arts & entertainment An Iconic Newspaperman In a new book, Seth Lipsky tells the story of Abraham Cahan, a pivotal figure in journalism and Jewish American history. I Suzanne Chessler Contributing Writer He was something of a star, but I am much more interested in making stars out of the people who work for me. The stars in my day were not the editors; they were the writers and in one or two cases senior editors. S eth Lipsky lived among the his- toric homes of Indian Village in the 1970s but has lived in the contemporary world of news for most of his life. During the Michigan years, Lipsky worked in the Detroit bureau of the Wall Street Journal. Various reporting, editorial and ownership positions — before and since — have included employment with Time magazine, the New York Post and the New York Sun. Lipsky, a minority owner of the Detroit Jewish News, will visit the area to intro- duce his new book about legendary editor Abraham Cahan, founder of the Jewish Daily Forward, the Yiddish publication started in 1897 and now known as the Forward. Cahan also penned the acclaimed 1917 novel, The Rise of David Levinsky. Lipsky's book, The Rise of Abraham Cahan (Nextbook/Schocken), will be his subject for two appearances at the Jewish Book Fair: at 2 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 10, at the Jewish Community Center in West Bloomfield; and 1 p.m. Monday, Nov. 11, at the JCC in Oak Park. His talks are spon- sored by the Detroit Jewish News. Lipsky, who proposed the English edi- tion of the Forward and worked at the paper for 10 years, has included two sec- tions of photos in the book. They relate to Cahan's historic connections as he covered and confronted issues important to Jewish immigrants settling into America. "The Yiddish Forward led its readers not away from Judaism but toward assimila- tion:' Lipsky explains in a phone conversa- tion from New York. "The English paper was launched in 1990 just as a national Jewish population survey discovered that the Jewish commu- nity had a demographic crisis. "People have said that the Forward has begun to lead its readers back toward a Jewish life. It's an cinspirator' in interests of matters Jewish, and I think Jewish news- papers can play a role in keeping young people connected to Judaism:' Here, Lipsky, 67, whose college years included a stint as editor of the Harvard Crimson, anticipates his local presentations: JN: What do you like about Abraham Cahan's story? SL: I like the relevance of the story to Seth Lipsky today and the lesson that one can adjust one's position to conform to the facts. I like the example he set as editor and his trajectory of discovering that, after his long battle, religion was at the core of his struggle. JN: What influenced you to write this book? SL: As the founder of the English lan- guage paper that we call the Forward, [I realized] that Cahan, 40 years after he died, was a huge presence there. People talked about him and wondered how he might have handled editorials. I began to wonder about Cahan, and when I sold my interest in the paper, I began working on this book. JN: How does your book differ from other books on the same subject? SL: There are some very good but more academic and specialized books about Abraham Cahan. This is a book for the general reader, and it is part of the Encounter Series on great Jewish lives that's published by Nextbook in conjunction with Random House and the Schocken imprint. JN: What did you learn about the dra- matic impact of the Forward and Cahan as you worked on the book? SL: One of the remarkable things I learned was just how anti-communist The Forward was. We think of it rightly as a great pro-labor, progressive institution in many ways, but it figured out before the other papers just what an evil enterprise the Soviets' Communist system was. Abraham Cahan made a famous trip to Europe in the mid-1920s and debriefed the Forward's correspondents. He came back and said what the Communists had set up in Russia was worse than anything under the czars. Coming from someone like Cahan, that was a very strong statement, and it colored the coverage of the Soviet Union for the rest of his days. A free trade union movement, with unions responsive to their members and not a political party or government, is the movement that really resulted in the downfall of the Soviet Union. A lot of the events in the downfall of the Soviet Union happened after Cahan died, which was in 1951. This book sets the stage for that story. JN: How did the Forward change with its English-language edition? SL: The Forward, between the assimi- lation it encouraged and the murder of European Jewry, was left with a dwindling readership. In 1983, it announced it would retreat to weekly publication from daily. That is the point at which I approached the Forward with a proposal to create a new paper under the flag of the old paper in the English language. We started out as a weekly, but it has been my hope it will be restored to daily publication in English. That is happen- ing now with the online platform, which makes daily publication radically less expensive from a production point of view than a printed paper. I think it will end up as a daily paper on the Web. JN: How would you compare your edit- ing style to Cahan's? SL: Cahan was a great editor, political leader and intellect in his own right. I'm a newspaperman and much more conserva- tive than he was. IN: What would you like readers to remember about the famous journalists you recall in connection with Cahan and also show in pictures? SL: There's a picture of Lincoln Steffens, who became the editor of the New York Commercial Advertiser and was a famous muckraking journalist. Cahan founded the Forward but quit [for a time], protesting attempts of the Socialist Party to control the publication, and went to work for the Commercial Advertiser. There's a picture of William Dean Howells, who was a great literary figure in America at the time and took Abraham Cahan under his wing. And there's a picture of H.L. Mencken, a famous correspondent for the Evening Sun in Baltimore but also an anti-Semite who had a great friendship with Cahan; they collaborated on a monograph about the Yiddish language, and it's a mystery why they liked each other so much. JN: What are your current projects? SL: I wrote an annotated guide to the Constitution for the general-interest reader, and I'm writing two sequels to that, one on the constitutional dollar and one on broad themes in the Constitution. I'm working on a book about Vietnam. I edit the New York Sun website, and I write a column for the New York Post. JN: How do you envision the future of Jewish newspapers and newspapers in general? SL: It's logical that we'll reach a tipping point where the online publications are more practical and popular than the print- ed papers, but papers are proving pretty durable. Most of the larger companies bring in far more revenues through their printed products than online products, but it's starting to shift. ❑ Seth Lipsky will speak at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Jewish Community Center in West Bloomfield and at 1 p.m. Monday, Nov.11, at the JCC in Oak Park. No admission charge. www.jccdet.org . JN November 7 • 2013 63