Baruch Charney Vladeck (born Borekh Nachman Tsharni, in Yiddish: ברוך טשאַרני); January 13, 1886 – October 30, 1938) was a Belorussian-American labor leader, manager of The Jewish Daily Forward for twenty years, and a member of the New York City Council.
Biography
Early years
Baruch Charney was born January 13, 1886, in Dukor, a small village near Minsk, in what is now Belarus. His parents were Zev Volf and Brokhe Tsharni (née Hurwitz). His father, a fervent LubavitcherHasid, died in 1889, leaving his mother a widow with five sons (he was the fourth) and a daughter.[1][2] Two of his brothers also achieved renown: literary critic Shmuel Niger and Yiddish poet Daniel Charney.[3]
In the early 1900s, Baruch Charney was drawn to the revolutionary movement for the overthrow of the Tsarist autocracy, becoming an activist in the Jewish Labour Bund. As an underground revolutionary, open use of his real name was regarded as highly dangerous to both him and his family, so the pseudonym "Vladeck" was adopted as a nom de guerre.[4] Baruch Charney would use this as his surname for the rest of his life.
Vladeck was arrested in 1904 for conducting a radical study circle for young workers,[5] and was imprisoned for a total of 8 months as a result of this first arrest.[4] He was arrested again in 1905 and faced an extensive exile in Siberia, a fate from which he was saved by the outbreak of the Revolution of 1905 and the political amnesties which accompanied that seminal event.[4]
The 1905 revolution ended in Tsarist restoration by 1907 and a period of reaction ensued. Vladeck came to feel that emigration to the United States was his most realistic option.[4] In 1908 he left Europe for North America, landing at Ellis Island, soon after which he began to immerse himself in the study of American history and culture.[4]
American political activity
In America, Vladeck made use of his previous experience as a public speaker, traveling extensively for four years and giving public lectures on a variety of social, political, and economic topics.[4]
In 1933 Vladeck laid the groundwork for the Jewish Labor Committee, which was formed by Jewish trade unionists, socialists, and kindred groups and individuals to oppose the rise of Nazism in Germany. The JLC had its founding convention the following February, in New York's Lower East Side; Vladeck was the organization's president from the convention until his death. He, together with Jewish trade union leaders, successfully convinced the American Federation of Labor to support a national boycott of German goods at the labor federation's 1933 convention.
^ abcdef"Vladeck, Practical Leader, Socialist Idealist, Dead at 52," The New Leader [New York], vol. 21, no. 45 (November 5, 1938), pg. 8.
^Zvi Gitelman, The Emergence of Modern Jewish Politics: Bundism and Zionism in Eastern Europe. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 2003; pg. 184.
"B.C. Vladeck Dies; City Councilman," New York Times, 31 Oct. 1938: p. 1.
"Half Million See Vladeck Funeral," New York Times, 3 Nov. 1938: p. 28.
Works
B. Vladeck in leben un shafen. Ed. Ephraim Jeshurin. New York: Forverts, 1936.
פֿון דער טיעפֿעניש פֿון האַרץ: אַ בוך פֿון ליידען און קאַמפֿן (From Heart's Depth: A Book of Suffering and Struggle), ed., with help from K. Tepper and Leon Savage. New York: Miller & Hillman, 1917.
Further reading
Brian Dolber, "Sweating for Democracy: Working Class Media and the Struggle for 'Hegemonic Jewishness,' 1919–1941." Ph.D. dissertation, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, 2011.
Brian Dolber, "Strange Bedfellows: Yiddish socialist radio and the collapse of broadcasting reform in the United States, 1927–1938." Historical Journal of Film, Television, and Radio, 2013, Vol. 33(2), 289–307
Melech Epstein, Profiles of Eleven. Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1965.
John Herling, "Baruch Charney Vladeck," in American Jewish Yearbook 41. New York: American Jewish Committee, 1939–1940.
Harold B. Hunting, "A Revolutionist Devoid of Hate," in Distinguished American Jews. Philip Henry Lotz, ed. New York: Associated Press, 1945.
Ephraim Jeshurin, B.C. Vladeck: Fifty Years of Life and Labor. New York: 1932.
Ephraim Jeshurin, ed., B. Vladek in der opshatsung fun zayne fraynd. New York: Forverts, 1936.
Franklin L. Jonas, The Early Life and Career of B. Charney Vladeck. Ph.D. dissertation, New York University, 1972.