It set it apart from others by publishing in the English language while catering (also) to the immigrant community.
[7] It appealed to the wide spectrum of Chicago Jewry.
[8] In addition to local issues, it covered national and international Jewish news.
[6] "As Allied armies liberated Europe in 1945, it published some of the earliest eyewitness accounts of Nazi concentration camps.
"[7] It was one of the longest continuously published Jewish weeklies in the United States.