Irene Levine Paull
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Irene Levine Paull
Irene Levine Paull (April 18, 1908 – August 12, 1981) was a writer and labor activist from Minnesota. She responded to discrimination by fighting for the rights of people who were oppressed. She was active in labor organizing and Communist politics, and she insisted that women could travel and write professionally just as men could. She founded the newspaper that became the ''Minneapolis Labor Review'', penned columns under feminine pseudonyms, and wrote poetry, plays, and fiction that addressed themes of injustice. Early life and education Irene Levine was born in Duluth, Minnesota on April 18, 1908. Her mother, Eva Zlatkovski Levine, was a Jewish immigrant from a Ukrainian shtetl, or small city Pereiaslav. Her father, Maurice Levine, was the son of Jewish immigrants from the same shtetl. The Levines lived near a large extended family and community from Peryaslov. Irene Levine Paull's radical politics were formed as a young child. When she began attending public school, gentil ...
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