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Hebrew language – Wikiwand

Posted By on December 31, 2023

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Hebrew (Hebrew alphabet: , vrt,

Northwest Semitic language

The earliest examples of written Paleo-Hebrew date back to the 10th century BCE.[17] Nearly all of the Hebrew Bible is written in Biblical Hebrew, with much of its present form in the dialect that scholars believe flourished around the 6th century BCE, during the time of the Babylonian captivity. For this reason, Hebrew has been referred to by Jews as Lashon Hakodesh ( , lit.'the holy tongue' or 'the tongue [of] holiness') since ancient times. The language was not referred to by the name Hebrew in the Bible, but as Yehudit (transl.'the language of Judah') or Spa Kna'an (transl."the language of Canaan").[1][note 2] Mishnah Gittin 9:8 refers to the language as Ivrit, meaning Hebrew; however, Mishnah Megillah refers to the language as Ashurit, meaning Assyrian, which is derived from the name of the alphabet used, in contrast to Ivrit, meaning the Paleo-Hebrew alphabet.[18]

Hebrew ceased to be a regular spoken language sometime between 200 and 400 CE, as it declined in the aftermath of the unsuccessful Bar Kokhba revolt, which was carried out against the Roman Empire by the Jews of Judaea.[19][20][note 3] Aramaic and, to a lesser extent, Greek were already in use as international languages, especially among societal elites and immigrants.[22] Hebrew survived into the medieval period as the language of Jewish liturgy, rabbinic literature, intra-Jewish commerce, and Jewish poetic literature. The first dated book printed in Hebrew was published by Abraham Garton in Reggio (Calabria, Italy) in 1475.[23] With the rise of Zionism in the 19th century, the Hebrew language experienced a full-scale revival as a spoken and literary language, after which it became the main language of the Yishuv in Palestine, and subsequently the lingua franca of the State of Israel with official status.

According to Ethnologue, Hebrew was spoken by five million people worldwide in 1998;[4] in 2013, it was spoken by over nine million people worldwide.[24] After Israel, the United States has the second-largest Hebrew-speaking population, with approximately 220,000 fluent speakers (see Israeli Americans and Jewish Americans).[25] Modern Hebrew and Arabic are the official languages of the State of Israel,[26] while pre-revival forms of Hebrew are used for prayer or study in Jewish and Samaritan communities around the world today; the latter group utilizes the Samaritan dialect as their liturgical tongue. As a non-first language, it is studied mostly by non-Israeli Jews and students in Israel, by archaeologists and linguists specializing in the Middle East and its civilizations, and by theologians in Christian seminaries.

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The rapper Ye, who has a long history of making anti-Semitic comments, issues an apology in Hebrew – Toronto Sun

Posted By on December 31, 2023

The rapper Ye, who has a long history of making anti-Semitic comments, issues an apology in Hebrew  Toronto Sun

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The rapper Ye, who has a long history of making anti-Semitic comments, issues an apology in Hebrew - Toronto Sun

Synagogue – Wikiwand

Posted By on December 28, 2023

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A synagogue,[lower-alpha 1] sometimes referred to by the Yiddish term shul[lower-alpha 2] and referred to by Reform communities as a temple,[lower-alpha 3] is a Jewish house of worship. Synagogues have a place for prayer (the main sanctuary and sometimes smaller chapels), where Jews attend religious services or special ceremonies (including weddings, b'nai mitzvah, confirmations, choir performances, or even children's plays), have rooms for study, social hall(s), administrative and charitable offices, classrooms for religious school and Hebrew school, sometimes Jewish preschools, and often have many places to sit and congregate; display commemorative, historic, or modern artwork throughout; and sometimes have items of some Jewish historical significance or history about the synagogue itself on display.

House of worship in Judaism or Samaritanism

Synagogues are consecrated spaces used for the purpose of Jewish prayer, study, assembly, and reading of the Torah (read in its entirety once a year, or in some synagogues on a triennial cycle, in weekly Torah portions during religious services). However, a synagogue is not always necessary for Jewish worship, due to adaptations during times of Jewish persecution in countries and regions that banned Judaism, frequently destroying and/or reappropriating synagogues into churches or even government buildings. Halakha (Jewish law, or Mitzvot, from the Mishnah the "Oral Torah") states that communal Jewish worship can be carried out wherever a minyan (a group of at least 10 Jewish adults) is assembled, often (but not necessarily) led by a rabbi. Worship can also happen alone or with fewer than 10 people, but there are certain prayers that are considered by halakha as solely communal, and these can therefore be recited only by a minyan, depending on sect of Judaism. In terms of its specific ritual and liturgical functions, the synagogue does not replace the symbol of the long-destroyed Temple in Jerusalem (1st or 2nd Temple).

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Latest wrestler in Jewish Sports Hall of Fame glad to be seen as strong Jew – The Times of Israel

Posted By on December 28, 2023

Latest wrestler in Jewish Sports Hall of Fame glad to be seen as strong Jew  The Times of Israel

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Claude Lanzmann Changed the History of Filmmaking with Shoah

Posted By on December 27, 2023

Claude Lanzmann, one of the greatest filmmakers ever, died Thursday in Paris, at the age of ninety-two. His 1985 film Shoah, the crucial cinematic confrontation with the Holocaust (a word that Lanzmann hated), changed the history of cinema with its absolute absence of archival footage, with its incarnation of history in the present tense as a first-hand, first-person act of political engagement. It changed political history with its journalistic revelations and its moral insights. But Lanzmanns creation of Shoah, though the product of a lifelong inspiration, was the result of a series of accidents. Every life is so, but Lanzmanns encounters with chance were particularly forthright and defiant. He challenged life to bring it on from a very early age, and from an early age he had a clear and pugnacious idea of what life was bringing ondeath. Rather than fleeing or hiding from death, he faced it down, as if he could fight his enemy better by keeping it in view and close at hand.

The first words of his 2009 autobiography, The Patagonian Hare, are The guillotine; the first chapter is devoted to the litany of victims and executioners whose stories have occupied his life and filled his imagination, and the story of his life involves bold action and dangerous adventure that long precededand are inseparable fromhis work as a filmmaker. As a teen-ager in Nazi-occupied France, he was active in the Resistance; as a Jewish person, he lived with the moment-to-moment knowledge that the Gestapo could haul him off. (His father prepared him and his siblings for the possibility with elaborate and fearsome drills to avoid capture.) As a teacher of philosophy in postwar Berlinwhile still in his early twentieshe snuck into East Germany to pursue his own journalistic investigation (it was published, in Le Monde, in 1951): As soon as one decides to break the law, everything actually becomes relatively easy. Lets just say that I was sometimes very afraid and always very lucky.

Lanzmann had published another report from Germany in Les Temps Modernes, the journal founded by Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir; he joined them as an editor. He and de Beauvoir became a couple, living together from 1952 to 1959. Whereas Sartres existentialism faced the immanence of death in life as a theoretical but absolute conundrum that confounded logic and morality, Lanzmann was an existentialist in action, whose philosophical education had the extra dimension of practical defiance of deathof the validation of life by a relentless challenge to, and temporary victory over, death. His sense of politics was similarly conditioned by a practical approach to power; though he admired Sartres book Anti-Semite and Jew, he repudiated the notion of persecution and victimhood as the defining Jewish traitand this idea proved to be the one that energized Shoah. (It also energized his devotion to Israel, which he first visited in 1952 and about which he made two films.)

Lanzmann was prosecuted in 1960 for his public opposition to Frances war in Algeria. He travelled widely, wrote for a variety of publications (including popular ones, such as Elle), was on the rewrite desk at the French equivalent of a tabloid, and did some television journalismall the while pursuing a varied range of intrepid and even reckless adventures that made for a grand and novelistic off-the-radar contrast with his minor, though admirable, public activities. (I discussed the story of Lanzmanns life and work when the English translation of The Patagonian Hare came out, in 2012.)

In effect, Lanzmann was secretly famous, and that secrecythe contrast between his vast vitality (both intellectual and physical) and his modest (though substantial) public achievementssparked what turned out to be his enduring work. In his journalism and his political activities, he was engaged with the horrors of the century, but he was running yet another risk, one that seemed oddly large for someone of his intellect, energy, and ability: a virtual nonexistence in the public sphere, a cipherhood in history. He was of history but he wasnt yet part of it, and his way into history proved to be, in itself, yet another of the defining forces of the times: the cinema.

Lanzmann was saved by the movies. He wasnt a movie buff, a cinephile, or a critic; he had no special cinematic aspirations. For Lanzmann, as for many other great filmmakers, the technical art was a readymade substitute for all other arts, the art that became accessible by the fact that it required little craft, but, rather, techniquethe camera did most of the work and seemed to be open from both ends, simultaneously recording what took place in front of the lens and the ideas that motivated him behind it. He made Shoah nearly by accident; after finishing a documentary about Israel, he was approached by an Israeli official with a commission to make a movie about the Holocaust from the Jewish point of view. It was supposed to be a standard-length movie that would be made in a few years; it turned out to be a nine-and-a-half-hour movie that took a dozen years to complete.

He said that the films subject was death, that he made the film in order to evoke what couldnt be shownnamely, death in the gas chambers of Treblinka, Auschwitz, Chelmno, and the other Nazi death camps. Shoah, though based on assiduous, arduous, and sometimes very risky journalistic investigation (notably, in his surreptitious recording in West Germany of former concentration-camp officials, which led both to his severe beating by Germans and to legal charges by the German government) is a work of imagination. His interviews, which he edited together with his filming of the places (mainly in Poland) where the camps were and their vestiges are, put the Holocaust into the present tense, and make the bearing of witness both the incarnation of death and the enduring act of resistance to death.

Survival is the other great subject of Shoah; Lanzmanns interviews include former members of the Jewish resistance in the Warsaw Ghetto and members of the Sonderkommando, Jewish captives in Auschwitz who were forced, on pain of death, to prepare other Jewish captives for murdercutting their hair, leading them into the gas chamber, and then removing their corpses. Its an act of profound and shattering moral insight that Lanzmann places these survivors of Nazi terror side by side. Survival was, for Lanzmann, an act of resistance, and members of the Sonderkommando are present in the film as the closest witnesses, the ultimate resisters, of death itself.

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Claude Lanzmann Changed the History of Filmmaking with Shoah

Israelis & Jews: In the midst of the Gaza war, Tel Avivs accusations of anti-Semitism are very misleading – Times of India

Posted By on December 27, 2023

Israelis & Jews: In the midst of the Gaza war, Tel Avivs accusations of anti-Semitism are very misleading  Times of India

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Israelis & Jews: In the midst of the Gaza war, Tel Avivs accusations of anti-Semitism are very misleading - Times of India

Kanye West apologizes to Jewish community in a post in Hebrew after repeated antisemitic remarks including just weeks ago – CNN

Posted By on December 27, 2023

  1. Kanye West apologizes to Jewish community in a post in Hebrew after repeated antisemitic remarks including just weeks ago  CNN
  2. Ye Apologizes for Antisemitic Comments With Post in Hebrew  The New York Times
  3. Kanye West Apologizes in Hebrew amid Repeated Antisemitic Comments  PEOPLE

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Kanye West apologizes to Jewish community in a post in Hebrew after repeated antisemitic remarks including just weeks ago - CNN

Kanye West apologises to Jewish community in Hebrew for his antisemitic rants – Hindustan Times

Posted By on December 27, 2023

Kanye West apologises to Jewish community in Hebrew for his antisemitic rants  Hindustan Times

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Kanye West apologises to Jewish community in Hebrew for his antisemitic rants - Hindustan Times

Teen Accused of Synagogue Shooting Plan Ordered To Write Book on WWII Hero Who Saved Jews – NowThis

Posted By on December 24, 2023

Teen Accused of Synagogue Shooting Plan Ordered To Write Book on WWII Hero Who Saved Jews  NowThis

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Teen Accused of Synagogue Shooting Plan Ordered To Write Book on WWII Hero Who Saved Jews - NowThis

Ashkenazi Jews Have Become More Genetically Similar Over Time

Posted By on December 24, 2023

A study of skeletons unearthed from a medieval Jewish cemetery in Germany has revealed a surprising genetic split among Ashkenazi Jews of the Middle Ages that no longer exists.

The analysis, the first of its kind from a Jewish burial ground and the product of yearslong negotiations among scientists, historians and religious leaders, shows that Ashkenazim have become more genetically similar over the past seven centuries. Two Jews walking the cobblestone streets of 14th-century Germany were more genetically distinct, on average, than any two Ashkenazi Jews alive today.

That is wild! said Dr. Harry Ostrer, a medical geneticist at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in the Bronx and a co-author of the new study. Despite the rapid growth of the Ashkenazi Jewish population during the last 700 years, the population became more homogeneous.

The study, published on Wednesday in the journal Cell, compared DNA extracted from the teeth of 33 men, women and children buried in the cemetery with DNA taken from hundreds of modern Jews from around the world. Previous studies have shown that modern communities are a genetic mlange, with Ashkenazim the world over carrying essentially the same collection of DNA sequences.

But the medieval remains tell a different story. They show that European Jews at the time came from two divergent gene pools.

Each group shared the same genetic ancestry, dating back to a small founder population that most likely emigrated from Southern Europe and reached the German Rhineland at the turn of the first millennium. But the DNA analysis also revealed a genetic divide among the skeletons, which could have several explanations. In one scenario, both groups originated from the Rhineland. One branch then stuck around the region, while the other headed east to modern-day Poland, Czech Republic, Austria and eastern Germany.

Alternatively, Eastern Europe might have been settled by a different population of Jews who then mixed to a limited extent with their Jewish neighbors to the west.

Either way, the two groups remained fairly isolated from each other for generations, as evidenced by their discrete genetic lineages. Then, prompted by massacres, expulsions and economic opportunities, they reunited in places like Erfurt, the central German city that is home to the cemetery where the remains were disinterred.

Its a supercool study, said Itsik Peer, a computational geneticist at Columbia University who was not involved in the research. Ancient DNA sequencing is a cheat-code that can take you to places where you dont have information today.

The existence of an east-meets-west community in Erfurt is also supported by the historical record, which includes detailed accounts of a violent pogrom on March 21, 1349 a Saturday. Angry mobs entered the local synagogue and attacked Jews in the midst of prayer. Few, if any, survived.

After the massacre, Erfurts leaders took possession of property and belongings. They even collected on debts owed to the murdered Jews. But just five years later, the need for lost tax revenue prompted the city to invite Jews back.

They came from far and wide. Tax records show names denoting origins from all over Europe including some from distant cities that had experienced their own antisemitic upheavals. In the middle of the German-speaking lands, this was the place to be at the time, said Maria Strzebecher, a medievalist who is the curator of the Old Synagogue Museum in Erfurt. At least, that is, until 1453, when Jews were forced out again.

The same migration patterns could be seen in the excavated teeth.

Isotope readings from the dental enamel showed that many people were migrants who had grown up elsewhere. But the DNA took this finding one step further, showing that Erfurtian Jews came from multiple places, and that those populations were genetically distinct.

This evidence both raises new questions and confirms stories weve been telling for a long time, said Elisheva Baumgarten, a social historian at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem who was not involved in the study.

Preserved documents on money-lending practices show that the Jews from each subgroup largely formed business alliances with members of their own kind, according to Maike Lammerhirt, a historian at the University of Erfurt and a co-author of the study. But both groups prayed in the same synagogue. They all cleansed in the same ritual bath. And, ultimately, they all lay side by side in the same cemetery.

The Erfurt skeletons carried many of the same disease-causing gene mutations that Ashkenazi Jews worry about today. That suggests a population bottleneck must have occurred before the Erfurtians were born one in which small numbers of individuals seeded an entire population, leading to genetic similarities and the amplification of certain gene variants.

Given the date of these samples, were putting it really at the very, very old end of those estimates, said Mark Thomas, an evolutionary geneticist at University College London who led the British study.

If you put the two papers together, theyre completely in agreement which is pretty cool, said Ron Pinhasi, an anthropologist and geneticist at the University of Vienna in Austria who was not involved in either study.

Rabbinic law generally frowns on exhumation of corpses, out of concern for the dignity of the dead. Scientists therefore cannot excavate Jewish gravesites purely out of academic intrigue.

But what happened in Erfurt had nothing to do with the scientists.

In 2013, a storehouse that was built on top of the cemetery more than 500 years earlier was converted into a parking garage. Karin Sczech, an archaeologist then with the state preservation office, knew that the construction might disturb some ancient Jewish remains.

Dr. Sczech came to the work site a day before excavation was scheduled to begin, only to find that the contractor had already broken ground. Inside the bucket of an actively digging excavator were the bones of a small child.

I yelled at the driver and said stop, recalled Dr. Sczech, now a UNESCO-World Heritage coordinator for Erfurt.

She and her team discovered 47 graves in an area roughly the size of a volleyball court. In consultation with the local Jewish community, the archaeologists meticulously removed the skeletons and brought them back to the local archives.

There, the bones sat for many years. The plan had been to rebury the bodies quickly, once scientists had a chance to study the remains. But the anthropologist involved in the effort became tied up, causing a yearslong delay.

Lucky for genetic science that he did. Had the anthropologist been more prompt, the skeletons would have been back in the ground before the geneticists who led the new study, David Reich of Harvard and Shai Carmi of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, ever knew about their existence.

The researchers set out in 2017 to find an ancient Jewish cemetery undergoing excavation, with the hope that they could take a small sample for genetic testing.

Dr. Carmi took the lead. He asked the advice of Ephraim Shoham-Steiner, a historian at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, in Israel. I said, If theres anywhere that this might actually come into play, it would be in Erfurt, Dr. Shoham-Steiner recalled.

At first, the top rabbi in Erfurt shot down the idea. There are situations that allow for DNA testing on Jewish corpses for instance, families of Yemenite children who disappeared in the early years of Israels establishment can request graves be opened for forensic identification.

But the reasoning in those cases centered on concrete benefits to the deceased. Scientific research performed on anonymous bodies is different.

Dr. Carmi consulted a rabbinical court judge in Israel Rabbi Zeev Litke, founder of the Simanim Institute in Jerusalem, which helps people determine whether they have Jewish ancestry through genetic testing who ruled that it would be permissible to isolate DNA from teeth or tiny detached bones inside of the ear that, unlike the rest of a skeleton, do not require reburial under Jewish law.

Convinced by the argument, the rabbi in Erfurt changed his mind. The project was a go. Dr. Sczech found that 38 of the skeletons had at least one detached tooth.

Soon, Dr. Reich was flying back to Boston with zip-top bags full of medieval molars, bicuspids and incisors. Using techniques that won this years Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, Dr. Reich and his colleagues successfully extracted DNA from 33 of the teeth.

The scientists hope their approach to community engagement will provide a road map for others hoping to examine the DNA of ancient remains, whether from Jewish cemeteries or otherwise. This really is a sort of prototype for what can be done in similar studies, Dr. Reich said.

Viewpoints differ among authorities on Jewish law, or Halakha, about whether procuring any DNA during an archaeological excavation of known Jews is above board.

Rabbi Myron Geller, a scholar of Jewish burial practices and a former member of the Committee on Jewish Law and Standards for the Conservative movement, described the rationale adopted by Rabbi Litke and the study authors as the firmest halakhic perspective possible.

But others questioned whether the abstract benefits of scientific knowledge were sufficient grounds to merit desecrating the dead. It gives me pause, said Rabbi Joseph Polak, chief justice of the Rabbinical Court of Massachusetts.

On a recent trip to Yad Vashem, the Holocaust memorial atop Mount Herzl in Jerusalem, Dr. Carmi strolled through the Valley of the Communities. In this massive monument to destroyed Jewish communities, he found the name Erfurt. Just as in medieval times, hundreds of Jewish residents of Erfurt were murdered during the Nazi era.

Standing there, Dr. Carmi reflected on the pieces of lost history that his genetic analysis had helped laid bare. It was a great honor for me personally to bring their story to life, he said.

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Ashkenazi Jews Have Become More Genetically Similar Over Time


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