RUVN
ZALTSMAN (1890-March 15, 1950)
He was born in Brisk (Brest),
Lithuania, into the family of a poor shoemaker.
At age six he was orphaned on his father’s side. He studied in religious primary school and on
his own acquired secular knowledge. In
his youth he became a tailor, and he was active in the trade union movement and
in the Bund. He was arrested by the
Tsarist authorities and exiled to Siberia for three years. In 1911 he came to New York and until 1919
worked in a sweatshop, while at the same time remaining active in the trade union
and socialist movement. In the Workmen’s
Circle he was a member of the education committee and a fighter on behalf of
secular Jewish schools. After 1920 he
was one of the most active leaders in the Jewish section of the Communist Party
in America. He was cofounder and general
secretary of the International Workers’ Order (IWO), of the newspaper Frayhayt (Freedom), and of a series of
Yiddish periodical publications of the leftist movement. He was one of the initiators of the Jewish
Culture Congress in Paris (1937). On
several occasions he visited European countries, including the Soviet
Union. He published articles (some under
the pseudonym “Zara”) in: Frayhayt, Morgn-frayhayt (Morning freedom), Hamer (Hammer), Di naye velt (The new world), Proletarishe
dertsiung (Proletarian education), Shul-almanakh
(School almanac), Yidishe kultur
(Jewish culture), and Eynikeyt
(Unity)—in New York; Kultur (Culture)
in Chicago; and in other Jewish Communist publications in various lands. He was the author of the book: Tsu der geshikhte fun der fraternaler
bavegung (Toward the history of the fraternal movement) (New York, 1936),
287 pp. He also published a significant
number of pamphlets of a political polemical character with Communist leanings,
such as: Barikht tsu der ershter konvents
fun internatsyonaln arbeter ordn (Report to the first convention of the
International Workers’ Order) (New York, 1931), 28 pp.; Di shul far ayer kind (The school for your child) (New York, 1935),
40 pp.; Ordn fun proletarishn fraternalism
(Order of proletarian fraternalism) (New York, 1938), 23 pp.; Der ordn in yidishn lebn (The Order in
Jewish life) (New York, 1938), 63 pp.; Der
ordn in der itstiker epokhe (The Order in the contemporary epoch) (New
York, 1941), 31 pp.; Farrat in arbeter
ring (Treason in Workmen’s Circle) (New York, 1942), 23 pp.; A shand un a veytog (A shame and a pain)
(New York, 1942), 23 pp.; 17 yor in dinst
fun folks-ordn (Seventeen years in service to the people’s order) (New
York, 1947), 63 pp.; Unter dem zeydenem
farhang fun amerikaner yidishn kongres (Under the silk curtain of the
American Jewish Congress) (New York, 1949), 32 pp. He died in St. Louis, Missouri.
Sources:
R. Yuklson, in Morgn-frayhayt (New
York) (March 18, 1959); Moyshe Kats, in Morgn-frayhayt
(March 24, 1959); Z. H. in Yidishe kultur
(New York) (April 1959).
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