Torah observant Jews want the best for all other Jews. It is less a scolding and more “Torah can benefit you the way it’s benefitted me”. I understand that it could often sound like talking down but truly it is not
@@timtim6373 not exactly. Jews actively advise against converting people. When speaking to non-Jews they will only go as far as explaining the basic laws of a moral society i.e. telling them not to curse god, not to worship idols, not to murder/steal, avoid sex crimes like rape incest adultery, no animal cruelty and to establish courts in their society. Jews are mainly interested in teaching less knowledgable Jewish people about their heritage and how to keep the laws of the Torah. The reason for this is simple: if the Torah is truly divine, Jews could really be in deep trouble for not following the laws. That being said, Jews do not force any strangers to do anything and certainly do not decapitate people for disagreeing with them.
I speak German and apparently just found out today that I also speak Yiddish😮 I knew Yiddish was a German dialect, but I didn't know how close it was. In my estimation it's closer than Pennsylvania Dutch even. I think it would be amazing to get native speakers of Yiddish, German, Texas German, and Pennsylvania Dutch together and see how well they can hold a conversation. I think it would be very surprising how little time it would take for them to be able to functionally communicate with one another.
I’m a black American and have taught my self a good amount of Yiddish. I can be honest and say I first learned it from the nanny (sitcom) and it intrigued me 💯😁🤷🏿♂️
Never knew Yiddish is that close to German. As a Dutchman I understood a lot. So next video of Xiaoma can be in German and, because Dutch is close to German, a few weeks later we can expect a video Xiaoma speaking Dutch.
I learned a bit of German a while ago, and when I tried to switch to Dutch (because I realized I have Dutch friends, why am I not learning Dutch instead?) my brain couldn't handle the similarity. It's said that Dutch (well, Frisian) is the closest language to English, and supposedly easiest to learn...but I had a far easier time learning German. I did, however, get very good at pronouncing Scheveningen because my Dutch friends would always make fun of me by making me say it!
I lived with an Israeli family for a little while, and they were the most giving, supportive and charitable people I've ever met. I was down on my luck when I was 18, and they welcomed me with open arms. They said their first rules, as soon as i entered their home were "If you are hungry, you eat. If you are thirsty you drink. If you need anything that you cannot find, you ask." And it feels so amazing to this day, over a decade later, that such a wonderful family helped me get my first apartment, helped me keep my job, and kept me out of trouble. Amazing family
Being German, I love hearing Yiddish spoken in the wild. Your ears perk up, because it's still so close to the German being spoken today, but uses antiquated vocabulary and it's own, often different expressions. Every Yiddish sentence sounds like German poetry in the moment xD
I specially like Yiddish songs because many singers speak the words out of rhythm and intonation. For example they would pronounce Kartofelsalat in a song: "kaa🎶aar🎵tou🎵uu🎶flsssssa🎶ääeeel🎶ahh-t🎵and it would sound like a shaman conjuring rain in the desert. When they speak it just sounds a bit odd but in a song it really becomes mystic.
@@fowleheidi482 I had to learn swiss german when i moved to Switzerland. Took me a couple of months to even understand them when they go full swiss mode.
There's a dialect of German spoken by some people in Texas that was basically just passed down from their immigrant forefathers, without changing like regular German did. So modern Germans will hear it and say the same, that it sounds like how their grandparents or great grandparents spoke.
I LOVE how Ari mentions potential interest in more practices in his life, then the man offers him to wear the kippah and make the blessing before the food. That was very beautiful and seemed like he directly understood his interests. And with all the joy. Lovely!!
@@gacy90 I'm Jewish, I live in Israel, my mom and grandparents were speaking Yiddish and I don't understand almost any of it, just funny slang that you can hear on Seinfeld 😂 None of my friends knows this language. Bravo to Xiaoma, for being so passionate about learning languages and connecting with people.
Once you learn a second language, picking up another one is always just a little easier. But it should never be as easy as this man makes it happen 😂😂😂😂 he's a very special person in that regard.
The fact that so many different cultures you visit have people who recognize you says a lot. You are making a difference in history. You help bridge cultural differences. You inspire many people, myself included to try harder to learn other languages and not be shy about approaching
Hey Xiamoa! Your video inspired me to try to learn to read Yiddish. I speak German and my grandfather was a German jew who fled to NYC during WWII and spoke Yiddish as well, but I never learned it. Turns out it's a lot easier to read than Hebrew because it includes all the vowels like German does! I have a new exciting skill now thanks to you and a much better understanding of the Hebrew alphabet.
I love how immediately the conversation starts about your lineage, it keeps the story going, always sharing from where your ancestors travelled and when, I love it 🥰
It’s amazing to be able to delve into a different culture or religion through Xiamoa/Arie’s videos. And to see how he can interact with others can be very intriguing and also heartwarming.
@@coloradotrader7202 and what’s your basis for that statement? Let me guess. You watched “unorthodox” on Netflix and now you think you understand hassidic culture?
@@coloradotrader7202 Why are you acting like your culture didn't do that during the 60s? In fact, if you're conservative, you should agree with the culture you hate so much
this was an amazing video! I used to take care of 2 sweet boys for a little over 6 years who were autistic and lived in a relatively strong Jewish household. they would have me over for holidays and cook delicious foods and bread. but the most precious moment was when one of the boys held my newborn for the first time. he recited the Shehecheyanu prayer, which most Jewish people do for their first time experiencing something new, and it made me cry. it was a sweet moment. the Jewish culture has always piqued my interest, so this was a nice to watch.
I’m Jewish and speak Hebrew, honestly I thought Yiddish would be more similar to Hebrew and it actually wasn’t, it was very interesting to hear this language!!! :)
It's mainly German, so if you learn the vowel-shifts and pronunciation, you can understand quite a lot in Yiddish if you speak German. I can understand maybe 80% of what I hear in Yiddish. Incidentally, a lot of non-Jewish people had some Yiddish in the old days. Even people who didn't speak German sometimes had some. One famous example is former Secretary of Defense Colin Powell.
It’s basically like German Creole with Hebrew words thrown in & written in Hebrew script. Edit: I forgot to mention there are a few Slavic words thrown in too.
One thing I like about your videos it is that we can experience other cultures, learn about them, get to know the people, and much more. I love NY with such a cultural diversity.
I think this is one of the most interesting videos you’ve done. Yiddish may be a major language in that community, but it’s also a dying language outside of it. My grandparents spoke Yiddish, their parents spoke Yiddish, but it wasn’t really passed on to my parents or my generation. Definitely a fascinating choice. Also good to show this community in a more positive light to a larger audience. Looking forward to part 2.
It’s funny I was told it was dying growing up, but it’s flourishing in Israel and the US in the Hasidic and Ultraorthodx communities. What’s sadly dying is the Judeo-Arabic, Judeo-Maaylan, etc. The Hebrew and other languages for the non European communities
My dad's grandfather was Jewish and grew up speaking Yiddish at home with his parents, who were immigrants from Belarus and Ukraine. But he and his siblings didn't pass Yiddish down to their kids, in an effort to assimilate and be more American. I always think it's a tragedy when a culture is lost that way, and I hope younger generations of secular Jews will be interested in reconnecting with Yiddish. I definitely want to learn.
Xioma, thank you for showing us all of these different cultures and showing appreciation for them in such a positive light. These videos never fail to make me laugh, smile, and appreciate thing a little more.
As an english & german speaker with some dutch, Yiddish feels like the language part of my brain just melting together with a bit of flair. Very interesting sounding language
Yiddish is so fascinating. It’s really a melting-pot kinda creole language. Yiddish and Modern German both diverged from Middle High German in the 11th and 12th centuries, if I’m not mistaken. All things considered, they’ve had very little time to diverge, and until 100 years ago, very little space to diverge. Their pronunciations are noticeably different, and Modern German uses prefixes, suffixes, and single-word conjugations more than Yiddish does, but the smaller words and root words and nearly identical. Yiddish incorporates a lot of Hebrew, as well as influences from Polish and Russian in some dialects. But anyone who speaks German today should be able to understand Yiddish. They’re not perfectly mutually comprehensible, but you’ll get the gist for sure
The sound of the Yiddish varies by the speaker's accent. Brooklyn "Yeshivish-style" Yiddish (in this video) is very distinct and sounds different than the European Yiddish that European-born Jews from the older, now-geriatric, generation speak.
@@YOLOnyc If I can make one correction to an otherwise great point, “Yeshiva-style” Yiddish would actually be spoken by non-Hasidic ultra Orthodox Jews, mostly of Lithuanian descent. Hasidic Yiddish is what was spoken in this video. There is a radical vowel shift between “Yeshivish” Yiddish, which is unfortunately dying very quickly, and Hasidic Yiddish.
As a fellow Jew I’ve been watching your videos and waiting for the day you did Yiddish or Hebrew. I’m so happy. I would love some day to come to NYC and experience the Jewish community, where I live in Canada the community is so small and exclusive (read: if you don’t have money you’re nobody) and I would love to experience a more welcoming community
wow I'm from Canada too. Not Jewish but try to partake in celebrations if I can. I've always wondered why our community was so small or thought maybe they were very quiet? This life here in this Jewish neighbourhood in NYC is another country altogether! I'd love to experience that and these people.
@@guytansbariva2295 if you read closely I said where I live in Canada, so that’s a problem with just that small community, I didn’t say ALL Jewish communities in Canada are like that
@@sharonhimmelman9685 Gotcha, sorry I missed that part. But yeah what people have been saying mostly is talking about the very expensive lemon. $100 or so? But it's no different than going to any cultural market, and they've got the expensive stuff at the back, just like Ari liked to see. Arabic markets have $100 dates, and Korean markets have $100 squid. It's all relative.
As a German, this was very satisfying. It's always so much more engaging when you even understand without subtitles. I hope Xiaoma reboots his German project. It would be fun to see how he connects German, Yiddish and Durch together.
"I'm Jewish and I don't think I've seen so many people at once in my life" Same same same! Being Jewish in most places in America you're always the minority. The feeling of being surrounded by so many of your own tribe is an amazing feeling indeed! Also, why aren't you wearing a kippah??? Lol
It’s so amazing. As a kid, I was one of two, maybe three Jews in my class. At Jewish summer camp the weight of explaining your heritage constantly being gone was an experience like no other. I loved it. My high school had almost 30% Jewish population (public school), which was a culture shock- I was used to being one of the only Jews, and the only observant one!
I love that you returned to your roots, Xiaoma. I spend so much time in other cultures that I appreciate so much when I am surrounded by my Mexican culture and people. It really makes it all special.
I was just talking to my mother (in my sukkah, funnily enough!) about Yiddish and my daughter as asked to hear it more and then here you are! I loved seeing Borough Park-I miss being down there more! What a wonderful way to kick off the new year and Sukkot! Can’t wait for part 2! Chag Sameach!
Xiaoman, I would love to see a video of you learning a very special (to me) Russian dialect. Doukhobor Russian is a combination of English and Russian and is only spoken in a few towns in Canada and the USA. I am a descendant of Doukhobors, and with there only being 30,000 left here in Canada, only 50% can speak Doukhobor and its sad that in 100 years it wont exist at all. Thank you for all the good vibes and awesome content :D Huge Fan Right Here!!
A friend of mine was an Orthodox Jew who was a farmer and knew Yiddish. One day at a farmer’s market several Russian emigre women were insulting him in Yiddish assuming he didn’t know what they were saying. You should have seen their faces when he told them “that’s not very nice” in their own language.
I really enjoyed this video. I've always been fascinated by the Jewish culture and, growing up in NYC, I love the Jewish people and enjoyed celebrating many of the holidays with our family friends. Looking forward to part 2, Ari. Your brother's a bit of a rockstar :)
I knew Yiddish is very similar to German, but hearing it being actually spoken is crazy! It feels epic being able to understand it without tons of effort, haha! Thank you for the video!
@@jaredf6205 Yiddish evolved alongside other German dialects through the centuries. It isn't that different to modern German, and very different to Old High German.
Xiaomanyc is legit one of, if not the best, UA-camr ever. The guy speaks multiple languages, travels the world and speaks to everyone and breaks barriers most could only dream of. Seriously deserves a humanitarian award!!
cool to be seeing more interactions with the Hasidic community since many of the people within are often worried that anyone with a camera is coming into their neighborhoods to criticize them in some way. Seems like in recent years especially there are more people even within the Hasidic community using UA-cam to share the culture, which I think is fascinating. Time after time ari shows that choosing to speak someone else’s language is something that is warmly received and appreciated across cultures ❤
Eh, their culture is toxic, I don’t think we should be pretending that an ancient religious way of living is somehow pure or beautiful. It’s primitive and full of shit speaking from first hand experience
@@christophershirley3279 Orthodox means traditional, aka not Reform or Conservative. Inside Orthodox Jews there are Modern Orthodox (also Religious Zionists in Israel) and Haredim (what some people call Ultra-Orthodox). And inside the last group, there are Sephardic and Ashkenazi (wich also exist inside the other communities), and inside the Ashkenazi community there are Hasidic Jews and Misnagdim (opponents of Hasidism). Sorry if its too complicated, but Hasidic Jews are only a part of Orthodox Jews.
I LOVE the interaction starting at 14:05 - especially when she wishes you a happy holiday! So beautiful to see people from different cultures and places being respectful, working together, and existing as part of the same community. ווונדערלעך / maravilloso ❤
You just earned a sub just for the overall natural way you are behind the camera as well as you clear unadulterated acceptance for all people! The world needs a few million of you sir.
What people don’t realize is that in the old days you could’ve been Jewish from practically anywhere in any country in Europe (except where they spoke Ladino) and yet Yiddish was the unifying language that everyone understood.
Actually, the were Judeo versions of many other languages too, Yiddish (Judeo Middle-High German) is the only surviving one but there was Judeo Italian, Judeo French, etc. Ladino (Judeo Spanish) is a novel language at this point used mostly in music, very few people speak it as their primary language these days.
It's always so funny and interesting to me (as a German) how much Yiddish I can actually understand. Stuff like "a bissl" ( a bit ) is also very much how southern Germans/Swabians speak, where I am from. By the way, how come your brother is so well versed in the Jewish community and you not as much? Were you brought up differently or what is the reason?
@@CornholioPuppetMaster That is very cool. The language is not easy to master. A lot of Germans struggle with it too, haha. May I ask what made you learn German? You forgot the C in "Fleisch" by the way :) But that's an easy mistake because it's pronounced like the English "sh", so don't worry.
@@Drumming_Monkey My wife is half German. She hates it when I translate Fleischküchle to "flesh cakes". Even though it's 100% accurate :D Her mother is Schwabish, so Fleischküchle is just meat. Not the pastry covered version from the Black Sea area.
It's truly remarkable how much this sounds like a middle ground between Dutch and German. I'm Dutch myself and also speak German, after seeing this, i will definitely take up some yiddish courses.
Great video! Was waiting for this video ever since i found out u were Jewish awhile back when u said it in one of ur videos. I myself grew up as a religious orthodox Jew in NY (not as a chasidish Jew) and it’s nice to see someone shine some light on the chasidish community especially since there is a huge increase in anti-semitism in those neighborhoods.
My dad actually understands Yiddish. It’s wild because he’s an old Californian surfer but his roots are New York Jew. Every now and then the Brooklyn accent and Jewish storytelling humor will come out and it’s like a different person 😂
Finally a video with a language I speak! Gives me some insight into how well you're speaking the other languages (besides Mandarin). For 2-3 weeks this is really great! For future reference, most American Hasidim speak the Hungarian dialect (or the very similar Polish dialect) which differs in pronunciation from the Lithuanian dialect used in more 'academic' circles. But you clearly made yourself understood- shkoyach!
I think he was saying 2-3 weeks and meant 2-3 hours based on what his friend kept saying, along with the interaction with that one man by the car (who had groceries).
Tajt siker vagy haver, vagy csak mesüge? Kukkold már meg! Nem látod, hogy kasa a szajré, nem tré? Mázlink volt, ne majrézz! If you can get around Hungarian orthography you can understand some of this sentence intentionally replete with jiddis words :D
Holy moly, a foreigner in your own hood. I feel you. Like my first visit to Japan, the homeland, surrounded by Japanese. Ha! Oddly, I took German in high school so I understood more Yiddish than I do in Japanese.
I have never paid attention to Yiddish till this video, but it's crazy how so many words sound German. It's like I understood it to a degree without knowing the language.
Absolutely amazing to see a top tier mainstream UA-camr being openly Jewish and donating the proceeds of the video to Jewish charities. Amazing! ישר כח!
I like that your brother said as an example "if you're gonna honk your horn at somebody in traffic think twice" then the video proceeds with plenty horn honking. So funny.
@@DonVideoGuy007 they’re still human and are not perfect. C’mon dude, a “reminder.” I’m sure you’ve missed your alarm a few times in your life, but you still set it. We are not robots and rigid in our convictions, even if at times we should be. The reminders we place on ourselves to improve our behavior are helpful tools.
@@Diablochild123 Usually orthodox Jews have that belief, that no jew can leave completely the religion, because it is like something what you inherit as a jew. So they think that everybody can come back, they just have to practice it again. So they see somebody like Arieh as a potential returnee.
@@Ordo1980 ye kind of. Your born Jewish, and that’s that. A non-Jew cannot turn around one day and say “I believe in Hashem (G-d)” and be Jewish. That’s why even myself I’m not religious at all, but if I went to that neighbourhood and told them my name (which is very Jewish) they would take me in no doubt in my mind.
@@Ordo1980 Yes he is born Jewish but is a secular Jew and these gentlemen in the video are religious Jews. We all are from Adam, thats what really matters.
I’ll never forget how a Jewish charity helped my family out with paying the electricity bill and some food during very hard times thought we’d never be in. I’ll be paying it back many fold.
Or just "family". Jewish obsession is unbelievably demonstrated and common. Saying that Jewish people are fascinating or good with money or even so kind and helpful, is the same of saying and thinking the opposite. What a crazy stupid Neurotypical world!
@@HPMTube1991 I have no such opinions. That’s a pretty aged opinion and small demographic. I don’t know anyone that says that except nazis and some odd elderly. I didn’t say any of that too so don’t hijack my post with this junk
@Varoth The point is- that neurotypicals tend to associate a parameter that is irrelevant as a factor. For example here; One taxpayer who was helped as a child by a family that lived near his home, apparently. Why the immediate tendency is, to mention that they are of Jewish origin. Moreover, it is an almost universal subconscious, classifying other taxpayers, according to one irrelevant variable. Usually religious or ethnic or national. 'Origin' or 'religion', in a context that is not national or religious, is the same as a reference to an eye color or a preferred taste or color. It is an archetype of social construction and primitive conditioning. And everyone suffers from it, almost without exception. I am outstanding. Although I am autistic and highly integrated and schizoid, it is enough to have a basic intelligence and an objective line of thought. In addition, the world needs to stop with the Jewish obsession. But also, with any other obsession. A saying like 'Jews are kind and they tend to help others' (similar to the response of the one above) is just like the saying 'Jews are greedy and dominate the dome' or any other dogmatism. I will suggest a literal (but not thoughtful) correction to the following: As a child, I was once caught up in state X and was helpless. For my benefit, a family that lives near where I live was provided with assistance. falcon
@@HPMTube1991 dude, relax the guy was showing appreciation for someone who did a good deed for them, and I'm Jewish orthodox,and appreciated the gesture... not everything is offensive
@@qwertyeet Watching this I sure feel like I lost out on not growing up in this atmosphere. My brother in Baltimore has a community with almost all Jewish people. It's a different feeling
I found out I was Jewish through some ancestor tracing recently, my family had no idea and I know nothing about the ethnicity or religion, thank you for this ❤
@@rollsaround2096 עברית היא שפה שמית ויש לנו קשר להמון שפות שעדיין חיות וגם כאלה שמתו, המשפחה השמית מאוד עשירה וגדולה. ערבית, עברית, ארמית, אמהרית, אכדית (מתה), אשורית, אבלאית, אמורית, טיגרינית ועוד הרבה שפות
Haha, Yiddish is like a time travel to late medieval German and also a bunch of Hebrew and Slavic words. As a German, I can understand approximately 80 % of those sentences. But I am quite good in understanding dialects and also know a little bit Russian, so it´s easier for me. Greets from GER, U.
I had no idea that it’s that similar to German. I knew about the connection to the German langue but very interesting to actually hear and understand it.
The time he had his brain scanned, the neurologist thinks he has bilateral language, meaning that he can process and develop language in both hemispheres of his brain, which is uncommon in men. This might explain partly why he can learn and retain so many languages.
Learn about Comprensible Input. It is basically learning a language like a native baby would. With that, little by little u acquire a language until u speak n understand it quite well. Don't give up, I know u can achieve what u set ur mind to. We are lucky to be able to watch this YT channel, it is honestly an inspiration to everyone.
While I love the reactions in your other videos, I found myself pausing to read the notes and enjoying this more as I'm learning about another culture.
That’s how my grandparents spoke. I didn’t find out my grandma was actually speaking Yiddish AND that she was a Jew later on in life. Kept it secret for going through the nightmare (grandpa is my hero for saving her and my aunts/uncles). They were from Germany. Husband’s family from Russia.
My mother grew up in Midwood, and I always felt uncomfortable visiting those areas in Brooklyn. As a very reformed NY Jewish guy, there were moments where I felt noticeably out of place. However, I will always go back for delicious mandel bread and other Jewish baked goods.
The flip phone he’s holding at 15:18 is such a throwback to when the Motorola razor flip phone was the hottest and latest phone on the market for the year! ❤
This is the video I’ve been waiting for from you. Please do a follow up with more Yiddish. There are different pronunciations for regions like Litvish vs Polish. It’s a rich and precious language with literature you can check out at Yivo.
@@michaelwodz9807 of course, pre WWII there were Jewish communities all through Eastern Europe, each with subtle differences in pronunciation. Common knowledge.
Man, that camera is a trip! I've never done acid, but I suspect the experience may be similar. I always enjoy the interactions. I wish I'd started learning languages way earlier in life. My brain won't hold new info very well any more. If I ever freed a mythical Jinn, one of my wishes would be to speak, understand, read and write any language known to man. You could go anywhere, anywhen, and talk to anyone about anything.
There are already a ton of comments saying how close to German Yiddish is, but since I am about to be teaching German, it’s so true! There are some varying words occasionally and some different pronunciations of words, but I could actually understand most of what was being said! Crazy cool! Ausgezeichnet!
I love this channel so much. Hearing the different dialects that you speak and the shock on everyone's face is just some of the best content I've ever consumed on UA-cam.
Helped a Jewish family move out and my God, they had soooo many books. The have a whole wall filled with them. It was it was a pain to pack them but it was interesting lol. Their family was huge and they had made a custom table to fit like 30 or more in one table for events. It was cool lol
Wouldn’t be surprised if you helped move the family prayer book, moms book, dads book, grandpas book, the kids books, the book they got as a gift for donating to the synagogue, the book they got from volunteering at the community vegetable garden, the special High Holy Days book, kids storybooks about virtue, and three copies of Chicken Soup for the Soul. And I’d bet they had a kids table too!
Thanks to Raycon buyraycon.com/xiaomanyc for sponsoring this video and I'll be donating 100% of the sponsorship proceeds to charity. Chag Sameach!!!
I'll check them out. Also you should learn Swahili! Best wishes.
.. to which charity, though?
$100? They saw you coming. You were the biggest lemon in the store! 🤣
I don't know your Jewish/Hebrew name until today. Arieh Moshe???
@@Jack_Nack No, it’s a special citrus for a special occasion. Like some people pay hundreds of dollars for a big, live tree at Christmas.
I love that he got a scolding straight away for not being religious enough from an elder.
It’s universal
the least he could do is apply the tefillin🤣
Torah observant Jews want the best for all other Jews. It is less a scolding and more “Torah can benefit you the way it’s benefitted me”. I understand that it could often sound like talking down but truly it is not
@@SammyJoon that’s how most religious people are
@@timtim6373 not exactly. Jews actively advise against converting people. When speaking to non-Jews they will only go as far as explaining the basic laws of a moral society i.e. telling them not to curse god, not to worship idols, not to murder/steal, avoid sex crimes like rape incest adultery, no animal cruelty and to establish courts in their society. Jews are mainly interested in teaching less knowledgable Jewish people about their heritage and how to keep the laws of the Torah. The reason for this is simple: if the Torah is truly divine, Jews could really be in deep trouble for not following the laws. That being said, Jews do not force any strangers to do anything and certainly do not decapitate people for disagreeing with them.
@@thewalrider1159 chill Adolph
I speak German and apparently just found out today that I also speak Yiddish😮 I knew Yiddish was a German dialect, but I didn't know how close it was. In my estimation it's closer than Pennsylvania Dutch even. I think it would be amazing to get native speakers of Yiddish, German, Texas German, and Pennsylvania Dutch together and see how well they can hold a conversation. I think it would be very surprising how little time it would take for them to be able to functionally communicate with one another.
I like how one of the comments pointed out: Yiddish sounds like a Dutch person trying to speak German.
It makes sense that Yiddish sounds like Pennsylvania Dutch, because both of the originated in the Rhineland area.
@Jack that would be great idea!
I'm currently learning German, and I can definitely hear the similarities!
it's not Jewish, I think it's German Jews who fled from the Nazi regime in Germany to America at that time
As a german i understand pretty much everything. Its almost like an german dialect.
It’s just a middle-high German written in a Hebrew script to preserve the old German from what I understand
That’s really cool, technically means Jews and Germans are linked culturally and ethnically
Ja stimmt, hab mich auch gewundert
That's so cool! I'm german and I thought the same thing.
@@anonymoust2877 Culturally, yes, ethnically Ashkenazi Jews mixed primarily Semitic men with Southern Italian women (Sardinians)
I’m a black American and have taught my self a good amount of Yiddish. I can be honest and say I first learned it from the nanny (sitcom) and it intrigued me 💯😁🤷🏿♂️
Lol awesome ❤
me too but i’m italian/mexican! learned some from the nanny too!
that’s amazing ! keep learning
The Nanny still rocks. Love that show.
Im Scandinavian and the Yiddish I know I learned from Fran too!!😂
I am obsessed with the wild angles your camera gives. I cannot contain my laughter most times 😂
@4:49
@@Cabal-ms3kb @7:46
@@Cabal-ms3kb @5:36
@@G1ngerpocalypse One of these should've been the thumbnail tbh
@4:37
Never knew Yiddish is that close to German. As a Dutchman I understood a lot.
So next video of Xiaoma can be in German and, because Dutch is close to German, a few weeks later we can expect a video Xiaoma speaking Dutch.
Same. Learned german in school and could always make out some of dutch, didn't know Yiddish was the same,
Yiddish is Middle High German from medieval times with sprinklings of Slavic and Hebrew words.
@@TheDivayenta they were forced to leave and settled in north america pretty early on
I learned a bit of German a while ago, and when I tried to switch to Dutch (because I realized I have Dutch friends, why am I not learning Dutch instead?) my brain couldn't handle the similarity. It's said that Dutch (well, Frisian) is the closest language to English, and supposedly easiest to learn...but I had a far easier time learning German.
I did, however, get very good at pronouncing Scheveningen because my Dutch friends would always make fun of me by making me say it!
Same! Amazing! I didn't know Yiddish was so related to Dutch and German!
I lived with an Israeli family for a little while, and they were the most giving, supportive and charitable people I've ever met. I was down on my luck when I was 18, and they welcomed me with open arms. They said their first rules, as soon as i entered their home were "If you are hungry, you eat. If you are thirsty you drink. If you need anything that you cannot find, you ask." And it feels so amazing to this day, over a decade later, that such a wonderful family helped me get my first apartment, helped me keep my job, and kept me out of trouble. Amazing family
אתה מדבר עברית?
Makes me cry so beautiful 😢
🤣🤣🤣🤣
"If you are hungry, you eat. If you are thirsty, you drink. If you need anything that you cannot find, you ask." That's beautiful. Good rules.
Baruch HaShem. May you continue to be blessed in my life, my friend. Thank you for sharing your story.
Being German, I love hearing Yiddish spoken in the wild. Your ears perk up, because it's still so close to the German being spoken today, but uses antiquated vocabulary and it's own, often different expressions. Every Yiddish sentence sounds like German poetry in the moment xD
I specially like Yiddish songs because many singers speak the words out of rhythm and intonation. For example they would pronounce Kartofelsalat in a song: "kaa🎶aar🎵tou🎵uu🎶flsssssa🎶ääeeel🎶ahh-t🎵and it would sound like a shaman conjuring rain in the desert. When they speak it just sounds a bit odd but in a song it really becomes mystic.
@@dennyb6768 What?
try Swiss-German, I think more difficult than Yiddish.
@@fowleheidi482 I had to learn swiss german when i moved to Switzerland. Took me a couple of months to even understand them when they go full swiss mode.
There's a dialect of German spoken by some people in Texas that was basically just passed down from their immigrant forefathers, without changing like regular German did. So modern Germans will hear it and say the same, that it sounds like how their grandparents or great grandparents spoke.
This man is a walking translator. Much respect. I’m still trying to learn one other language and it’s not easy for me
Translators usually walk with the person they translate for but ye
@@jonathankraig425 😐
To be honest he doesn’t speak that well.
But i think he understands much.
"I'm Jewish I've never seen this many jews in my life." Had me laughing so hard.
It's crazy how crowded everything is. Gives me major anxiety. I hate crowds :(
I've seen some but they were in that camp in europe
@@TheJewHunter1488 Booooooo🤢👎
He isn't wrong lmao I thought the same thing
Well he should visit Israel...
It's astonishing how much I understand as a native German speaker. Yiddish is very close to some of our dialects
Geshmak = gut schmecken oder lecker
Ek is afrikaans en kan omtrent alles verstaan😅
@@dreanotto3487 Ik kan jou ook verstaan lijkt veel op Nederlands, Afrikaans is een mooie taal.
As a guy from the Netherlands it all sounds very understandable...
@@mike77gmc ich kann euch auch alle verstehen
I LOVE how Ari mentions potential interest in more practices in his life, then the man offers him to wear the kippah and make the blessing before the food. That was very beautiful and seemed like he directly understood his interests. And with all the joy. Lovely!!
Yes! That’s the heart of the Jewish community. There’s no exclusion, just welcoming.
So interesting.
It's amazing how quickly you pick up on these different languages. Very impressive and very entertaining as always!
1) When you enjoy something you learn extremly fast 2) His brain is used to learn new language so he adapts to a new language really really fast
@@ReloGP14th You make a great point.
hes jewish,,,he should have known this since 5
@@gacy90 I'm Jewish, I live in Israel, my mom and grandparents were speaking Yiddish and I don't understand almost any of it, just funny slang that you can hear on Seinfeld 😂 None of my friends knows this language. Bravo to Xiaoma, for being so passionate about learning languages and connecting with people.
Once you learn a second language, picking up another one is always just a little easier. But it should never be as easy as this man makes it happen 😂😂😂😂 he's a very special person in that regard.
The fact that so many different cultures you visit have people who recognize you says a lot. You are making a difference in history. You help bridge cultural differences. You inspire many people, myself included to try harder to learn other languages and not be shy about approaching
First video he didn't get anything free
Lol jk jk
@@ANTIStraussianlmao a year later and these long nose joos finally being exposed for the demonic greedy mob they are
The smile on some of the people you interact with their mother tongue is beyond any earthly descriptions… it makes me feel really happy too
Hey Xiamoa! Your video inspired me to try to learn to read Yiddish. I speak German and my grandfather was a German jew who fled to NYC during WWII and spoke Yiddish as well, but I never learned it. Turns out it's a lot easier to read than Hebrew because it includes all the vowels like German does! I have a new exciting skill now thanks to you and a much better understanding of the Hebrew alphabet.
I love how immediately the conversation starts about your lineage, it keeps the story going, always sharing from where your ancestors travelled and when, I love it 🥰
It’s amazing to be able to delve into a different culture or religion through Xiamoa/Arie’s videos. And to see how he can interact with others can be very intriguing and also heartwarming.
it is a culture that treats women like 2nd class citizens
@@coloradotrader7202 and what’s your basis for that statement? Let me guess. You watched “unorthodox” on Netflix and now you think you understand hassidic culture?
@@coloradotrader7202 islam?
@@coloradotrader7202 Why are you acting like your culture didn't do that during the 60s? In fact, if you're conservative, you should agree with the culture you hate so much
@@vercot7000 I never said I hated anything, I was just stating a fact. dont get butt hurt bozo
this was an amazing video! I used to take care of 2 sweet boys for a little over 6 years who were autistic and lived in a relatively strong Jewish household. they would have me over for holidays and cook delicious foods and bread. but the most precious moment was when one of the boys held my newborn for the first time. he recited the Shehecheyanu prayer, which most Jewish people do for their first time experiencing something new, and it made me cry. it was a sweet moment. the Jewish culture has always piqued my interest, so this was a nice to watch.
That’s beautiful
* Piqued....not peeked.
@@deirdrekiely6187 not to be that person but OP was right with the piqued
@@erinslays OP was not right. OP edited their comment after they were corrected. So yeah, you were that guy
@@erinslays you look the teeny tiny little hats??
Aweee Ari & his brother are both so nice, just good souls honestly. Hope to see more content with the two of you❤️
I’m Jewish and speak Hebrew, honestly I thought Yiddish would be more similar to Hebrew and it actually wasn’t, it was very interesting to hear this language!!! :)
It's mainly German, so if you learn the vowel-shifts and pronunciation, you can understand quite a lot in Yiddish if you speak German. I can understand maybe 80% of what I hear in Yiddish.
Incidentally, a lot of non-Jewish people had some Yiddish in the old days. Even people who didn't speak German sometimes had some. One famous example is former Secretary of Defense Colin Powell.
I thought the same thing!!
הוא צריך לדעת עברית היוטיובר הזה
It’s basically like German Creole with Hebrew words thrown in & written in Hebrew script. Edit: I forgot to mention there are a few Slavic words thrown in too.
@@divemylollol6152 הוא יודע קצת.
One thing I like about your videos it is that we can experience other cultures, learn about them, get to know the people, and much more. I love NY with such a cultural diversity.
I think this is one of the most interesting videos you’ve done. Yiddish may be a major language in that community, but it’s also a dying language outside of it. My grandparents spoke Yiddish, their parents spoke Yiddish, but it wasn’t really passed on to my parents or my generation. Definitely a fascinating choice. Also good to show this community in a more positive light to a larger audience.
Looking forward to part 2.
as long as there are Orthodox Ashkenazi, I don't see it disappearing. So that's good.
It’s funny I was told it was dying growing up, but it’s flourishing in Israel and the US in the Hasidic and Ultraorthodx communities. What’s sadly dying is the Judeo-Arabic, Judeo-Maaylan, etc. The Hebrew and other languages for the non European communities
same, all of my grandparents spoke it and didn’t pass it on so they could talk without the kinderlach understanding🫠
My dad's grandfather was Jewish and grew up speaking Yiddish at home with his parents, who were immigrants from Belarus and Ukraine. But he and his siblings didn't pass Yiddish down to their kids, in an effort to assimilate and be more American. I always think it's a tragedy when a culture is lost that way, and I hope younger generations of secular Jews will be interested in reconnecting with Yiddish. I definitely want to learn.
The reintroduction of Hebrew seemed to replace Yiddish for the most part.
You get such honesty by speaking to all these different people in their language. Such a good perspective on human nature in general. Thank me man.
Thank *YOU man lol
you can edit comments 😊
massive massive respect for donating the proceeds in accordance with the tradition of the holiday
Your username fits you.
Keep being cool, drippy rat. Respect!
Exactly,much respect for doing that. ❤️🕊️
Xioma, thank you for showing us all of these different cultures and showing appreciation for them in such a positive light. These videos never fail to make me laugh, smile, and appreciate thing a little more.
As an english & german speaker with some dutch, Yiddish feels like the language part of my brain just melting together with a bit of flair. Very interesting sounding language
same here, i always knew yiddish was a think but never actually clicked how much sense it makes when I hear it?
Yiddish is so fascinating. It’s really a melting-pot kinda creole language. Yiddish and Modern German both diverged from Middle High German in the 11th and 12th centuries, if I’m not mistaken. All things considered, they’ve had very little time to diverge, and until 100 years ago, very little space to diverge. Their pronunciations are noticeably different, and Modern German uses prefixes, suffixes, and single-word conjugations more than Yiddish does, but the smaller words and root words and nearly identical. Yiddish incorporates a lot of Hebrew, as well as influences from Polish and Russian in some dialects. But anyone who speaks German today should be able to understand Yiddish. They’re not perfectly mutually comprehensible, but you’ll get the gist for sure
The sound of the Yiddish varies by the speaker's accent. Brooklyn "Yeshivish-style" Yiddish (in this video) is very distinct and sounds different than the European Yiddish that European-born Jews from the older, now-geriatric, generation speak.
I'm swedish that understands german and some dutch, this was definitely some hybrid thing. Sounded odd but very interesting and fascinating.
@@YOLOnyc If I can make one correction to an otherwise great point, “Yeshiva-style” Yiddish would actually be spoken by non-Hasidic ultra Orthodox Jews, mostly of Lithuanian descent. Hasidic Yiddish is what was spoken in this video. There is a radical vowel shift between “Yeshivish” Yiddish, which is unfortunately dying very quickly, and Hasidic Yiddish.
As a fellow Jew I’ve been watching your videos and waiting for the day you did Yiddish or Hebrew. I’m so happy.
I would love some day to come to NYC and experience the Jewish community, where I live in Canada the community is so small and exclusive (read: if you don’t have money you’re nobody) and I would love to experience a more welcoming community
wow I'm from Canada too. Not Jewish but try to partake in celebrations if I can. I've always wondered why our community was so small or thought maybe they were very quiet? This life here in this Jewish neighbourhood in NYC is another country altogether! I'd love to experience that and these people.
Yeah, see you're not exactly helping the Jewish reputation when you say the community in Canada thinks you're nobody unless you have money.
@@guytansbariva2295 if you read closely I said where I live in Canada, so that’s a problem with just that small community, I didn’t say ALL Jewish communities in Canada are like that
@@sharonhimmelman9685 Gotcha, sorry I missed that part. But yeah what people have been saying mostly is talking about the very expensive lemon. $100 or so?
But it's no different than going to any cultural market, and they've got the expensive stuff at the back, just like Ari liked to see. Arabic markets have $100 dates, and Korean markets have $100 squid. It's all relative.
Hi sharon. Ur name is german and it emeans heavens man
“Just search white guy speaks Chinese on UA-cam.” I laughed way too hard at that 😂
Not wrong though 😂
Lmaoo was just about to comment ahah
he has the youtube algorithm wrapped round his finger at this point lmao
There's a guy on the street in one of his other videos that addressed him literally as that "see you later 'white guy speaks Chinese!' “ 😂
That’s actually how he titled his videos
As a German, this was very satisfying. It's always so much more engaging when you even understand without subtitles.
I hope Xiaoma reboots his German project. It would be fun to see how he connects German, Yiddish and Durch together.
many german words also come from the yiddish originally. Tohuwabohu, Ganove, meschugge, it's pretty awesome how the 2 languages are woven together.
@@hanshansomahammau And Kosher :)
@@hanshansomahammau and many terms for money.
@@hanshansomahammau meshuga and ganuv is from hebrew
The extra touch with the text bubbles was very insightful and made the video more interesting. You effort doesn't go unnoticed!
"I'm Jewish and I don't think I've seen so many people at once in my life"
Same same same! Being Jewish in most places in America you're always the minority. The feeling of being surrounded by so many of your own tribe is an amazing feeling indeed! Also, why aren't you wearing a kippah??? Lol
It’s so amazing. As a kid, I was one of two, maybe three Jews in my class. At Jewish summer camp the weight of explaining your heritage constantly being gone was an experience like no other. I loved it. My high school had almost 30% Jewish population (public school), which was a culture shock- I was used to being one of the only Jews, and the only observant one!
I love that you returned to your roots, Xiaoma. I spend so much time in other cultures that I appreciate so much when I am surrounded by my Mexican culture and people. It really makes it all special.
Hell yea man!
Never realized you were Jewish! Shalom brotha!! Great video as always
Never new YOU were Jewish either…shalom אחי 😁😁😁 it’s a small world we live in.
@@mikewizowski441 I never knew you were Jewish as well. It really is a small world after all. Shalom!
Shalom!
Hello sir🙏 please help me😭
You blind bro ? 😂
I was just talking to my mother (in my sukkah, funnily enough!) about Yiddish and my daughter as asked to hear it more and then here you are! I loved seeing Borough Park-I miss being down there more! What a wonderful way to kick off the new year and Sukkot! Can’t wait for part 2! Chag Sameach!
Living in Southern California I think I missed out with not living in this kind of community
Hello maym please🙏 help😭 me
Xiaoman, I would love to see a video of you learning a very special (to me) Russian dialect. Doukhobor Russian is a combination of English and Russian and is only spoken in a few towns in Canada and the USA. I am a descendant of Doukhobors, and with there only being 30,000 left here in Canada, only 50% can speak Doukhobor and its sad that in 100 years it wont exist at all. Thank you for all the good vibes and awesome content :D Huge Fan Right Here!!
A friend of mine was an Orthodox Jew who was a farmer and knew Yiddish. One day at a farmer’s market several Russian emigre women were insulting him in Yiddish assuming he didn’t know what they were saying. You should have seen their faces when he told them “that’s not very nice” in their own language.
What the hell were they saying about your friend?!
@@NYC_Goody as I recall they were insinuating that he was stupid and so would be easy to con into a lower price.
@@charlescurran1289 Typical
@@charlescurran1289 that's their religion
@@charlescurran1289 Yiddish moment.
I really enjoyed this video. I've always been fascinated by the Jewish culture and, growing up in NYC, I love the Jewish people and enjoyed celebrating many of the holidays with our family friends. Looking forward to part 2, Ari. Your brother's a bit of a rockstar :)
I knew Yiddish is very similar to German, but hearing it being actually spoken is crazy!
It feels epic being able to understand it without tons of effort, haha!
Thank you for the video!
I mean it's basically German.
Which is crazy because it split from High German over a thousand years ago.
@@jaredf6205 Yiddish evolved alongside other German dialects through the centuries. It isn't that different to modern German, and very different to Old High German.
Xiaomanyc is legit one of, if not the best, UA-camr ever. The guy speaks multiple languages, travels the world and speaks to everyone and breaks barriers most could only dream of. Seriously deserves a humanitarian award!!
cool to be seeing more interactions with the Hasidic community since many of the people within are often worried that anyone with a camera is coming into their neighborhoods to criticize them in some way. Seems like in recent years especially there are more people even within the Hasidic community using UA-cam to share the culture, which I think is fascinating. Time after time ari shows that choosing to speak someone else’s language is something that is warmly received and appreciated across cultures ❤
Yeah I watched a documentary and the hasidics refused to mention women because theres apparently a big abuse problem.
Eh, their culture is toxic, I don’t think we should be pretending that an ancient religious way of living is somehow pure or beautiful. It’s primitive and full of shit speaking from first hand experience
These are Orthodox Jews, not Hasidic.
@@GoBlueHTB I think Orthodox is kind of an umbrella term that could include many orthodox groups. If you’re Jewish, please educate me if I’m wrong.
@@christophershirley3279 Orthodox means traditional, aka not Reform or Conservative. Inside Orthodox Jews there are Modern Orthodox (also Religious Zionists in Israel) and Haredim (what some people call Ultra-Orthodox). And inside the last group, there are Sephardic and Ashkenazi (wich also exist inside the other communities), and inside the Ashkenazi community there are Hasidic Jews and Misnagdim (opponents of Hasidism). Sorry if its too complicated, but Hasidic Jews are only a part of Orthodox Jews.
Finally you’re covering Yiddish! Danken God! Your Jewish viewers were wondering when you’re going to cover it 😊
It's danken Gott.
I LOVE the interaction starting at 14:05 - especially when she wishes you a happy holiday! So beautiful to see people from different cultures and places being respectful, working together, and existing as part of the same community. ווונדערלעך / maravilloso ❤
Thanks for the walk. The Jewish Community in NY is very interesting!!! And your brother apparently is a legend there! :D
Xiaoma feels like a protestant walking through a Greek Orthodox festival.
looooooool
except judaism is an ethnicity
You just earned a sub just for the overall natural way you are behind the camera as well as you clear unadulterated acceptance for all people! The world needs a few million of you sir.
What people don’t realize is that in the old days you could’ve been Jewish from practically anywhere in any country in Europe (except where they spoke Ladino) and yet Yiddish was the unifying language that everyone understood.
And Yiddish and Ladino speakers would use Biblical Hebrew to communicate with each other when they met.
@@rlt9492 Which is the actual unifying language.
Actually, the were Judeo versions of many other languages too, Yiddish (Judeo Middle-High German) is the only surviving one but there was Judeo Italian, Judeo French, etc. Ladino (Judeo Spanish) is a novel language at this point used mostly in music, very few people speak it as their primary language these days.
Do they speak Yiddish in Israel?
@@rlt9492 Not Biblical Hebrew. Medieval Hebrew.
It's always so funny and interesting to me (as a German) how much Yiddish I can actually understand. Stuff like "a bissl" ( a bit ) is also very much how southern Germans/Swabians speak, where I am from.
By the way, how come your brother is so well versed in the Jewish community and you not as much? Were you brought up differently or what is the reason?
maybe he met his wife or something and he decided to be more religious
@@caroline5573 definitely could be the case. It's just very interesting to me. :)
I’ve been learning German for a few months and I recognized words like danke and fleish
@@CornholioPuppetMaster That is very cool. The language is not easy to master. A lot of Germans struggle with it too, haha. May I ask what made you learn German? You forgot the C in "Fleisch" by the way :) But that's an easy mistake because it's pronounced like the English "sh", so don't worry.
@@Drumming_Monkey My wife is half German. She hates it when I translate Fleischküchle to "flesh cakes". Even though it's 100% accurate :D
Her mother is Schwabish, so Fleischküchle is just meat. Not the pastry covered version from the Black Sea area.
These videos always put me in a good mood, I think it's seeing the human connection that's heart warming
your mother always puts me in a good mood
It's truly remarkable how much this sounds like a middle ground between Dutch and German. I'm Dutch myself and also speak German, after seeing this, i will definitely take up some yiddish courses.
because its yiddish and not hebrew language
thats antisemitic unless you're jewish
@@andyrobin7196 How?
@@LaFlaneuse0 cultural appropriation
@@andyrobin7196 as a jewish person, no it isn't lol
Dude, this was SUPER informative! Please start doing more annotations, if you can! Thanks!
I’m not Jewish. But I love the Jewish culture and I live in NYC.
Lol
Great video! Was waiting for this video ever since i found out u were Jewish awhile back when u said it in one of ur videos. I myself grew up as a religious orthodox Jew in NY (not as a chasidish Jew) and it’s nice to see someone shine some light on the chasidish community especially since there is a huge increase in anti-semitism in those neighborhoods.
I've always enjoyed your videos but this one was really amazing for me, it's so exciting to see my culture being celebrated in such a fun way ✨️
חג שמח
I love how less surprised they all are and how fast word travels about how he speaks it really well
My dad actually understands Yiddish. It’s wild because he’s an old Californian surfer but his roots are New York Jew. Every now and then the Brooklyn accent and Jewish storytelling humor will come out and it’s like a different person 😂
This guy would probably win a battle against duolingo😫
This guy IS Duolingo
Or at least win a lil taco. Lol
Yeah, Duolingo maybe...
Finally a video with a language I speak! Gives me some insight into how well you're speaking the other languages (besides Mandarin). For 2-3 weeks this is really great! For future reference, most American Hasidim speak the Hungarian dialect (or the very similar Polish dialect) which differs in pronunciation from the Lithuanian dialect used in more 'academic' circles. But you clearly made yourself understood- shkoyach!
I think he was saying 2-3 weeks and meant 2-3 hours based on what his friend kept saying, along with the interaction with that one man by the car (who had groceries).
Tajt siker vagy haver, vagy csak mesüge? Kukkold már meg! Nem látod, hogy kasa a szajré, nem tré? Mázlink volt, ne majrézz!
If you can get around Hungarian orthography you can understand some of this sentence intentionally replete with jiddis words :D
He did a weird mixture of the dialects. For instance, he called his friend his brider instead of his bruder, so there was some galitzianer.
American hassidim are the biggest American Yiddish speaking community
Holy moly, a foreigner in your own hood. I feel you. Like my first visit to Japan, the homeland, surrounded by Japanese. Ha! Oddly, I took German in high school so I understood more Yiddish than I do in Japanese.
Man i have somehow literally never met anyone of japanese ancestry here in north america.
@@thorodinson6649 Very common on the West Coast. LA SF etc. Whole communities.
@@shrayesraman5192 Vancouver Canada there are plenty
Where fr do u live bro
日本語は少し話します。でも。。。まだまだです。
I have never paid attention to Yiddish till this video, but it's crazy how so many words sound German. It's like I understood it to a degree without knowing the language.
Absolutely amazing to see a top tier mainstream UA-camr being openly Jewish and donating the proceeds of the video to Jewish charities. Amazing! ישר כח!
Does god not provide enough for those charities? SUS
@@PROVOCATEURSK אלוהים יקלל אותך
@@PROVOCATEURSK god is waiting for his own stimulus check
You already have all of Hollywood, can we just have UA-cam?
@@tombeacher9667 and most of the billionaires
I like that your brother said as an example "if you're gonna honk your horn at somebody in traffic think twice" then the video proceeds with plenty horn honking. So funny.
The drivers honking were probably not Jewish?!?
@@DonVideoGuy007 they’re still human and are not perfect. C’mon dude, a “reminder.” I’m sure you’ve missed your alarm a few times in your life, but you still set it. We are not robots and rigid in our convictions, even if at times we should be. The reminders we place on ourselves to improve our behavior are helpful tools.
"Buy a yamaka, speak Yiddish, you're one of ours." How freaking wholesome is that?!
He is Jewish, so it is not that strange that they say that 🙃
@@Ordo1980 Some groups of people have the “if you weren’t born and lived it, you’re not it” mentality. I’m just glad he’s welcoming of it. :)
@@Diablochild123 Usually orthodox Jews have that belief, that no jew can leave completely the religion, because it is like something what you inherit as a jew. So they think that everybody can come back, they just have to practice it again. So they see somebody like Arieh as a potential returnee.
@@Ordo1980 ye kind of. Your born Jewish, and that’s that. A non-Jew cannot turn around one day and say “I believe in Hashem (G-d)” and be Jewish. That’s why even myself I’m not religious at all, but if I went to that neighbourhood and told them my name (which is very Jewish) they would take me in no doubt in my mind.
@@Ordo1980 Yes he is born Jewish but is a secular Jew and these gentlemen in the video are religious Jews. We all are from Adam, thats what really matters.
As an only English speaker, I'm amazed at literally any language you speak and glad there are subtitles to go along with it 👍
I’ll never forget how a Jewish charity helped my family out with paying the electricity bill and some food during very hard times thought we’d never be in. I’ll be paying it back many fold.
Or just "family".
Jewish obsession is unbelievably demonstrated and common.
Saying that Jewish people are fascinating or good with money or even so kind and helpful, is the same of saying and thinking the opposite.
What a crazy stupid Neurotypical world!
@@HPMTube1991 Your point is?
@@HPMTube1991 I have no such opinions. That’s a pretty aged opinion and small demographic. I don’t know anyone that says that except nazis and some odd elderly. I didn’t say any of that too so don’t hijack my post with this junk
@Varoth
The point is-
that neurotypicals tend to associate a parameter that is irrelevant as a factor.
For example here; One taxpayer who was helped as a child by a family that lived near his home, apparently. Why the immediate tendency is, to mention that they are of Jewish origin. Moreover, it is an almost universal subconscious, classifying other taxpayers, according to one irrelevant variable. Usually religious or ethnic or national. 'Origin' or 'religion', in a context that is not national or religious, is the same as a reference to an eye color or a preferred taste or color.
It is an archetype of social construction and primitive conditioning. And everyone suffers from it, almost without exception. I am outstanding. Although I am autistic and highly integrated and schizoid, it is enough to have a basic intelligence and an objective line of thought.
In addition, the world needs to stop with the Jewish obsession. But also, with any other obsession.
A saying like 'Jews are kind and they tend to help others' (similar to the response of the one above) is just like the saying 'Jews are greedy and dominate the dome' or any other dogmatism.
I will suggest a literal (but not thoughtful) correction to the following:
As a child, I was once caught up in state X and was helpless. For my benefit, a family that lives near where I live was provided with assistance. falcon
@@HPMTube1991 dude, relax the guy was showing appreciation for someone who did a good deed for them, and I'm Jewish orthodox,and appreciated the gesture... not everything is offensive
Being a jew, this was amazing. I understood a lot of what they were talking about.
Happy sukkot
@@TheJleliot thanks so much
@@qwertyeet Watching this I sure feel like I lost out on not growing up in this atmosphere. My brother in Baltimore has a community with almost all Jewish people. It's a different feeling
Happy sukkot
Chag Samaiach!
I found out I was Jewish through some ancestor tracing recently, my family had no idea and I know nothing about the ethnicity or religion, thank you for this ❤
Welcome... If you are in the big city you could check out some of the Jewish delicatessens.
@@jaybloomfield5082 i worked at Carnegie deli in nyc for 2 years 😭
@@brianakelley123 they’re not kosher. JS
Africans: wow, you speak our language! Here’s a free meal
Chasidim: you want a lemon? That’ll be 100$
You must have missed the beginning where they gave a sandwich
that's not a lemon it's an Etrog, and it's not for eating but for making a commandment from the bible.
It's not a lemon it's an Etrog
It's not a lemon, it's an Etrog (citron), and it's a really expensive fruit.
True
I was a Hebrew Linguist in the Air Force. I’m amazed at your ability to learn and remember languages. It’s a gift from God.
אני מקווה שהוא תנסה ללימוד עברית, זה יהיה ממש מעניין אם הוא יכול להצליח - זה שפה אלף פעמים יותר קשה מיידיש.
עד כמה שאני יודע לעברית אין שום קשר לספות אחרות. חוץ מאולי ארמית. וגם הדקדוק יחסית מוזר.
@@rollsaround2096 עברית היא שפה שמית ויש לנו קשר להמון שפות שעדיין חיות וגם כאלה שמתו, המשפחה השמית מאוד עשירה וגדולה.
ערבית, עברית, ארמית, אמהרית, אכדית (מתה), אשורית, אבלאית, אמורית, טיגרינית ועוד הרבה שפות
Show me proof your God exists….oh wait, you can’t!
God is Santa Claus for grownups!
Such unlogical thing to say. He is learning, not getting it for free. May Lucifer free your mind from cultist thinking.
A pleasure to see the veterans of languages! You give life and inspiration to media and education alike.
Haha, Yiddish is like a time travel to late medieval German and also a bunch of Hebrew and Slavic words. As a German, I can understand approximately 80 % of those sentences. But I am quite good in understanding dialects and also know a little bit Russian, so it´s easier for me. Greets from GER, U.
But I can speak Hebrew, and I don't understand Yiddish at all 🥲
The wife and I will have to check this neighborhood out next time we go to New York !
@@dankelly5150 don’t forget crown heights! this year is prob gonna be more packed lol
I can't get over "De Fleisch ist geschmack"
@@ireadysucks3026 CH speaks the least yiddish, Williamsburg the most and Borough Park comes in at second place.
I had no idea that it’s that similar to German. I knew about the connection to the German langue but very interesting to actually hear and understand it.
This was a nice glimpse into their community. Looking forward to part 2.
Learning a new language is such a struggle for me. That’s such an amazing gift Xiaoma has. It’s awesome to see true peace across so many cultures.
Seriously. It takes me years to process a basic understanding of another language
The time he had his brain scanned, the neurologist thinks he has bilateral language, meaning that he can process and develop language in both hemispheres of his brain, which is uncommon in men. This might explain partly why he can learn and retain so many languages.
I think it helps if you have a photographic memory
RIGHT??? Wouldn''t it be so very cool to be able to chat with EVERYONE????
Learn about Comprensible Input. It is basically learning a language like a native baby would. With that, little by little u acquire a language until u speak n understand it quite well. Don't give up, I know u can achieve what u set ur mind to. We are lucky to be able to watch this YT channel, it is honestly an inspiration to everyone.
I like his fake attempt at running during his headphone pitch lmao. 1:37
While I love the reactions in your other videos, I found myself pausing to read the notes and enjoying this more as I'm learning about another culture.
same
I did too.
Crazy how much u can understand with German as your mother tongue! 🤯
Alles.
Ja weil es vom deutschen abgeht man kann es sehr mit Österreichisch oder schweizer deutsch vergleichen
Man bezeichnet Yiddish auch als Judendeutsch
Krasser mindblow
@@mafujutz ich finde, dass es vor allem dem bayerischen Dialekt sehr nahe kommt. Noch viel eher als schweizerdeutsch.
That’s how my grandparents spoke. I didn’t find out my grandma was actually speaking Yiddish AND that she was a Jew later on in life. Kept it secret for going through the nightmare (grandpa is my hero for saving her and my aunts/uncles). They were from Germany. Husband’s family from Russia.
💓💓💓 So sorry to hear what she went thru.
Maternal?
Loved these reactions. Perfect time for these videos, the world needs it!
Also love the facts on Judaism thrown in, I'm learning! 🧐
Thank you for sharing so many cultures with us through language. It's such a joy to watch
My mother grew up in Midwood, and I always felt uncomfortable visiting those areas in Brooklyn. As a very reformed NY Jewish guy, there were moments where I felt noticeably out of place. However, I will always go back for delicious mandel bread and other Jewish baked goods.
The reactions get me every time I watch these😂
Keep up the good work 👍
The flip phone he’s holding at 15:18 is such a throwback to when the Motorola razor flip phone was the hottest and latest phone on the market for the year! ❤
I'm part Ashkenazi Jewish on my mom's side of the family and I'm happy to see a new video like this :)
I heard my Grandma speak Yiddish as a kid. God Bless Her that she spoke 4 languages.
You're really talented having such a grasp on so many languages. That's just so cool honestly
I knew you were rooted with the Jewish nation!!! Good for you braving the streets of NY on Erev Sukkos!
This is the video I’ve been waiting for from you. Please do a follow up with more Yiddish. There are different pronunciations for regions like Litvish vs Polish. It’s a rich and precious language with literature you can check out at Yivo.
Palestine
Yiddish in poland?
@@michaelwodz9807 of course, pre WWII there were Jewish communities all through Eastern Europe, each with subtle differences in pronunciation. Common knowledge.
@@franceslock1662 not very common i guess! Im polish and ive never heard of this, thanks for the knowledge
@@franceslock1662 i knew there were large jewish communities in poland i just assumed they didnt speak Yiddish for some reason
Man, that camera is a trip! I've never done acid, but I suspect the experience may be similar.
I always enjoy the interactions. I wish I'd started learning languages way earlier in life. My brain won't hold new info very well any more.
If I ever freed a mythical Jinn, one of my wishes would be to speak, understand, read and write any language known to man. You could go anywhere, anywhen, and talk to anyone about anything.
That mythical Jinn would somehow find a way to mess up your wish, they always do 😂 But that would make a heck of a good storyline!
I enjoy mushrooms, and it reminds me of when they are hitting a little too hard in public.
I feel as though I’ve been waiting for this video!! Glad you’re doing it + helping to resurrect such an old and important language:)
1:38 The “run” that stops at end of frame 🤌💋 😂😂😂
This is fascinating, I live in the Midwest and never knew how deep the religion goes and is embedded in that community and culture
There are already a ton of comments saying how close to German Yiddish is, but since I am about to be teaching German, it’s so true! There are some varying words occasionally and some different pronunciations of words, but I could actually understand most of what was being said! Crazy cool! Ausgezeichnet!
I love this channel so much. Hearing the different dialects that you speak and the shock on everyone's face is just some of the best content I've ever consumed on UA-cam.
Really love this video man. I show my English students some of your videos sometimes. This one is a real banger. Nice one!
Helped a Jewish family move out and my God, they had soooo many books. The have a whole wall filled with them. It was it was a pain to pack them but it was interesting lol. Their family was huge and they had made a custom table to fit like 30 or more in one table for events. It was cool lol
Wouldn’t be surprised if you helped move the family prayer book, moms book, dads book, grandpas book, the kids books, the book they got as a gift for donating to the synagogue, the book they got from volunteering at the community vegetable garden, the special High Holy Days book, kids storybooks about virtue, and three copies of Chicken Soup for the Soul. And I’d bet they had a kids table too!
Right! Like get a life lol
jews in general are some of the biggest book lovers ever.
Please keep making these videos they are the best!
As an orthodox Jew, this was amazing 😂
barúkh hashém from new zealand brother
Chag Samaiach!
Same here also chag sameach
Chag sukkot sameach from Australia!
@@blakeybarn Did you go to Kadimah?
I’m currently learning Dutch and it’s crazy how similar Yiddish is to it
It’s a mix of dutch, german, slavic and some hebrew words in it