Abraham Isaak
Abraham Isaak was a newspaper editor and Russian-American anarchist. He was raised in the Mennonite village of Rosenthal, part of the Chortitza Colony, but later settled in the United States.
Biography
Abraham Isaak was the second of 12 children born to Abraham Isaak and Helena Wiebe.Isaak was best known for his editing and publishing the American anarchist weeklies the Firebrand and Free Society, Isaak was less a theorist than an activist. His acquaintances and friends included the Russian anarchists Peter Kropotkin and Emma Goldman.
Isaak came to regret his move to New York in 1904 where Free Society faced financial problems that forced its closure in November of that year. Emma Goldman's Mother Earth, which first appeared in 1906, was an attempt to fill the anarchists' subsequent literary void.
Political and ethical beliefs
Isaak only twice referred to his Mennonite past in the Firebrand and Free Society. This extended quote is taken from the former:Although Isaak was an ex-Mennonite, he continued to espouse many traditional Anabaptist principles such as pacifism, mutual aid and socio-economic equality that Anarchist theorists have promoted and that Isaak believed represented the best of his own Mennonite tradition.