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What’s with this “Wren” thing?
The oldest extant version of the fable
we
are presenting here appeared in 1913 in the first volume of a two-volume anthology
of Low
Saxon folktales (Plattdeutsche
Volksmärchen “Low German Folktales”)
collected by Wilhelm Wisser (1843–1935). Read
more ...
‘Ibriyt • Ivrit
Hebrew
From
Canaanite nomads’ dialect via significant sacred
tongue
to revived written and spoken language featured
in the world-wide
electronic media— the
story
of
Hebrew
is little short of
miraculous.
Language
information: Hebrew is currently used as an everyday language by over five million people,
a large portion of whom are native speakers of it. Most of these people are
Israeli, and of these the majority lives in Israel, where Hebrew is the most
important of
two
official languages (the other one being Arabic). (Amharic, English, Russian,
Spanish and French
are
also
widely used but are not official languages in Israel.)
Outside Israel, sizeable
Hebrew-speaking
communities are found in Argentina, Australia,
Brazil, Canada, Chile, France, Germany, the Palestinian West Bank and Gaza, Panama,
the
United
Kingdom,
and
the United States of America. There are numerous second-language speakers of
Hebrew, particularly immigrants in Israel. Most people that are proficient in
Hebrew are Jewish. There is a good number of non-Jewish
native
speakers of Hebrew, probably in great part due to interfaith marriage not being
legally available in Israel. Most Arabic speakers of Israel can communicate in
Hebrew also.
A
fragment from the Aleppo Codex, a linguistically highly
significant 10th-century document in
which scribes used
diacritic symbols to indicate vowels and cantillation
Far beyond the
number of its everyday speakers, Hebrew plays a very important role in
religion.
In
Judaism
it is the traditional “Sacred Tongue” (Lĕshôn Ha-Qôdesh), the predominant language of the sacred scriptures (Tanakh, including the Torah or Pentateuch) and the language of
liturgy as well as of personal prayer. Secondarily, it is the predominant
language
of
the Judaic-derived Christian Old Testament, and as such it is of great importance to Christian theologians, alongside Greek and Latin.
Hebrew began as
a Southern Canaanite language variety specific to ancient Hebrew tribes
and developed into the common language of the Israelites. It is closely
related to Ammonite, Edomite, Moabite, Philistine and Phoenician (as well as
Punic, the
North African descendant of Phoenician). Being a Semitic language, Hebrew is
also
fairly
closely
related
to Akkadian,
Eblaite,
Amorite and Ugaritic. It is the only survivor among
all of the above-mentioned. It is also a relative
of Aramaic, Arabic and Maltese, is more distantly related
to Amharic and
other Ethiopic languages as well as to the Tamazight (“Berber”) languages. However,
its very closest relative appears to be Samaritan (also known as Samaritan
Hebrew),
a co-descendant
of Old
Hebrew
used
as a liturgical language alongside Samaritan Aramaic
among a few hundred remaining ethno-religious Samaritans in Israel and the
Palestinian
West Bank.
The traceable developmental
stages of Hebrew may be summarized as follows:
Classical
Hebrew
(also known as “Old Hebrew” or “Paleo-Hebrew”)
Archaic
10th–6th century BCE (until Babylonian captivity of 586), written with the Canaanite
script
Biblical
ca. 6th century BCE (Babylonian Exile period)—adoption of the Imperial
Aramaic Script—the language of most of the Hebrew Bible
Late Biblical
6th–4th century BCE (Persian period)—the language of a few parts of the Hebrew Bible
Dead Sea Scrolls
3rd BCE – 1st CE (Hellenistic and Roman periods)
Mishnaic
1st–4th CE (Roman period after the destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem)—a written and spoken language and the language of most of the Hebrew parts of
the Mishnah and Toseftah within the
Talmud—also known as Early Rabbinic Hebrew
Amoraic Hebrew
a collection of dialects recorded in other parts of the Talmud, also in a few parts of the Dead Sea Scrolls—by and large varieties on which later forms of literary Hebrew were based
Medieval Hebrew
7th–10th century CE—a group of literary varieties, Tiberian Hebrew being the most important. Vowel
diacritics were introduced during this period.
Liturgical Hebrew
10th century – present—the language of Jewish worship and religious scholarship everywhere,
with numerous traditions of pronunciation influenced by spoken vernaculars
Modern Hebrew
mid-19th century – present—a modern written and spoken variety used in all walks of life, now the native
language of millions
Without
exception works of great beauty and Jewish
communities’ most
treasured possessions, Torah scrolls are
lovingly crafted and decorated, and their Hebrew
texts are
meticulously handwritten. These scrolls may not
be destroyed but tend to be stored or buried when they become
too feeble for ordinary use. This makes the defacement and destruction
of Torah scrolls far more deleterious and odious
than most non-Jews realize.
Jews often refer to the Torah as Etz Chayim (Eṣ Ḥayim, “Tree of Life”).
It used to be generally believed that Hebrew gave up its place as an everyday
language to Aramaic by the beginning of Israel’s Hellenistic period in the
4th century BCE. However, some of the latest archaological finds seem to indicate
that Hebrew and Aramaic coexisted on all or most levels until near the end
of the Roman period. After that, Hebrew continued to exist as a language
reserved for liturgy and scholarly literature. Nevertheless, its development
continued when
writers borrowed words and expressions from Aramaic, Arabic and other languages
(either directly or in the form of loan translations). At the same time, numerous
traditions of pronouncing Hebrew developed under the influence of languages
spoken by Jews over much of Eurasia and Northern Africa. Some of these traditions
are now extinct, such as that of China. The best-known traditions
are those of Ashkenazim (Northwest, Central and East European Jews),
Sephardim (Iberian
Jews that after the Inquisition migrated to most places
around the Mediterranean Sea and to parts of Protestant Northern Europe),
Mizrakhim (Jews of the Middle East) and Persians (Jews of Iran, Afghanistan and
large parts
of Central Asia), also various traditions of Jewish communities in India. Although
the pronunciation of Hebrew varied considerably, already prior to the establishment
of Modern Hebrew well-learned Jews tended
to be able to communicate in spoken literary Hebrew with fellow-Jews with whom
they shared no other language, as reported about Russian-born
and natively Yiddish-speaking Eliezer Ben-Yehuda (born Eliezer Yitzhak Perlman) visiting
Jewish communities in Algeria.
Eliezer
Ben-Yehuda (1858–1922),
the founding force behind the
revival of Hebrew as an everyday
language.
The late 19th century witnessed
the actual
genesis
of
Modern
Hebrew among European Jews that were affected by the confluence of cultural
assimilation, anti-Semitism and emerging Zionism. Secular periodicals and books
began
to
be
published
in
Hebrew. Eliezer Ben-Yehuda
(1858–1922) and
his
followers
envisaged the revival of Hebrew as a reuniting, insulating and empowering force
of universal Jewry. Their movement gathered strength as Jews, many
of them intellectuals and agnostic ethnic revivalists, began to leave Europe’s predominantly anti-Semitic
climate for Jewish pioneer settlements in Turkish- and British-ruled Palestine.
Like Ben-Yehuda, many of them adopted Hebrew as their everyday language and
raised their children as the first group of native Hebrew speakers since the
end of Israel’s Roman period. This remarkable, apparently unprecedented development culminated
with the founding of the State of Israel (1948) and with the number of native
speakers swelling from a handful to millions within the span of one
century. Israeli Hebrew is a language that functions fully in all walks of
life.
In
Israeli Hebrew, several consonant symbols
share
their pronunciation with other symbols.
While immigrants and members
of certain minorities in Israel speak Hebrew with various types of accents,
Standard Israeli
Hebrew, being primarily based on traditional Sephardic pronunciation, has a
narrow range of native phonological varieties, and accents of native Hebrew
speakers
using foreign languages are unique and unmistakable. Israeli Hebrew is a highly
Europeanized Semitic language variety, especially
phonologically. In this regard it is a far cry from Classical and Medieval
Hebrew as well as from the “Arabic-sounding” Hebrew with which Yemenite and other “Oriental” immigrants from Arabic-speaking countries arrive, varieties which they soon
abandon
in
favor
of
the
more
prestigeous
(or “acceptable”) Europeanized variety. This standard pronunciation is so simplified that it
ignores all historical vowel length distinctions, distinctions between certain
consonants, as well as lenition of the stops represented by the letters dalet and gimel. This makes spelling a considerable challenge for speakers
of Modern Hebrew,
and an additional obstacle for learners of the written language is the usual
absence of vowel diacritics. However, the retention of ancient spelling (albeit
with a measure of simplification in the use of the letters waw and yud) equals retention of a link with pre-contemporary Hebrew. This allows even Hebrew
speakers with little or no religious education to more or less understand religious
and other types of
pre-contemporary texts.
Genealogy: Afro-Asiatic > Semitic > Central > Southern > Canaanite