Munkatsher Humorist was published on Wednesdays.[3] It featured local news and comments on current events, as well as anecdotes and jokes.[2] The newspaper carried advertisements in Yiddish, German and Hungarian.[2] The language used in Munkatsher Humorist was distinctively folksy and idiomatic, showcasing a rich repository of the local Yiddish dialect.[1]
The paper was politically independent.[2] The paper ridiculed local Jewish internal politics, in particular joking about the struggles of the Hasidic courts of Munkács and Belz.[1][2][6]
The launching of Munkatsher Humorist in 1924 had been preceded the same year by the emergence in Munkács of the daily newspaper Dos Yidishe Folksblat ('The Jewish People's Newspaper') during the lead-up to the 1924 election.[7] In 1927 a rival Yiddish daily, Yidishe Tzaytung ('Jewish Newspaper'), was founded by Chief Rabbi Chaim Elazar Shapira.[7]Munkatsher Humorist would dedicate significant attention to the squabbles between the two dailies.[7]
The copies of the periodical were printed by the Meisels Bernat printing shop.[3] The paper consisted of four pages.[2] The format was 24x32 cm.[3]
Munkatsher Humorist was eventually driven out of the market by other Yiddish-language publications.[5]
References
^ abcdKomoróczy Szonja Ráhel. A munkácsi jiddis sajtó a két világháború között in Önazonosság és tagoltság. Elemzések a kulturális megosztottságról. Szerk. Bárdi Nándor, Tóth Ágnes, Argumentum, Budapest, 2013, 355.