Thursday, June 4, 2026

How Yiddish and Hebrew Connect

 Nadene Goldfoot                                         

      Some of Kalonymos family 

The Rhine Valley is the birthplace of the Yiddish speakers of Ashkenazi Judaism. From the 10th to 14th centuries, the "ShUM" cities of Speyer, Worms, and Mainz became a major cradle of European Jewish learning. Famous Jewish scholars, philosophers, and community leaders lived throughout the Rhine region.  Rashi (Solomon ben Isaac): Born in Troyes, France, the most prominent commentator on the Torah and Talmud studied at the yeshivas in Mainz and Worms before returning to France. The Kalonymos Family, of which I have traced my family from: An influential family of scholars and mystics who migrated from Italy to Mainz in the early Middle Ages, laying the foundations for early Ashkenazi Jewish mysticism (Hasidei Ashkenaz), are but a few well known Jews from this region  

Here are three common examples of Yiddish phrases written in Hebrew characters:

1. "What's up?" or "How are things?"
  • Yiddish (Hebrew characters): וואָס הערט זיך
  • Transliteration: Vos hertz zich? 
2. "Oh my gosh!" or "Woe is me!"
  • Yiddish (Hebrew characters): אױ װײ
  • Transliteration: Oy vey 
3. "You should live and be well!"
  • Yiddish (Hebrew characters): זײַ געזונט
  • Transliteration: Zay gezunt , can be used after one sneezes.

Yiddish originated in the 9th and 10th centuries in Central Europe when Ashkenazi Jews in the Rhine Valley adapted the local medieval High German dialects for their daily use. As a fusion language, it combined German grammar and vocabulary with a rich infusion of Hebrew, Aramaic, and various Slavic and Romance influences, all traditionally written using the Hebrew alphabet.  The Rhine Valley Origins (9th–12th Centuries): Following migrations from northern Italy and France, Jewish communities settled in the Rhineland of present-day Germany. They adopted the local Germanic dialects but naturally incorporated Hebrew and Aramaic terms. Because Hebrew was historically reserved strictly for prayer and holy texts, this new hybrid dialect became the vernacular for everyday business and social life.

The Eastern European Shift (13th–17th Centuries): Fleeing persecution in Central Europe, many Ashkenazi Jews migrated eastward into Slavic-speaking territories like Poland, Lithuania, and Ukraine. During this phase, Yiddish absorbed a massive influx of Slavic vocabulary and grammatical structures, distancing it further from standard German.  My paternal ancestors came from Lithuania and Poland and the line married into many of the Ukraine area.  Their Yiddish pronunciation would have developed at this period.  Each country was a little different from each other, so if you were one of these Jews, you could tell where the other came from.  

Cultural Flourishing (19th–20th Centuries): Despite opposition from Enlightenment leaders who viewed it as merely a casual jargon, Yiddish became the foundation of a robust, secular cultural identity. The Jewish Enlightenment (known as the Haskalah) was an intellectual and social movement sweeping Europe from the 1770s to the 1880s. Leaders of the movement, known as maskilim (the wise), sought to combine traditional Jewish identity with secular education, European languages, and civic integration. Their work laid the groundwork for modern secular Jewish identity, Zionism, and Reform Judaism It supported a thriving ecosystem of literature, press, and theater, culminating in the 1908 Czernowitz Conference, which officially declared Yiddish a national language of the Jewish people.  Modern Era: The geographic dispersion caused by mass migrations and the devastating losses of the Holocaust drastically reduced the number of native Yiddish speakers globally. However, the language remains widely used today, particularly within Hasidic and ultra-Orthodox communities, while also being studied and preserved as a vital component of Jewish heritage. The Yiddish National Theater opened in New York City and consisted of plays done in Yiddish about the immigrants and their lives and other famous Yiddish literature.

However, when Jews started going back to Israel during the first Aliyah period (1880-1881), a pair, Deborah and Eliezer Ben Yehuda,  decided it was time to revive Hebrew as the national language once again.  Hebrew was revived as a spoken language in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, primarily through the efforts of lexicographer Eliezer Ben-Yehuda. By transitioning the language from a purely sacred, liturgical text into a modern, everyday tongue, it became the only successful large-scale linguistic revival in human history. So,  the couple responsible for reviving Hebrew and spreading its usage as a modern, everyday language in Israel was Eliezer Ben-Yehuda and his first wife, Deborah (Devora) Ben-Yehuda. After immigrating to Jerusalem in 1881, the couple established the world's first modern Hebrew-speaking household and committed to communicating solely in the ancient language. To me, that must have been agonizing at certain times with the impulse to speak in your native language.  

  • The First Native Speaker: The couple famously raised their son, Ben-Zion (later Itamar), to be the first native Hebrew speaker in over 1,500 years. They shielded him from other languages so Hebrew would be his only mother tongue.  Since ancient Hebrew lacked terms for modern items, Eliezer invented hundreds of everyday words (like glida for ice cream and milon for dictionary) by adapting biblical roots. Eliezer's relentless drive—including editing Jerusalem's first Hebrew newspaper, HaZvi, and establishing the Committee of the Hebrew Language in 1890—paved the way for the language to be adopted by new immigrant settlements. 
    Hebrew alphabet
    Script type
    Abjad primarily, alphabet
    Period
    2nd–1st century BCE to present
    DirectionRight-to-left
    LanguagesHebrew; derivations used for Yiddish, Ladino, Mozarabic, Levantine Arabic, Aramaic, Knaanic, other Jewish languages
  • Reading from right to left;  Alphabet evree(meaning Hebrew) The dots under the letters are for beginners needed help with vowel sound

    Hebrew is a Northwest Semitic language that originated in the ancient Levant. Spanning over 3,000 years, its history is uniquely defined by a transition from a spoken vernacular to a sacred liturgical language, culminating in its modern revival as the national language of Israel. While Hebrew ceased to be a common spoken vernacular around 200 CE, it never fully "died". For roughly 1,700 years, Jews worldwide used it continuously for prayer, religious study, and as a written lingua franca to communicate across different countries. In fact, it was found that Columbus used it to write to his son, keeping his message personal. Hebrew print vs cursive script in writing

    down below in cursive: a-b (aleph bet)-I forget the ph letter and here it is)

    ❓Hebrew Print is for is all printed works, newspapers 📰, books 📚, signs, billboards etc. But hand writing is in Hebrew Cursive Script letters.

     So, we find that the Haskalah was busy reviving Hebrew !  The revival began in the 18th century during the Jewish Enlightenment. Secular writers started publishing Hebrew newspapers and literature. They expanded the ancient vocabulary to describe modern, everyday topics, which slowly moved the language away from its exclusively religious context.   Ben-Yehuda must have been a part of this movemenat, as when he made a radical decision to speak only Hebrew at home. He raised his son, Ben-Zion, exclusively in Hebrew, making him the first native Hebrew speaker in nearly 2,000 years.  Eliezer ben Yehuda Invented Vocabulary: Ancient Hebrew had no words for modern inventions. Ben-Yehuda created thousands of new words (such as for "electricity" or "newspaper") by adapting ancient root words and borrowing from Arabic, French, and German.  He began compiling a massive, multi-volume dictionary that provided the standard vocabulary for the growing community.

    The revival gained unstoppable momentum when early Zionist pioneers and educators in Ottoman Palestine made Hebrew the language of instruction in schools. By teaching children exclusively in Hebrew, it naturally became their mother tongue, passing rapidly from the classroom into the streets. Mass waves of Jewish immigrants began arriving from Europe, North Africa, and the Middle East, speaking entirely different languages like Yiddish, Ladino, and Arabic. Because no single diaspora language was universally shared, Hebrew was adopted as the shared national language, unifying the diverse population.  Today, Modern Hebrew is spoken by over 9 million people as the primary language of daily life, government, and culture in Israel. You can learn more about this unprecedented linguistic achievement on Wikipedia. 
    My father spoke Yiddish in his home and learned English when he went to school. My bubba never did learn English !   I learned a few of his words, like botch 'n tuchus (spank your bottom) and then learned Hebrew in Sunday school at an early age but forgot much by aliyah time at age 37.  I had 9 months of school to learn a lot more in Haifa, but I got my teaching certificate.  









    House Speaker Nancy Pelosi Lost, Bad For Jews

     Nadene Goldfoot                                        

    California State Senator Scott Wiener, right, smiles before taking photos with supporters at the 2026 California Democratic Party State Convention in San Francisco, February 21, 2026. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)
    Scott Wiener (born May 11, 1970) age 56, is an American politician who has served as a member of the California State Senate from the 11th district since 2016. A member of the Democratic Party, his district encompasses San Francisco and parts of San Mateo County.

    California State Sen. Scott Wiener advanced Tuesday as the frontrunner to succeed former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi in Congress, in a contest closely watched in Jewish politics after Wiener called Israel’s actions in the Gaza War a genocide and called for a halt to arms sales to Israel. Our senior political reporter, Jacob Kohnbluh, who tells us he  tracked the debate over Zionism and the war in Gaza, detailing how prominent Jewish candidates (such as California State Sen. Scott Wiener) have faced intense primary pressure for their evolving views. For instance, Kornbluh reported that after Senator Wiener made statements calling Israel’s actions in Gaza a "genocide" and urged a halt to arms sales, he ultimately stepped down as co-chair of the California Jewish Caucus following backlash.  The Jewish progressive, who won the Democratic primary to replace retiring former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi in Congress, navigated a highly tested relationship with his local Jewish community.

    • The "Genocide" Remark: Following a refusal to take a definitive "yes" or "no" position on whether Israel's actions constituted genocide during an early January 2026 debate, Wiener released a video clarifying that he believed the Israeli government's attempts to destroy Gaza and displace Palestinians amounted to genocide. Destroy Gaza, an area that Israel had given freely to the Palestinians in the name of Peace?  No way!  
    • Timeline: The evacuation began in August 2005 and the last Israeli military forces left the territory on September 12, 2005.  Scope of the Withdrawal: Israel dismantled all 21 Jewish settlements in the Gaza Strip and four additional settlements in the northern West Bank.  While Israel handed over internal control of the land and evacuated its civilian population, it maintained (and continues to maintain) strict control over Gaza's borders, coastline, and airspace.  Good thing, too, since 5 minutes later it became a base for Hamas terrorists to attack Israel.  It was a slap in the face for Israel.  
    • There have been other peoples moved from one area to another like the Muslim people of India who were moved to Pakistan.  (Muslim people migrated from India to Pakistan in one of the largest mass migrations in human history. The primary exodus took place during and immediately after the Partition of India in 1947, when the British Indian Empire was divided into independent India and Pakistan (which included what is now Bangladesh).  
    • Resignation from Jewish Caucus Leadership: Because of the controversy and petitions from local constituents, Wiener stepped down from his co-chair role in the California Legislative Jewish Caucus in February 2026, though he remains an active member.
    • Policy and Re-election: Despite alienating segments of the local Jewish establishment with his "genocide" remarks, Wiener—who supports a two-state solution (today rather passe thinking after October 7th)  and generally views the U.S.-Israel alliance favorably—handily advanced out of his congressional primary. Past Antisemitic Targeting: Earlier in his legislative career, JTA reported on instances where Wiener was targeted with antisemitic tropes, including a 2020 Facebook ad by a construction trade union that depicted him clutching a handful of Monopoly money, which was condemned by Jewish advocates. 
    • You know what this Portland, Oregon writer thinks about that?  It's the anti-semitism that is driving this Senator into fearing the reaction of Israel's creation among the world of anti-Semites, and he doesn't have the strong spine of most of us who is fighting it.  He's caved in.  How disappointing he is to me.  Disappointing and makes me angry that he has botched up our history so badly.  There's no excuse for that with me! 
    • This Left sided Democratic  Senator Wiener who even happens to be Jewish, advanced in the Congressional Primary in San Francisco.  He is to face off against Connie Chan, who was endorsed by current seat holder Nancy Pelosi, after a former AOC aide backed by anti-Israel streamer Hasan Piker falls short.  
      Connie Chan (born Chan Sze-man, October 8, 1978; 48 years old;  Chinese: 陳詩敏) is an American politician serving as a member of the 
      San Francisco Board of Supervisors
       for District 1 since January 8, 2021, after defeating Marjan Philhour in 2020, and again in 2024. Chan is a progressive Democrat.
    • I'm looking at Connie Chan. She's also another Democratic anti-Semite about Israel.  Need I remind readers that Israel is a Jewish state?    Connie Chan, a San Francisco Supervisor and Democratic candidate for California's 11th Congressional District, has made her staunch criticism of Israel's military actions a central pillar of her foreign policy platform. Her stance on Israel has become one of the defining and most controversial issues in the election. 
      Her Stance and Record:
      • Gaza and Military Aid: Chan has consistently condemned Israel's war in Gaza, frequently characterizing the crisis as a genocide against Palestinians. She supports imposing an arms embargo on Israel and previously backed the Block the Bombs Act, a congressional bill designed to restrict specific U.S. weapons transfers to Israel. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had already explicitly backed a legislative push to phase out direct U.S. military aid to Israel, stating his goal to draw American financial support down to zero over the next decade. This strategy transitions the long-standing dynamic from an "aid recipient" to an equal "defense trade partnership".  Rather than waiting for the expiration of the current U.S.-Israel security agreement in 2028, Netanyahu expressed plans to start the transition immediately.Under this proposal, Israel will fully finance its own weapon acquisitions from American defense manufacturers rather than relying on subsidized grants.
      • Lebanon: In April 2026, she issued a joint statement with Lebanese-American activists demanding an end to U.S. taxpayer money and military aid to Israel, citing devastating harm to innocent families in Lebanon and Gaza. {Does she not realize that Lebanon is attacking Israel first or why they are fighting in the first place; and that it's about Hezbollah terrorists fed by Iran?}
      • Local Resolutions: During her time on the San Francisco Board of Supervisors, she voted to pass the city's ceasefire resolution in early 2024. [Nope, she's not keeping up with facts other than California news, evidentely]
      The Campaign and PAC Controversy:
      Chan's foreign policy views generated significant late-breaking controversy just ahead of the June 2026 primary election. Although she pledged not to accept direct donations from the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), journalists uncovered a super PAC network (Pro-Choice Majority Action) backing her campaign. This PAC spent nearly half a million dollars supporting her candidacy and received hundreds of thousands of dollars from AIPAC-aligned super PACs.  AIPAC stands for the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, which is the largest and one of the most influential pro-Israel lobbying groups in the United States. It is a bipartisan, grassroots organization that advocates for strong U.S.-Israel relations
      The Response:
      Chan's campaign pushed back heavily against this revelation, stating in a release reported by J. Weekly that the funds were given to independent entities, not her campaign, and urged any group supporting her to respect her values and reject pro-Israel PAC money. Nevertheless, the situation was weaponized by progressive opponents like Saikat Chakrabarti. 
      Connie Chan is all smiles as the ballots come in on June 2, 2026. Photo by Abigail Vân Neely.Connie Chan has beat her opponent, Saikat Chakrabarti, for the No. 2 spot in San Francisco’s congressional contest — she and Sen. Scott Wiener will face off in the November general election to succeed Rep. Nancy Pelosi.