Mizrahi Hebrew
Mizrahi Hebrew, or Eastern Hebrew, refers to any of the pronunciation systems for Biblical Hebrew used liturgically by Mizrahi Jews, that is, Jews that settled in Arab countries or further east and with a background of Arabic, Persian, or other languages of the Middle East and Asia. As such, Mizrahi Hebrew is actually a blanket term for many dialects.
Sephardi Hebrew is not considered one of these even if it has been spoken in the Middle East and North Africa. The Sephardim were expellees from Spain, and settled among the Mizrahim, but in countries such as Syria and Morocco, there was a fairly high degree of convergence between the Sephardi and the local pronunciations of Hebrew. Yemenite Hebrew is also considered quite separate, as it has a wholly different system for the pronunciation of vowels.
The same terms are sometimes used for the pronunciation of modern Hebrew by Jews of Arab or other Mizrahi origins. It is generally a compromise between Standard modern Hebrew and the traditional liturgical pronunciation as described in this article.
Features
The following features are generally found in the pronunciation of Jews from Arabic-speaking countries, and the variations tend to follow the Arabic dialect of the country in question.
- The stress tends to fall on the last syllable wherever this is the case in Biblical Hebrew.
- א (Aleph) is pronounced with a clear glottal stop [ʔ] except when used as a mater lectionis.
- ב (Bet without dagesh) is pronounced [b] in some countries (such as Iraq), and [v] (voiced labiodental fricative) in others (such as Morocco).[1]
- ג (Gimel without dagesh) is pronounced [ɣ] (voiced velar fricative) like Arabic غ.
- ד (Dalet without dagesh) is normally pronounced [d], but occasionally (like in the Iraqi pronunciation of the word adonai) [ð], like Arabic ذ (voiced dental fricative).
- ו (Vav) is pronounced [v] in some countries and [w] in others (such araq).
- ח (Ḥet) is pronounced [ħ], like Arabic ح (voiceless pharyngeal fricative).
- ט (Tet) is pronounced [tˤ], like Arabic ط (voiceless pharyngealized alveolar stop).
- כ (Kaph) is pronounced [x], (voiceless velar fricative).
- ע (Ayin) is pronounced [ʕ], like Arabic ع (voiced pharyngeal fricative).
- צ (Tsadi) is pronounced [sˤ], like Arabic ص (voiceless pharyngealized alveolar fricative).
- ק (Qof) is usually pronounced [q] like Arabic ق (voiceless uvular stop) but other sounds occur like [k], [ɡ] or [ʔ] (glottal stop).
- ר (Resh) is usually trilled [r]. Baghdadi Jews pronounced it as a uvular [ʀ], close to Arabic غ &lrm.[2]
- ת (Tav without dagesh) is pronounced [t] in some countries, and [θ], like Arabic ث (voiceless dental fricative) in others (such as Iraq).[3]
- Vowels generally have the same sounds as in Sephardi Hebrew:
- Tsere is pronounced [eː].
- Holam is pronounced [oː].
- Kamatz gadol is pronounced [aː].
The pronunciation of Mizrahi Jews from non-Arab countries differs in some respects. For example, among Persian Jews, distinctively Arabic sounds such as ح [ħ] and ط [tˤ] do not occur, and Kamatz gadol is pronounced [ɒ] like the long a in Persian.
History
In Talmudic times it was noted that the Galilean (and maybe Syrian) pronunciation of Hebrew and Aramaic differed from those of both Judaea and Babylonia, principally by the loss of distinct sounds for the guttural letters he, ḥet and 'ayin. This feature is still found in Samaritan Hebrew.
Following the Arab conquest of Palestine and Mesopotamia, much work was done by the Masoretes in standardizing and refining the pronunciation of Biblical Hebrew, under the influence of the Arabic grammarians of the time: this included establishing the pronunciation of the guttural letters by reference to their Arabic equivalents. Three distinct notations for the vowels were devised: the Palestinian, the Babylonian and the Tiberian, of which the Tiberian eventually superseded the other two.
The process of assimilation to Arabic went furthest with the Babylonian Jews. For example, in Classical Arabic, and in some spoken dialects including Iraqi Arabic, there is no phonemic distinction between "a" and "e", though a phonetic difference is made by the presence of an adjacent emphatic or guttural consonant. Accordingly the Babylonian notation does not distinguish between patach (in other pronunciations [a]), segol (in other pronunciations [e] or [ɛ]) and sheva na', and these three vowels are still pronounced alike (as [æ]) among Yemenite Jews. In Levantine Arabic, by contrast, there are distinct "a" and "e" sounds, and these two vowels are distinguished in both the Palestinian and the Tiberian notations.[4]
After the expulsion of the Sephardi Jews from Spain in 1492, the exiles took the leading position in most Arab and Ottoman countries, and the local pronunciation of Hebrew assimilated to Sephardi Hebrew in many respects, in particular the pronunciation of the vowels. For this reason, today's Iraqi Jews distinguish between patach (/a/) and segol (/e/) in the same way as most other Sephardi and Mizrahi Jews. However, distinct sounds for the guttural and emphatic letters, and the [b] sound for bet raphe, were retained in many Arab countries, probably under the influence of Arabic.
Iraqi Jews, like the Yemenites, retain the Classical Arabic sounds of waw ([w]) and tav raphe ([θ]). In other Arab countries tav raphe is pronounced [t]: this is equally consistent with the pronunciation of Sephardi Hebrew and with that of colloquial Arabic. The pronunciation of waw as [v] is more clearly Sephardic in origin.[5]
Notes
- ↑ The [b] presumably reflects the influence of Arabic, where there is no [v]. The [v] pronunciation may reflect the influence of Sephardic immigrants from and after 1492, as it is also found in the pronunciation of Ottoman Sephardim (though not all Sephardim: see Sephardi Hebrew). The pronunciation before 1492, both in Spain and in Arabic-speaking countries, is unclear.
- ↑ The Jews of Baghdad traditionally used the uvular sound in Judaeo-Arabic. The peculiarity is has occurred for centuries, as old manuscript translations of the Bible into Iraqi Judaeo-Arabic often confuse ra with ghayn, but that is not found in translations into other dialects (Avishur, Yitzhak, Studies in Judaeo-Arabic Translations of the Bible). That is not generally reflected in the Hebrew pronunciation of the Baghdadi Jewish diaspora.
- ↑ The difference usually follows differences in the local dialect of Arabic: however, Sephardim are divided on the pronunciation of this letter, though [t] predominates.
- ↑ However, the distinction is differently applied in Tiberian Hebrew and Levantine Arabic. For example, the feminine ending is "-ah" in Tiberian Hebrew and "-é" in Levantine Arabic.
- ↑ Though Arabic /w/ becomes [v] in some North African dialects, as well as in Persian and Turkish.
Bibliography
- Idelsohn, A.Z., Phonographierte Gesänge und Aussprachsproben des Hebräischen der jemenitischen, persischen und syrischen Juden: Vienna 1917
- Katz, K., Masoret ha-lashon ha-'Ivrit shel Yehude Aram-Tsova (ִHalab) bi-qeriat ha-Miqra ve-ha-Mishnah (The Hebrew Language Tradition of the Jews of Aleppo in the Reading of the Bible and Mishnah): Jerusalem 1981 (Hebrew) Edah ve-Lashon series vol. 7
- Katz, K., Masoret ha-qeri'ah shel qehillat Jerba ba-Miqra u-va-Mishnah (The Hebrew Language Tradition of the Community of Djerba, Tunisia) Edah ve-Lashon series vol. 2
- Morag, S., Masoret ha-lashon ha-'Ivrit shel Yehude Bagdad, bi-qeriat ha-Mikra ve-ha-Mishnah (The Hebrew Language Tradition of the Baghdad Community: the Phonology): Jerusalem 1977 (Hebrew) Edah ve-Lashon series vol. 1
- S. Morag, 'Pronunciations of Hebrew', Encyclopaedia Judaica XIII, 1120–1145
- Yeivin, I., The Hebrew Language Tradition as Reflected in the Babylonian Vocalization: Jerusalem 1985 (Hebrew)
See also
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