- Timerman, Jacobo
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▪ 2000Argentine journalist (b. Jan. 6, 1923, Bar, Ukrainian S.S.R., U.S.S.R.—d. Nov. 11, 1999, Buenos Aires, Arg.), exposed the Argentine military's “dirty war,” in which thousands of political dissidents and intellectuals were killed, by writing an account of his incarceration and subsequent torture in the late 1970s. Timerman, born into a prominent Jewish family that in 1928 migrated to Argentina to escape the pogroms, was affected by watching his parents live in poverty in their new country. After a series of odd jobs, he began writing in the early 1940s for a number of publications. In 1962 he established Primera Plana, his own weekly news magazine, and it was an immediate success. He later sold Primera Plana, began another successful weekly magazine, and sold that one as well. In 1971 he launched a daily tabloid newspaper called La Opinion, which fared extremely well because of its unending attacks on abuses of power in high places. When the military seized control in 1976, Timerman and his paper came under increasing attacks. After receiving a number of death threats, he was abducted by the military in April 1977. Confined, tortured, and interrogated, Timerman was held for two and one-half years. After his release, he wrote a book about his experiences in prison, Prisoner Without a Name, Cell Without a Number (1981), which alerted the international community to the horrors taking place in Argentina. Subsequently, he was banished from the country and moved first to Israel and then New York and Spain, continuing to work as an author and a journalist. He was allowed to return to Argentina in 1983.
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Universalium. 2010.