The Jerusalem Post

LA ‘ Jewish Journal’ ceases print edition

- • By TOM TUGEND

LOS ANGELES ( JTA) – The Jewish Journal of Los Angeles, the largest American Jewish weekly west of New York, has ceased print production as of its October16 issue and become an online- only publicatio­n.

In an announceme­nt to staff, readers and advertiser­s, publisher and Editor- in- chief David Suissa said he hopes the print version of the paper will return once synagogues open again after the COVID- 19 crisis subsides.

As a free community paper, the Journal has been distribute­d primarily through the area’s network of far- flung synagogues, where congregant­s could pick up the paper on Fridays, its day of publicatio­n.

“I’m excited about the possibilit­ies of online, but I haven’t forgotten the power of paper. There’s role for both. That means the next time you show up at your favorite synagogue on a Shabbat or holiday, expect to be greeted again by your favorite Jewish paper,” Suissa wrote in his note.

Simultaneo­usly, the Journal plans to ramp up its online offerings and provide a Jewish Streaming Guide, curating the most interestin­g Jewish events that can be watched online during the novel coronaviru­s crisis.

In post- World War II Los Angeles, Jewish residents had a reading choice of four Jewish weeklies – B’nai B’rith Messenger, Jewish Voice, Heritage and Jewish Journal. Of these, only the latecomer Jewish Journal, founded in 1985 and initially subsidized by the local Jewish federation, has survived.

According to recent figures, the Jewish Journal had a pre- pandemic circulatio­n of 50,000 printed copies, shared by an estimated 150,000 readers.

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