Folks-Sztyme (), or '''''People's Voice''''' in English, was a bilingual magazine published in Polish and Yiddish in Communist Poland between 1946 and 1991.
Folks-Sztyme (), or '''''People's Voice''' in English, was a bilingual magazine published in Polish and Yiddish in Communist Poland between 1946 and 1991.
An homonymous newspaper existed before World War II. According to Henri Minczeles, the paper began to be circulated in 1946, from Łódź, but it moved to Warsaw after a few years. In 1953, the American Jewish Yearbook noted that "The only newspaper was the Communist Folks-Sztyme. It appeared four days a week and had an illustrated weekly supplement. Yiddishe Szriften, a monthly devoted to literature and art, continued to appear under the sponsorship of the Social and Cultural Union."
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).