Hebrew Language - Jewish Languages - Dzhidi
Dzhidi, or Judæo-Persian, is the Jewish
language spoken by the Jews living in Persia. As a collective term,
Dzhidi refers to a number of Indo-Iranian languages or dialects spoken
by Jewish communities throughout the formerly extensive Persian Empire.
On a more limited scale, spoken Dzhidi refers to the Judæo-Persian
dialect spoken by the Jewish communities of the area around Tehran and
Mashhad. The language is also known, especially in its literary form, as
Latorayi, literally "not [the language] of the Torah".
The earliest evidence of the entrance of Persian words into the language
of the Israelites is found in the Bible. The post-exilic portions,
Hebrew as well as Aramaic, contain besides many Persian proper names and
titles, a number of nouns (as "dat" = "law"; "genez" = "treasure"; "pardes"
= "park") which came into permanent use at the time of the Achæmenidæ.
More than five hundred years after the end of that dynasty the Jews of
the Babylonian diaspora again came under the dominion of the Persians;
and among such Jews the Persian language held a position similar to that
held by the Greek language among the Jews of the West. Persian became to
a great extent the language of everyday life among the Jews of
Babylonia; and a hundred years after the conquest of that country by the
Sassanids an amora of Pumbedita, Rab Joseph (d. 323), declared that the
Babylonian Jews had no right to speak Aramaic, instead using either
Hebrew or Persian. Aramaic, however, remained the language of the Jews
in Palestine as well as of those in Babylonia, although in the latter
country a large number of Persian words found their way into the
language of daily intercourse and into that of the schools, a fact which
is attested by the numerous Persian derivatives in the Babylonian
Talmud. But in the Aramaic Targum there are very few Persian words,
owing to the fact that after the middle of the third century the
Targumim on the Pentateuch and the Prophets were accepted as
authoritative and received a fixed textual form in the Babylonian
schools. In this way they were protected from the introduction of
Persian elements.
From:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dzhidi_language
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