Lee Zion at his paper (Guardian photo by Matthew Cantor) |
“How could I sit comfortably at my desk while Ukrainian children die?” Lee Zion of the Lafayette Nicollet Ledger in Lafayette, Minn., asked Matthew Cantor of The Guardian. “If they want me as a teacher, I’ll be a teacher. If they want me as a guy driving a truck, delivering supplies, I will deliver supplies. If they need help with cleanup efforts in Bucha and other cities, I will assist with the cleanup.”
"One element of his predecessor’s work Lawson may not pursue is his editorials, which have occasionally landed him in hot water," Cantor writes. "In 2019, Zion wrote a piece on declining fertility rates in which he suggested a remedy: women could 'have sex with me.' It also suggested increasing immigration, noting that this might bother some people because it could 'make America less white,' referencing Donald Trump’s 'Make America great again' slogan."
“There was a huge outcry,” Zion recalled. “Some people really, really loved that piece. And others hated it. Hated it with a passion. . . . One of them said, I will never advertise in this paper, so long as Lee Zion is in charge. Now that I’m done, a new person can probably win this guy back.”
Zion, a native of Brooklyn, N.Y., who has spent his adult life in newspapers, moved to Lafayette in 2018 to buy the Ledger for $35,000. Now he says he will stay in Ukraine “for as long as they’ll have me. And who knows? There’s a Jewish community in Ukraine. I could find a home among the Jewish community.” Cantor writes, "He hopes his plans inspire others to take similar action."
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