, Hirschfeld Press (1960), Page 109.
  7. ^ The Centennial History of the Jews of Colorado, 1859-1959, by Allen D. Breck, The University of Denver Department of History Series, Hirschfeld Press (1960), Page 110.