Abraham Cahan






 

 

 


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Abraham Cahan, the son of a school teacher, was born in a Lithuanian village in Russia in 1860. He emigrated to the United States in 1882 and settled in the Lower East Side of New York. Cahan worked in a factory and became involved in trade union activities.

In 1897 Cahan founded the Jewish Daily Forward and turned it into a mass-circulation daily. A committed socialist, Cahan became a leading figure in the American Socialist Party. Cahan novel, Yekl, a Tale of the New York Ghetto (1896) won the enthusiastic support of the literary critic, William Dean Howells, and was praised for the realistic treatment of Jewish immigrant life.

Cahan's best known novel, The Rise of David Levinsky was published in 1917. The book tells the story of an ambitious immigrant who abandons the practices of Judaism in order to be successful. Abraham Cahan died in 1951.

 

 

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