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posted by martyb on Wednesday July 31 2019, @02:36PM   Printer-friendly
from the is-there-an-app-for-that? dept.

Aramaic, a Semitic language related to Hebrew and Arabic, was the common tongue of the entire Middle East when the Middle East was the crossroads of the world. People used it for commerce and government across territory stretching from Egypt and the Holy Land to India and China. Parts of the Bible and the Jewish Talmud were written in it; the original "writing on the wall," presaging the fall of the Babylonians, was composed in it. As Jesus died on the cross, he cried in Aramaic, "Elahi, Elahi, lema shabaqtani?" ("My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?")

But Aramaic is down now to its last generation or two of speakers, most of them scattered over the past century from homelands where their language once flourished. In their new lands, few children and even fewer grandchildren learn it. (My father, a Jew born in Kurdish Iraq, is a native speaker and scholar of Aramaic; I grew up in Los Angeles and know just a few words.) This generational rupture marks a language's last days. For field linguists like Khan, recording native speakers—"informants," in the lingo—is both an act of cultural preservation and an investigation into how ancient languages shift and splinter over time.

In a highly connected global age, languages are in die-off. Fifty to 90 percent of the roughly 7,000 languages spoken today are expected to go silent by century's end. We live under an oligarchy of English and Mandarin and Spanish, in which 94 percent of the world's population speaks 6 percent of its languages. Yet among threatened languages, Aramaic stands out. Arguably no other still-spoken language has fallen farther.

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/innovation/how-to-save-a-dying-language-4143017/?all


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday July 31 2019, @08:17PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday July 31 2019, @08:17PM (#873715)

    Do you have any proof this Jesus person even existed?

    You'll find people who'll dig out the references in Josephus, problems are
    1. One Josephus reference was obviously 'fucked with' by Christians at some point in history to give their sky fairy avatar story some historical 'veracity'.
    2. The other refers to James, the brother of Jesus...which goes against some of the Christian sky fairy mythos..

    Josephus, being a Jew (albeit one regarded as being a bit of an Romanised 'Uncle Tom') doesn't refer anywhere to Jesus being the Judaic 'Messiah', you might argue that the '...A wise man, if it be lawful to call him a man..' implies that the Jesus he was talking about was more than just a man...cue angelic choirs..he is the messiah! , feh, could also imply (a la Python) it was a woman with a false beard..or indeed, a very naughty boy....

    Throw into the mix, Jesus was a common name back then...Josephus was writing about what the Romans regarded as 'Troublesome Jews', at a stretch, Christians could argue that the Jesus mentioned was a leader of the Judaic sect which became what we know today as Christianity, once the Romans had fucked with it, but as far as I know the Jews are still waiting on their Messiah to appear, the guy Josephus mentions?, he wasn't it..