Uus Ilm Explained

Uus Ilm
Type:Weekly Estonian language newspaper
Foundation:1909
Ceased Publication:June 1989
Language:Estonian
Political:Communist
Circulation:550 (1925)
Headquarters:Monroe, New York

Uus Ilm (Estonian for New World) was an Estonian language communist newspaper published from Monroe, New York. It began publication in 1909.

History

During the 1920s, it was tied to the Estonian Language Federation of the United Communist Party of America. As of 1925, it had a weekly circulation of 550. Its editor then was Aleksander Kovel, Mihkel Nukk was the editor from 1933 to 1938, from 1940 to 1944 and from 1947 to 1989. Already during the 1930s, the newspaper had very few subscribers and most of the circulation was distributed free of charge. During the World War II events, the newspaper supported the Soviet line, also approving of the forceful integration of Estonia into the USSR. The paper depicted the life in Estonian from the Soviet point of view and treated Marxism and the issues of the US workers of Estonian descent.[1]

Uus Ilm stopped being published in June 1989[2] due to lack of purchasers.

Sources

Notes and References

  1. EE 10. kd - Uus Ilm
  2. Web site: Ajalehe Uus Ilm ja teiste USA sotsialistliku suunitlusega Eesti töölisorganisatsioonide dokumentide kollektsioon (EE-RA - ERAF.9595) - Archives Portal Europe.