The Portuguese Tribune, also known as Tribuna Portuguesa, is a Portuguese bilingual newspaper headquartered in Modesto, California. It was founded in July 1979 by John P. Brum in San Jose, CA. It is currently owned by The Tagus Group and its publisher and editor is José Ávila.
History
Regularly published since September 1979, The Portuguese Tribune was a weekly newspaper headquartered in the heart of the Portuguese-American community of San Jose—the Little Portugal or Five Wounds neighborhood. In the mid-1980s and under difficult financial and administrative crisis, it was reorganized by entrepreneurs Albert Soares, John Rodrigues da Silveira, and Arthur Thomas under editor Artur da Cunha Oliveira, Azorean writer and future Member of the European Parliament. After Dr. Cunha Oliveira's election to the European Parliament in 1989, the newspaper went through some administrative challenges and irregular publication until radio personality and writer Filomena Rocha Mendes took over. A couple of years later, the administration was transferred to Jaime Lemos, Armando Antunes, and Helder Antunes, who brought in new columnists, among them, José Ávila, and became a biweekly publication. In 2002-2003, The Tagus Group presided by José Ávila acquired all rights to the publication and significantly modernized The Portuguese Tribune—increasing the number of contributors and columnists of all ages and opinions, focusing on community events rather than news from Portugal, committing to a more in-depth English language section, publishing the newspaper on its entirety on the web with a worldwide readership, redesigning it into a fresh layout, leading to a more than 100% increase in subscribers. From its original address on Alum Rock Avenue to the corner of 33rd Street to the rectory of Five Wounds Portuguese National Church to 27th Street, all in San Jose's Little Portugal district to its present address in Modesto, The Portuguese Tribune has evolved with the times and celebrated its 30th anniversary in September 2009.
The Portuguese Tribune was the 28th Portuguese newspaper to be founded in California since A Voz Portuguesa in 1884 in San Francisco. The Portuguese Tribune was the first Portuguese newspaper in California since the Capelinhos Volcano wave of immigration from the Azores Islands. Since then, others were established, but none other than The Portuguese Tribune has survived: Notícia 1985-1986, Portugal-USA 1986-1987, Luso-Americano California 1992-1995, Portuguese-American Chronicle 1997-2006, and Lusitania News 2006. Even the old Jornal Portugues, a merger of three earlier newspapers—O Imparcial 1903-1932, Jornal de Noticias 1917-1932, and Colonia Portugueza -- ceased to exist in 1997 after over a century of publication.
Causes
In the 1980s, The Portuguese Tribune sponsored an initiative to recognize former Portuguese Consul General in Bordeaux, France, Aristides de Sousa Mendes by the Portuguese Government. In the early 1990s, the newspaper became a voice for the East Timorese people in the Portuguese-American community in the US, institutions of higher learning, and political entities in Sacramento, Washington, DC, and New York. Since its foundation in 1979, The Portuguese Tribune has supported educational causes including the Portuguese Studies Programs at and .