{{Short description|Russian journalist (1816–1893)}} {{Infobox writer | name= Aleksander Zederbaum | image=Zederbaum, Alexander.jpg | image_size= | caption=Aleksander Zederbaum, 1885 | native_name= | native_name_lang= | pseudonym= | birth_name= | birth_date={{birth date|1816|08|27}} | birth_place=Zamość, Congress Poland | death_date={{death date and age|1893|09|08|1816|08|27}} | death_place=Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire | resting_place= | occupation= | language=Hebrew, Yiddish, Russian | residence= | alma_mater= | genre= | subject= | movement= | notableworks= | spouse= | children= | awards= | years_active= }}
'''Aleksander Ossypovich Zederbaum''' ({{Langx|yi|אַלעקסאַנדער הלוי אָסיפאָוויטש צעדערבוים}}; August 27, 1816, Zamość – September 8, 1893, Saint Petersburg) was a Polish-Russian Jewish journalist who wrote primarily in Hebrew. He was founder and editor of ''Ha-Melitz'', and other periodicals published in Yiddish and Russian.
==Biography== A son of poor parents, Zederbaum was apprenticed to a tailor. He succeeded in acquiring a knowledge of Hebrew literature, and of the Russian, Polish, and German languages. He married in Lublin, and in 1840 left for Odessa, then a centre of the ''Haskalah'' movement. He obtained there a commercial position, made the acquaintance of the ''Maskilim'' of the city, and in his leisure hours continued to work for his self-education. Later he opened a clothing-store, and was himself cutter in his tailoring-shop.
In 1860 Zederbaum succeeded in obtaining the government's permission to publish ''Ha-Melitz'', the first Hebrew periodical issued in Russia; and three years later he began publishing the pioneer Yiddish journal ''Kol Mevasser''. After an existence of eight years the latter paper was suppressed by the government, whereupon Zederbaum went to Saint Petersburg, obtaining permission to transfer the headquarters of ''Ha-Melitz'' to that city. He was also granted permission to do his own printing, and to publish, besides ''Ha-Melitz'', a Russian weekly (''Vyestnik Ruskich Yedreed''), which, however, enjoyed only a short existence, as did also the "Razsvyet," which he started a few years later. In 1881 he founded the ''Volksblatt'', a daily Yiddish journal which existed for eight years, although Zederbaum was its editor for only a few years. In 1884 Zederbaum invited rising Yiddish author Mordecai Spector to join him as an assistant editor of the paper, after publishing his breakthrough novel ''Der Yidisher Muzhik'' (''The Jewish Farmer''). The two worked together until 1887.<ref name="encyclopedia">{{cite web|title=Spector, Mordecai |website=Encyclopaedia Judaica - Encyclopedia.com | author= Moshe Starkman| url=https://www.encyclopedia.com/religion/encyclopedias-almanacs-transcripts-and-maps/spector-mordecai}}</ref>
Zederbaum was the author of "Keter Kehunnah" and "Ben ha-Metsarim," but neither of these works met with any success. His chief significance lies in the fact that he was a champion of the Haskalah. His ''Kol Mevasser'' offered an opportunity for many of the best jargon-writers to develop their talents; and among these may be mentioned Yitzkhok Yoel Linetzky, Mendele Mocher Sforim, Mordecai Spector, and Sholem Aleichem.
Zederbaum exercised considerable influence in government circles, and it was due to his intercession that an impartial judgment was obtained for many Jewish families accused of blood libel in Kutaisi; he disclosed also the ignorance of the Russian anti-Semite Hippolytus Lutostansky, whose pamphlets threatened to become dangerous for the Russian Jews. The Palestine Association of Odessa owed its existence to Zederbaum's activity.
== References == {{Reflist}} {{Jewish Encyclopedia|article=Zederbaum, Alexander Ossypovitch|url=http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/15212-zederbaum-alexander-ossypovitch/|first1=Joseph|last1=Jacobs|first2=S.|last2=Hurwitz|volume=12|page=650}}
=== References in the Jewish Encyclopedia === * ''Khronika Voskhoda''. 1893, Nos. 35-36 * Sokolow, ''Sefer Zikkaron'', 1890 * Wiener, ''History of Yiddish Literature in the Nineteenth Century'' * Brainin, ''Zikronot'', 1899 * Friedberg, in ''Sefer ha-Shanah'', 1900
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Zederbaum, Aleksander}} Category:1816 births Category:1893 deaths Category:People from Zamość Category:People from Congress Poland Category:Russian people of Polish-Jewish descent Category:19th-century journalists from the Russian Empire Category:Russian male journalists Category:19th-century male writers from the Russian Empire Category:People of the Haskalah Category:Hebrew-language writers Category:Newspaper editors from the Russian Empire Category:Yiddish-language journalists