in 1917.
Seated (L-R): Ben-Tsien Hofman (Tsivion),
Max Goldfarb,
Morris Winchevsky, A. Litvak, Hannah Salutsky, Moishe Terman.
Standing: Shauchno Epstein, Frank Rozenblat,
Baruch Charney Vladeck,
Moissaye Olgin,
Jacob Salutsky (J.B.S. Hardman). Shortly after arriving in the United States, Olgin became a regular contributor to the Jewish daily newspaper
The Forward. Olgin became an American citizen in April 1920. He was a leading member of the
Jewish Socialist Federation of the
Socialist Party of America and was influential in leading the JSF out of the party at a special convention of the organization held in September 1921. Together with other defecting members of the JSF, Olgin thereafter entered the fledgling
Workers Council organization, a small group of
revolutionary socialists which rejected the conspiratorial "underground" form of organization of the then extant communist movement. Olgin ceased contributing to
The Forward at this same time. Olgin blesses the Arab revolutionaries," a political cartoon published in
The Jewish Daily Forward satirizing Olgin's alleged support for the
1929 Palestine riots, October 13, 1929 In April 1922, there was launched a new
Yiddish-language newspaper, the Daily
Freiheit (later the
Morning Freiheit). Olgin served as first editor of this publication, a position which he retained up until the time of his death. He also contributed frequently to the Communist Party's English-language newspaper,
The Daily Worker, and served as a special correspondent for the
Soviet Communist Party's daily,
Pravda. Although a bitter rival of
Alexander Bittelman in the heated factional politics of the Jewish Federation in the early 1920s, by the middle of the decade, Olgin had emerged as a supporter of the political faction that was headed by
William Z. Foster,
Earl Browder, and his former foe. Olgin made several trips to the
Soviet Union. In 1937, he went to Paris as delegation to the International Yiddish Culture Congress which founded the World Alliance for Jewish Culture (YCUF). While in Paris, he addressed the Writers Congress. ==Death and legacy==