Aramaic Interview with Fr Brutos Bethlehem, Syrian Orthodox Church Virgin Mary
Aramaic Interview with Fr Brutos Bethlehem, Syrian Orthodox Church Virgin Mary
Aramaic Interview with Fr Brutos Bethlehem, Syrian Orthodox Church Virgin Mary
Directed By: John-Roger, Dss & Jsu Garcia, Dss
Aramaic (Classical Syriac: ܐܪܡܝܐ Aramaya) is a family of languages or dialects, belonging to the Semitic family. More specifically, it is a part of the Northwest Semitic subfamily, which also includes Canaanite languages such as Hebrew and Phoenician. The Aramaic script was widely adopted for other languages and is ancestral to both the Arabic and modern Hebrew alphabets.
During its over 3,000 years of written history,[2] Aramaic has served variously as a language of administration of empires and as a language of divine worship. It was the lingua franca of the Neo-Assyrian Empire, Neo-Babyloni
2:00
Learn to Write Aramaic - modern Eastern Assyrian alphabet (cursive script 5 of 5)
Learn to Write Aramaic - modern Eastern Assyrian alphabet (cursive script 5 of 5)
Learn to Write Aramaic - modern Eastern Assyrian alphabet (cursive script 5 of 5)
In previous videos, you learned to write the classical cursive alphabet, cursive ligatures and final letter forms. Now take a look at the same letters in the...
1:19
Ghada Shbeir - Aramaic lullaby
Ghada Shbeir - Aramaic lullaby
Ghada Shbeir - Aramaic lullaby
Ghada Shbeir - Aramaic lullaby غادة شبير Specialist and professional performer of traditional Middle Eastern folks and Arabo Andalusian songs, Syriac and Anc...
3:47
Holy mass in Aramaic - Jerusalem 5
Holy mass in Aramaic - Jerusalem 5
Holy mass in Aramaic - Jerusalem 5
Archpishop Mor Sewerios Malki Murad.
7:11
The Aramaic Worldview of Yeshua (Jesus): A Native Middle Eastern Cosmology
The Aramaic Worldview of Yeshua (Jesus): A Native Middle Eastern Cosmology
The Aramaic Worldview of Yeshua (Jesus): A Native Middle Eastern Cosmology
An exerpt from Neil Douglas-Klotz, Ph.D. giving a public presentation at the First Unitarian Universalist Church in Columbus, OH. November 2011.
11:24
Aramaic Project-Part 27. The Syriac East meets the Latin West in Kerala, India
Aramaic Project-Part 27. The Syriac East meets the Latin West in Kerala, India
Aramaic Project-Part 27. The Syriac East meets the Latin West in Kerala, India
Excerpt from Dr. Joseph J. Palackal’s presentation at the conference on “Safeguarding the Musical Traditions of Eastern Christianity” at the Rome campus of the University of Notre Dame, Indiana. May 24-26, 2015.
http://sacredmusic.nd.edu/assets/164559/rome_eastern_christian_music_congress_2015_final.pdf
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The pronunciation of Syriac in Kerala and Iraq. Conversations with Dr. Koonammakkal Thoma Kathanar, Fr. Emmanuel Thelly, CMI, and Joseph J. Palackal (http://www.TheCMSIndia.org/palackal.html).
----------------------------------------------
A Syriac Aramaic Hymn from the Holy Syriac Orthodox Liturgy,the first Christian Church in the Middle East which Jesus Christ talked its Holy Aramaic Language...
2:40
THE LORD'S PRAYER IN ARAMAIC WITH ENGLISH TRANSLATION
THE LORD'S PRAYER IN ARAMAIC WITH ENGLISH TRANSLATION
THE LORD'S PRAYER IN ARAMAIC WITH ENGLISH TRANSLATION
Aramaic Language: The Language of Christ The Aramaic language is a Semitic language closely related to Hebrew. Originally the language of the Aramaeans (Aram...
5:47
Ghada Shbeir - Aramaic hymns
Ghada Shbeir - Aramaic hymns
Ghada Shbeir - Aramaic hymns
Ghada Shbeir ia a specialist and a professional performer of traditional Middle Eastern folks and Arabo Andalusian songs, Syriac Aramaic and Ancient Maronite chants, Ghada Shbeir has an exquisite talent and the ability to move easily and with professionalism from traditional folk songs to religious chants. She has earned frequent comparison to some of the best Middle Eastern singers - 26 June 2015.
12:05
Bible Translations: Peshitta- Aramaic English New Testament (AENT)
Bible Translations: Peshitta- Aramaic English New Testament (AENT)
Bible Translations: Peshitta- Aramaic English New Testament (AENT)
http://theoscholar.blogspot.com/ http://bible-geeks.com A look at the translation of the Peshitta by Messianic Jewish teacher Andrew Gabriel Roth. It is a li...
10:58
Syriac Christian militias at war against IS. Syriac-Aramaic (Assyrians) and Kurds fight the IS.
Syriac Christian militias at war against IS. Syriac-Aramaic (Assyrians) and Kurds fight the IS.
Syriac Christian militias at war against IS. Syriac-Aramaic (Assyrians) and Kurds fight the IS.
French TV channel "France24" reports about the fight of the Syriac (Assyrian) Christians and Kurds against the IS terrorist organisation.
In north-eastern Syria, Kurds and the Syriac Christian community have begun carving out an autonomous region for themselves.
Der Französiche Sender "France24" berichtet über den Kampf der Syrisch-Aramäischen (Assyrischen) Christen und der Kurden gegen die Terrororganisation des "Islmaischen Staates" gleichzeitg wird über die Autonome Region berichtet die von den Kurden und den Syrisch-Aramäischen Christen aufgebaut wurde.
5:55
Aramaic Project-Part 28. The Pronunciation Syriac in India and Iraq
Aramaic Project-Part 28. The Pronunciation Syriac in India and Iraq
Aramaic Project-Part 28. The Pronunciation Syriac in India and Iraq
Excerpt from Dr. Joseph J. Palackal’s presentation at the conference on “Safeguarding the Musical Traditions of Eastern Christianity” ( http://sacredmusic.nd.edu/assets/164559/rome_eastern_christian_music_congress_2015_final.pdf)
at the Rome campus (http://international.nd.edu/global-gateways/rome/) of the University of Notre Dame, Indiana (https://www.nd.edu). May 24-26, 2015.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The pronunciation of Syriac in Kerala and Iraq. Conversations with Dr. Koonammakkal Thoma Kathanar, Fr. Emmanuel Thelly, CMI, and Joseph J. Palackal (http://www.Th
4:21
Report about the Assyrian Syriac-Aramaic Christian Sootoro Militia GPF (Gozarto Protection Force)
Report about the Assyrian Syriac-Aramaic Christian Sootoro Militia GPF (Gozarto Protection Force)
Report about the Assyrian Syriac-Aramaic Christian Sootoro Militia GPF (Gozarto Protection Force)
Report about the Assyrian Syriac-Aramaic Christian Sootoro Militia also know as the GPF (Gozarto Protection Force) that are fighting ISIS in Hassakeh in North Eastern Syria (Gozarto).
Reportage über die Aramäische/Assyrische Sootoro (GPF Gozarto Protection Force) die die IS Terroristen im Nordosten Syriens bekämpft.
Haseke Süryani SOOTORO Birlikleri Suriye Ordusu'nun Safında Savaşıyor
2:51
Torah in Aramaic
Torah in Aramaic
Torah in Aramaic
Reciting verses in Genesis 28:10 in the ancient near eastern dialect of Judean Aramaic. I am pronouncing the words relatively slowly and deliberately in orde...
Aramaic Interview with Fr Brutos Bethlehem, Syrian Orthodox Church Virgin Mary
Aramaic Interview with Fr Brutos Bethlehem, Syrian Orthodox Church Virgin Mary
Aramaic Interview with Fr Brutos Bethlehem, Syrian Orthodox Church Virgin Mary
Directed By: John-Roger, Dss & Jsu Garcia, Dss
Aramaic (Classical Syriac: ܐܪܡܝܐ Aramaya) is a family of languages or dialects, belonging to the Semitic family. More specifically, it is a part of the Northwest Semitic subfamily, which also includes Canaanite languages such as Hebrew and Phoenician. The Aramaic script was widely adopted for other languages and is ancestral to both the Arabic and modern Hebrew alphabets.
During its over 3,000 years of written history,[2] Aramaic has served variously as a language of administration of empires and as a language of divine worship. It was the lingua franca of the Neo-Assyrian Empire, Neo-Babyloni
2:00
Learn to Write Aramaic - modern Eastern Assyrian alphabet (cursive script 5 of 5)
Learn to Write Aramaic - modern Eastern Assyrian alphabet (cursive script 5 of 5)
Learn to Write Aramaic - modern Eastern Assyrian alphabet (cursive script 5 of 5)
In previous videos, you learned to write the classical cursive alphabet, cursive ligatures and final letter forms. Now take a look at the same letters in the...
1:19
Ghada Shbeir - Aramaic lullaby
Ghada Shbeir - Aramaic lullaby
Ghada Shbeir - Aramaic lullaby
Ghada Shbeir - Aramaic lullaby غادة شبير Specialist and professional performer of traditional Middle Eastern folks and Arabo Andalusian songs, Syriac and Anc...
3:47
Holy mass in Aramaic - Jerusalem 5
Holy mass in Aramaic - Jerusalem 5
Holy mass in Aramaic - Jerusalem 5
Archpishop Mor Sewerios Malki Murad.
7:11
The Aramaic Worldview of Yeshua (Jesus): A Native Middle Eastern Cosmology
The Aramaic Worldview of Yeshua (Jesus): A Native Middle Eastern Cosmology
The Aramaic Worldview of Yeshua (Jesus): A Native Middle Eastern Cosmology
An exerpt from Neil Douglas-Klotz, Ph.D. giving a public presentation at the First Unitarian Universalist Church in Columbus, OH. November 2011.
11:24
Aramaic Project-Part 27. The Syriac East meets the Latin West in Kerala, India
Aramaic Project-Part 27. The Syriac East meets the Latin West in Kerala, India
Aramaic Project-Part 27. The Syriac East meets the Latin West in Kerala, India
Excerpt from Dr. Joseph J. Palackal’s presentation at the conference on “Safeguarding the Musical Traditions of Eastern Christianity” at the Rome campus of the University of Notre Dame, Indiana. May 24-26, 2015.
http://sacredmusic.nd.edu/assets/164559/rome_eastern_christian_music_congress_2015_final.pdf
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The pronunciation of Syriac in Kerala and Iraq. Conversations with Dr. Koonammakkal Thoma Kathanar, Fr. Emmanuel Thelly, CMI, and Joseph J. Palackal (http://www.TheCMSIndia.org/palackal.html).
----------------------------------------------
A Syriac Aramaic Hymn from the Holy Syriac Orthodox Liturgy,the first Christian Church in the Middle East which Jesus Christ talked its Holy Aramaic Language...
2:40
THE LORD'S PRAYER IN ARAMAIC WITH ENGLISH TRANSLATION
THE LORD'S PRAYER IN ARAMAIC WITH ENGLISH TRANSLATION
THE LORD'S PRAYER IN ARAMAIC WITH ENGLISH TRANSLATION
Aramaic Language: The Language of Christ The Aramaic language is a Semitic language closely related to Hebrew. Originally the language of the Aramaeans (Aram...
5:47
Ghada Shbeir - Aramaic hymns
Ghada Shbeir - Aramaic hymns
Ghada Shbeir - Aramaic hymns
Ghada Shbeir ia a specialist and a professional performer of traditional Middle Eastern folks and Arabo Andalusian songs, Syriac Aramaic and Ancient Maronite chants, Ghada Shbeir has an exquisite talent and the ability to move easily and with professionalism from traditional folk songs to religious chants. She has earned frequent comparison to some of the best Middle Eastern singers - 26 June 2015.
12:05
Bible Translations: Peshitta- Aramaic English New Testament (AENT)
Bible Translations: Peshitta- Aramaic English New Testament (AENT)
Bible Translations: Peshitta- Aramaic English New Testament (AENT)
http://theoscholar.blogspot.com/ http://bible-geeks.com A look at the translation of the Peshitta by Messianic Jewish teacher Andrew Gabriel Roth. It is a li...
10:58
Syriac Christian militias at war against IS. Syriac-Aramaic (Assyrians) and Kurds fight the IS.
Syriac Christian militias at war against IS. Syriac-Aramaic (Assyrians) and Kurds fight the IS.
Syriac Christian militias at war against IS. Syriac-Aramaic (Assyrians) and Kurds fight the IS.
French TV channel "France24" reports about the fight of the Syriac (Assyrian) Christians and Kurds against the IS terrorist organisation.
In north-eastern Syria, Kurds and the Syriac Christian community have begun carving out an autonomous region for themselves.
Der Französiche Sender "France24" berichtet über den Kampf der Syrisch-Aramäischen (Assyrischen) Christen und der Kurden gegen die Terrororganisation des "Islmaischen Staates" gleichzeitg wird über die Autonome Region berichtet die von den Kurden und den Syrisch-Aramäischen Christen aufgebaut wurde.
5:55
Aramaic Project-Part 28. The Pronunciation Syriac in India and Iraq
Aramaic Project-Part 28. The Pronunciation Syriac in India and Iraq
Aramaic Project-Part 28. The Pronunciation Syriac in India and Iraq
Excerpt from Dr. Joseph J. Palackal’s presentation at the conference on “Safeguarding the Musical Traditions of Eastern Christianity” ( http://sacredmusic.nd.edu/assets/164559/rome_eastern_christian_music_congress_2015_final.pdf)
at the Rome campus (http://international.nd.edu/global-gateways/rome/) of the University of Notre Dame, Indiana (https://www.nd.edu). May 24-26, 2015.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The pronunciation of Syriac in Kerala and Iraq. Conversations with Dr. Koonammakkal Thoma Kathanar, Fr. Emmanuel Thelly, CMI, and Joseph J. Palackal (http://www.Th
4:21
Report about the Assyrian Syriac-Aramaic Christian Sootoro Militia GPF (Gozarto Protection Force)
Report about the Assyrian Syriac-Aramaic Christian Sootoro Militia GPF (Gozarto Protection Force)
Report about the Assyrian Syriac-Aramaic Christian Sootoro Militia GPF (Gozarto Protection Force)
Report about the Assyrian Syriac-Aramaic Christian Sootoro Militia also know as the GPF (Gozarto Protection Force) that are fighting ISIS in Hassakeh in North Eastern Syria (Gozarto).
Reportage über die Aramäische/Assyrische Sootoro (GPF Gozarto Protection Force) die die IS Terroristen im Nordosten Syriens bekämpft.
Haseke Süryani SOOTORO Birlikleri Suriye Ordusu'nun Safında Savaşıyor
2:51
Torah in Aramaic
Torah in Aramaic
Torah in Aramaic
Reciting verses in Genesis 28:10 in the ancient near eastern dialect of Judean Aramaic. I am pronouncing the words relatively slowly and deliberately in orde...
4:45
Blessed are the peacemakers, from the Beatitudes of Christ, in Aramaic
Blessed are the peacemakers, from the Beatitudes of Christ, in Aramaic
Blessed are the peacemakers, from the Beatitudes of Christ, in Aramaic
Tubwayhun lahwvday shlama dawnaw(hie) dalaha nitqarun. (language is Aramaic)
'Blessed are the peacemakers: for they shall be called the children of God.'
All the major traditions that arose from the Middle east i.e Jewish, Christian and Islamic have their roots in the same source, the same Mother Earth and probably from the same language. They are believed to have all originally called God either El or Al which means that the One or that One which expresses itself uniquely through all things. From this root arises the sacred names Allaha (aramaic) Allah (Arabic) Elohim (Hebrew), and Elat (Old Canaanite).
(Above translation from Prayer
6:02
MESSIAHS ARAMAIC NAME
MESSIAHS ARAMAIC NAME
MESSIAHS ARAMAIC NAME
"THE ARAMAIC NAME OF THE SAVIOR!"
The Messiah grew up in Natsari which was on an out crop of hills near Galilee! Which is also Northern Israel! That was closer to Syria and they spoke Aramaic regularly there! The Aramaic name for the savior is, "Eashoa ha m'sheeka!"
Luke 4:16-30 - He went to Nazareth, where He had been brought up!..........
The Messiah's name is spelled, Yoot Sheen Waw Ein (Eashoa) in Aramaic!
Isho or Eesho, is in fact, the Aramaic name of Messiah!
To the American ear it sounds like 'Isho or Ishoa or Eashoa'
Eashoa' means, "The Life-Giver"
M'sheekha means, "The Anointed One"
Eashoa' M'sheekha means, "The Anointed Life-Giv
80:47
Qurbana in East Syriac (Suriyani or Aramaic) - Full Video
Qurbana in East Syriac (Suriyani or Aramaic) - Full Video
Qurbana in East Syriac (Suriyani or Aramaic) - Full Video
Qurbana by Narivelil Mathayi Kathanar; Venue: Yohannan Mamdana Church, Kanjirathanam; Choir: Sisilian, Pala About Syriac language: http://www.nasranifoundati...
7:19
Bible Translations: Peshitta- Aramaic New Covenant
Bible Translations: Peshitta- Aramaic New Covenant
Bible Translations: Peshitta- Aramaic New Covenant
http://theoscholar.blogspot.com/ http://bible-geeks.com A very good and very literal translation of the Peshitto New Testament by Herb Jahn. Here is my Amazo...
10:01
Neo/New Aramaic 3 Meeting-Jerusalem מפגשי שיחות לימוד כורדית/ארמית
Neo/New Aramaic 3 Meeting-Jerusalem מפגשי שיחות לימוד כורדית/ארמית
Neo/New Aramaic 3 Meeting-Jerusalem מפגשי שיחות לימוד כורדית/ארמית
North Eastern Neo/New Aramaic Lessons Meeting In Jerusalem ISRAEL. Video No. 3 מפגשי לישנא דני ללימוד כורדית/ארמית חדשה צפון מזרחית בבית הופמן ירושלים ישראל....
4:37
Abeer Nehme: Aramaic Sacred Song 1 (World Sufi Spirit Festival | Live Recording)
Abeer Nehme: Aramaic Sacred Song 1 (World Sufi Spirit Festival | Live Recording)
Abeer Nehme: Aramaic Sacred Song 1 (World Sufi Spirit Festival | Live Recording)
A popular name in Sufi music, Abeer Nehme excels in the art of singing the spiritual repertory of Maronite, Byzantine and Syrian origins. She is sober, touching and with her Sufi songs she revives the Aramean roots of an ancient tradition. Her clear and limpid voice seems to fly over time, elevating our spirits on a boundless heavenly journey.
Drawing upon Eastern traditions, Christianity and the Arabic culture, she has completely mastered both the Gregorian as well as Orthodox heritages.
Infused with an extremely vivid memory of a Biblical Middle East, Abeer Nehmé reminds us of the historical importance of the Aramean language; the language
1:10
Lord's Prayer in Syriac (Aramaic)
Lord's Prayer in Syriac (Aramaic)
Lord's Prayer in Syriac (Aramaic)
The Lord's Prayer, Proclaimed in the Syriac (Aramaic) language [Eastern Dialect], that Jesus Christ Spoke, the Prayer that was taught to the Apostles by our ...
4:52
Aramaic - Syria - Assyrian - Syriac - The Truth!
Aramaic - Syria - Assyrian - Syriac - The Truth!
Aramaic - Syria - Assyrian - Syriac - The Truth!
How one of the oldest continuos languages in the world is suffering neglect. Vatican has replaced the language of the Catholic Eastern Churches with Arabic, ...
7:46
Bible Translations: An Introduction to the Aramaic Peshitta New Testament
Bible Translations: An Introduction to the Aramaic Peshitta New Testament
Bible Translations: An Introduction to the Aramaic Peshitta New Testament
http://theoscholar.blogspot.com/ http://bible-geeks.com The introduction to my series on the Aramaic Peshitta. It is an ancient Bible written in Aramaic, the...
Aramaic Interview with Fr Brutos Bethlehem, Syrian Orthodox Church Virgin Mary
Directed By: John-Roger, Dss & Jsu Garcia, Dss
Aramaic (Classical Syriac: ܐܪܡܝܐ Aramaya) is a family of languages or dialects, belonging to the Semitic family. More specifically, it is a part of the Northwest Semitic subfamily, which also includes Canaanite languages such as Hebrew and Phoenician. The Aramaic script was widely adopted for other languages and is ancestral to both the Arabic and modern Hebrew alphabets.
During its over 3,000 years of written history,[2] Aramaic has served variously as a language of administration of empires and as a language of divine worship. It was the lingua franca of the Neo-Assyrian Empire, Neo-Babylonian Empire and Achaemenid Empire, the day-to-day language of Yehud Medinata and of Judaea (539 BC – 70 AD), the language that Jesus probably used the most,[3][4][5] the language of large sections of the biblical books of Daniel and Ezra, and is the main language of the Talmud and Syriac Christianity, in particular the Assyrian Church of the East, the Chaldean Catholic Church, the Ancient Church of the East, the Saint Thomas Christian Churches in India, the Syriac Orthodox Church and the Maronite Church.[6] However, Jewish Aramaic was different from the other forms both in lettering and grammar. Parts of the Dead Sea Scrolls are in Jewish Aramaic showing the Jewish lettering, related to the Hebrew script. Aramaic was also the original language of the Bahrani people of Eastern Arabia.[7]
Aramaic's long history and diverse and widespread use has led to the development of many divergent varieties, which are sometimes considered dialects, though they are distinct enough that they are sometimes considered languages. Therefore, there is not one singular, static Aramaic language; each time and place rather has had its own variation. Aramaic is retained as a liturgical language by certain Eastern Christian churches, in the form of Syriac, the Aramaic variety by which Eastern Christianity was diffused, whether or not those communities once spoke it or another form of Aramaic as their vernacular, but have since shifted to another language as their primary community language.
Modern Aramaic is spoken today as a first language by many scattered, predominantly small, and largely isolated communities of differing Christian, Jewish, and Mandean ethnic groups of West Asia[8]—most numerously by the Assyrians in the form of Assyrian Neo-Aramaic and Chaldean Neo-Aramaic—that have all retained use of the once dominant lingua franca despite subsequent language shifts experienced throughout the Middle East. The Aramaic languages are now considered endangered.[9]
Directed By: John-Roger, Dss & Jsu Garcia, Dss
Aramaic (Classical Syriac: ܐܪܡܝܐ Aramaya) is a family of languages or dialects, belonging to the Semitic family. More specifically, it is a part of the Northwest Semitic subfamily, which also includes Canaanite languages such as Hebrew and Phoenician. The Aramaic script was widely adopted for other languages and is ancestral to both the Arabic and modern Hebrew alphabets.
During its over 3,000 years of written history,[2] Aramaic has served variously as a language of administration of empires and as a language of divine worship. It was the lingua franca of the Neo-Assyrian Empire, Neo-Babylonian Empire and Achaemenid Empire, the day-to-day language of Yehud Medinata and of Judaea (539 BC – 70 AD), the language that Jesus probably used the most,[3][4][5] the language of large sections of the biblical books of Daniel and Ezra, and is the main language of the Talmud and Syriac Christianity, in particular the Assyrian Church of the East, the Chaldean Catholic Church, the Ancient Church of the East, the Saint Thomas Christian Churches in India, the Syriac Orthodox Church and the Maronite Church.[6] However, Jewish Aramaic was different from the other forms both in lettering and grammar. Parts of the Dead Sea Scrolls are in Jewish Aramaic showing the Jewish lettering, related to the Hebrew script. Aramaic was also the original language of the Bahrani people of Eastern Arabia.[7]
Aramaic's long history and diverse and widespread use has led to the development of many divergent varieties, which are sometimes considered dialects, though they are distinct enough that they are sometimes considered languages. Therefore, there is not one singular, static Aramaic language; each time and place rather has had its own variation. Aramaic is retained as a liturgical language by certain Eastern Christian churches, in the form of Syriac, the Aramaic variety by which Eastern Christianity was diffused, whether or not those communities once spoke it or another form of Aramaic as their vernacular, but have since shifted to another language as their primary community language.
Modern Aramaic is spoken today as a first language by many scattered, predominantly small, and largely isolated communities of differing Christian, Jewish, and Mandean ethnic groups of West Asia[8]—most numerously by the Assyrians in the form of Assyrian Neo-Aramaic and Chaldean Neo-Aramaic—that have all retained use of the once dominant lingua franca despite subsequent language shifts experienced throughout the Middle East. The Aramaic languages are now considered endangered.[9]
published:25 Sep 2014
views:8
Learn to Write Aramaic - modern Eastern Assyrian alphabet (cursive script 5 of 5)
In previous videos, you learned to write the classical cursive alphabet, cursive ligatures and final letter forms. Now take a look at the same letters in the...
In previous videos, you learned to write the classical cursive alphabet, cursive ligatures and final letter forms. Now take a look at the same letters in the...
Ghada Shbeir - Aramaic lullaby غادة شبير Specialist and professional performer of traditional Middle Eastern folks and Arabo Andalusian songs, Syriac and Anc...
Ghada Shbeir - Aramaic lullaby غادة شبير Specialist and professional performer of traditional Middle Eastern folks and Arabo Andalusian songs, Syriac and Anc...
Excerpt from Dr. Joseph J. Palackal’s presentation at the conference on “Safeguarding the Musical Traditions of Eastern Christianity” at the Rome campus of the University of Notre Dame, Indiana. May 24-26, 2015.
http://sacredmusic.nd.edu/assets/164559/rome_eastern_christian_music_congress_2015_final.pdf
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The pronunciation of Syriac in Kerala and Iraq. Conversations with Dr. Koonammakkal Thoma Kathanar, Fr. Emmanuel Thelly, CMI, and Joseph J. Palackal (http://www.TheCMSIndia.org/palackal.html).
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Please acknowledge TheCMSIndia.org and/or Joseph J. Palackal (http://www.TheCMSIndia.org/palackal.html) when this video is used for academic or other purposes.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
JESUS & INDIA: A CONNECTION THROUGH LANUAGE AND MUSIC. The Aramaic Project
(http://www.TheCMSIndia.org/Aramaic-Project.html).
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
***To purchase resources on Indian Christianity published by the Christian Musicological Society of India, please visit Product Gallery at http://josefross.com/html/ ***
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
To donate to the cause of the Digital Library of Christian Music in India, please contact info@TheCMSIndia.org
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
To contribute to the Aramaic Project, please contact info@TheCMSIndia.org
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
For updates, please subscribe to the CMSIndia channel
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
For information on the history of early Christianity in India http://TheCMSIndia.org/releases.html#cradle
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Kindly leave your comments on the videos
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Excerpt from Dr. Joseph J. Palackal’s presentation at the conference on “Safeguarding the Musical Traditions of Eastern Christianity” at the Rome campus of the University of Notre Dame, Indiana. May 24-26, 2015.
http://sacredmusic.nd.edu/assets/164559/rome_eastern_christian_music_congress_2015_final.pdf
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The pronunciation of Syriac in Kerala and Iraq. Conversations with Dr. Koonammakkal Thoma Kathanar, Fr. Emmanuel Thelly, CMI, and Joseph J. Palackal (http://www.TheCMSIndia.org/palackal.html).
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Please acknowledge TheCMSIndia.org and/or Joseph J. Palackal (http://www.TheCMSIndia.org/palackal.html) when this video is used for academic or other purposes.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
JESUS & INDIA: A CONNECTION THROUGH LANUAGE AND MUSIC. The Aramaic Project
(http://www.TheCMSIndia.org/Aramaic-Project.html).
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
***To purchase resources on Indian Christianity published by the Christian Musicological Society of India, please visit Product Gallery at http://josefross.com/html/ ***
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
To donate to the cause of the Digital Library of Christian Music in India, please contact info@TheCMSIndia.org
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
To contribute to the Aramaic Project, please contact info@TheCMSIndia.org
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
For updates, please subscribe to the CMSIndia channel
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
For information on the history of early Christianity in India http://TheCMSIndia.org/releases.html#cradle
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Kindly leave your comments on the videos
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
A Syriac Aramaic Hymn from the Holy Syriac Orthodox Liturgy,the first Christian Church in the Middle East which Jesus Christ talked its Holy Aramaic Language...
A Syriac Aramaic Hymn from the Holy Syriac Orthodox Liturgy,the first Christian Church in the Middle East which Jesus Christ talked its Holy Aramaic Language...
Aramaic Language: The Language of Christ The Aramaic language is a Semitic language closely related to Hebrew. Originally the language of the Aramaeans (Aram...
Aramaic Language: The Language of Christ The Aramaic language is a Semitic language closely related to Hebrew. Originally the language of the Aramaeans (Aram...
Ghada Shbeir ia a specialist and a professional performer of traditional Middle Eastern folks and Arabo Andalusian songs, Syriac Aramaic and Ancient Maronite chants, Ghada Shbeir has an exquisite talent and the ability to move easily and with professionalism from traditional folk songs to religious chants. She has earned frequent comparison to some of the best Middle Eastern singers - 26 June 2015.
Ghada Shbeir ia a specialist and a professional performer of traditional Middle Eastern folks and Arabo Andalusian songs, Syriac Aramaic and Ancient Maronite chants, Ghada Shbeir has an exquisite talent and the ability to move easily and with professionalism from traditional folk songs to religious chants. She has earned frequent comparison to some of the best Middle Eastern singers - 26 June 2015.
published:27 Jun 2015
views:63
Bible Translations: Peshitta- Aramaic English New Testament (AENT)
http://theoscholar.blogspot.com/ http://bible-geeks.com A look at the translation of the Peshitta by Messianic Jewish teacher Andrew Gabriel Roth. It is a li...
http://theoscholar.blogspot.com/ http://bible-geeks.com A look at the translation of the Peshitta by Messianic Jewish teacher Andrew Gabriel Roth. It is a li...
French TV channel "France24" reports about the fight of the Syriac (Assyrian) Christians and Kurds against the IS terrorist organisation.
In north-eastern Syria, Kurds and the Syriac Christian community have begun carving out an autonomous region for themselves.
Der Französiche Sender "France24" berichtet über den Kampf der Syrisch-Aramäischen (Assyrischen) Christen und der Kurden gegen die Terrororganisation des "Islmaischen Staates" gleichzeitg wird über die Autonome Region berichtet die von den Kurden und den Syrisch-Aramäischen Christen aufgebaut wurde.
French TV channel "France24" reports about the fight of the Syriac (Assyrian) Christians and Kurds against the IS terrorist organisation.
In north-eastern Syria, Kurds and the Syriac Christian community have begun carving out an autonomous region for themselves.
Der Französiche Sender "France24" berichtet über den Kampf der Syrisch-Aramäischen (Assyrischen) Christen und der Kurden gegen die Terrororganisation des "Islmaischen Staates" gleichzeitg wird über die Autonome Region berichtet die von den Kurden und den Syrisch-Aramäischen Christen aufgebaut wurde.
published:08 Feb 2015
views:22
Aramaic Project-Part 28. The Pronunciation Syriac in India and Iraq
Excerpt from Dr. Joseph J. Palackal’s presentation at the conference on “Safeguarding the Musical Traditions of Eastern Christianity” ( http://sacredmusic.nd.edu/assets/164559/rome_eastern_christian_music_congress_2015_final.pdf)
at the Rome campus (http://international.nd.edu/global-gateways/rome/) of the University of Notre Dame, Indiana (https://www.nd.edu). May 24-26, 2015.
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The pronunciation of Syriac in Kerala and Iraq. Conversations with Dr. Koonammakkal Thoma Kathanar, Fr. Emmanuel Thelly, CMI, and Joseph J. Palackal (http://www.TheCMSIndia.org/palackal.html).
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Please acknowledge TheCMSIndia.org and/or Joseph J. Palackal (http://www.TheCMSIndia.org/palackal.html) when this video is used for academic or other purposes.
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JESUS & INDIA: A CONNECTION THROUGH LANUAGE AND MUSIC. The Aramaic Project
(http://www.TheCMSIndia.org/Aramaic-Project.html).
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***To purchase resources on Indian Christianity published by the Christian Musicological Society of India, please visit Product Gallery at http://josefross.com/html/ ***
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To donate to the cause of the Digital Library of Christian Music in India, please contact info@TheCMSIndia.org
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To contribute to the Aramaic Project, please contact info@TheCMSIndia.org
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For updates, please subscribe to the CMSIndia channel
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For information on the history of early Christianity in India http://TheCMSIndia.org/releases.html#cradle
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Kindly leave your comments on the videos
Excerpt from Dr. Joseph J. Palackal’s presentation at the conference on “Safeguarding the Musical Traditions of Eastern Christianity” ( http://sacredmusic.nd.edu/assets/164559/rome_eastern_christian_music_congress_2015_final.pdf)
at the Rome campus (http://international.nd.edu/global-gateways/rome/) of the University of Notre Dame, Indiana (https://www.nd.edu). May 24-26, 2015.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The pronunciation of Syriac in Kerala and Iraq. Conversations with Dr. Koonammakkal Thoma Kathanar, Fr. Emmanuel Thelly, CMI, and Joseph J. Palackal (http://www.TheCMSIndia.org/palackal.html).
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Please acknowledge TheCMSIndia.org and/or Joseph J. Palackal (http://www.TheCMSIndia.org/palackal.html) when this video is used for academic or other purposes.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
JESUS & INDIA: A CONNECTION THROUGH LANUAGE AND MUSIC. The Aramaic Project
(http://www.TheCMSIndia.org/Aramaic-Project.html).
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
***To purchase resources on Indian Christianity published by the Christian Musicological Society of India, please visit Product Gallery at http://josefross.com/html/ ***
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
To donate to the cause of the Digital Library of Christian Music in India, please contact info@TheCMSIndia.org
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
To contribute to the Aramaic Project, please contact info@TheCMSIndia.org
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
For updates, please subscribe to the CMSIndia channel
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
For information on the history of early Christianity in India http://TheCMSIndia.org/releases.html#cradle
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Kindly leave your comments on the videos
published:10 Jun 2015
views:25
Report about the Assyrian Syriac-Aramaic Christian Sootoro Militia GPF (Gozarto Protection Force)
Report about the Assyrian Syriac-Aramaic Christian Sootoro Militia also know as the GPF (Gozarto Protection Force) that are fighting ISIS in Hassakeh in North Eastern Syria (Gozarto).
Reportage über die Aramäische/Assyrische Sootoro (GPF Gozarto Protection Force) die die IS Terroristen im Nordosten Syriens bekämpft.
Haseke Süryani SOOTORO Birlikleri Suriye Ordusu'nun Safında Savaşıyor
Report about the Assyrian Syriac-Aramaic Christian Sootoro Militia also know as the GPF (Gozarto Protection Force) that are fighting ISIS in Hassakeh in North Eastern Syria (Gozarto).
Reportage über die Aramäische/Assyrische Sootoro (GPF Gozarto Protection Force) die die IS Terroristen im Nordosten Syriens bekämpft.
Haseke Süryani SOOTORO Birlikleri Suriye Ordusu'nun Safında Savaşıyor
Reciting verses in Genesis 28:10 in the ancient near eastern dialect of Judean Aramaic. I am pronouncing the words relatively slowly and deliberately in orde...
Reciting verses in Genesis 28:10 in the ancient near eastern dialect of Judean Aramaic. I am pronouncing the words relatively slowly and deliberately in orde...
Tubwayhun lahwvday shlama dawnaw(hie) dalaha nitqarun. (language is Aramaic)
'Blessed are the peacemakers: for they shall be called the children of God.'
All the major traditions that arose from the Middle east i.e Jewish, Christian and Islamic have their roots in the same source, the same Mother Earth and probably from the same language. They are believed to have all originally called God either El or Al which means that the One or that One which expresses itself uniquely through all things. From this root arises the sacred names Allaha (aramaic) Allah (Arabic) Elohim (Hebrew), and Elat (Old Canaanite).
(Above translation from Prayers from the Cosmos (Meditations on the Aramaic words of Jesus translated and with commentary by Neil Douglas- Klotz)
Tubwayhun lahwvday shlama dawnaw(hie) dalaha nitqarun. (language is Aramaic)
'Blessed are the peacemakers: for they shall be called the children of God.'
All the major traditions that arose from the Middle east i.e Jewish, Christian and Islamic have their roots in the same source, the same Mother Earth and probably from the same language. They are believed to have all originally called God either El or Al which means that the One or that One which expresses itself uniquely through all things. From this root arises the sacred names Allaha (aramaic) Allah (Arabic) Elohim (Hebrew), and Elat (Old Canaanite).
(Above translation from Prayers from the Cosmos (Meditations on the Aramaic words of Jesus translated and with commentary by Neil Douglas- Klotz)
"THE ARAMAIC NAME OF THE SAVIOR!"
The Messiah grew up in Natsari which was on an out crop of hills near Galilee! Which is also Northern Israel! That was closer to Syria and they spoke Aramaic regularly there! The Aramaic name for the savior is, "Eashoa ha m'sheeka!"
Luke 4:16-30 - He went to Nazareth, where He had been brought up!..........
The Messiah's name is spelled, Yoot Sheen Waw Ein (Eashoa) in Aramaic!
Isho or Eesho, is in fact, the Aramaic name of Messiah!
To the American ear it sounds like 'Isho or Ishoa or Eashoa'
Eashoa' means, "The Life-Giver"
M'sheekha means, "The Anointed One"
Eashoa' M'sheekha means, "The Anointed Life-Giver"
"Eashoa'" is a pronunciation of ישוע as found 28 times in the Tanach. It comes from a young eastern (specifically Syriac) dialect, also known as a western dialect of Aramaic, the dialect that Yahusha and his compatriots would have regularly spoken (in all likelihood) a western Judean Aramaic with a Galilean accent!
Eashoa and Yeshua are spelled exactly the same way! The first Aramaic letter י Yoot is also the Hebrew letter Yad, also called Yud is pronounced with an, "I" instead of a, "Y"
"EASHOA" (ARAMAIC) E SHO - The two, A'S Have no sound, they are silent!
"EASHOA" (HEBREW) EASH O A - The "O" In Hebrew is always. "OO" like in School. EASHOA Becomes, "ESHU" Spelled as, ישוע. To the American ear it sounds like 'Isho or Ishoa! The Yoot or Yud
HEBREW HAS NO LETTERS, "J-U-W-X". SO ANY FORM OF SHUA WITH U A IS NOT POSSABLE, ARE NEEDED "OO" IS THE SOUND, "O" IN ARAMAIC!
PRONOUNCED, "ISHO OR ISHOA," EVEN THOUGH ITS SPELLED EASHOA IN ENGLISH AND ישוע in Hebrew!
So, when Jews see the spelling, ישוע they pronounce, "Yeshua" but when someone who speaks Aramaic sees this spelling they pronounce is as, "Eashoa" .
In Arabic they call him Isa (keep in mind that the Arabic view of Messiah is false)
For those who don't know, "Jesus" wasn't and ISN'T "Messiah's" NAME! If He were standing in front of you right now and you called Him this, He would look at you all funny! "Jesus" is the Greek form of honoring ZEUS, and this, through the centuries became IEOSUS. Seeing that Yahusha wasn't Greek, did not worship Greek gods, and said that His reason was to come to the lost sheep of the house of ISRAEL, He would not respond to, "Jesus" which in English actually means…ABSOLUTLEY NOTHING! There is no meaning behind this name. However, Yahusha means, "Yahuah's Saves or Yahuah's Salvation" and Eashoa is similar, "The Anointed Life Giver."
His true name is Yahusha! It is also EASHOA (in Aramaic, which was his primary language). Yahusha and Eashoa are exactly the same in that they both have meaning, in spelling, and in speech! However, the difference between that two is simply this, INFLECTION. Nothing more, nothing less! "Inflection" definition - A change in the form of a word to reflect different grammatical functions of the word in a sentence! English has lost most of its inflections!
I believe that it is time for Christians to start worshiping the way we were meant to…in spirit and in TRUTH. Yahusha is the Messiah (Mashiach).
"THE ARAMAIC NAME OF THE SAVIOR!"
The Messiah grew up in Natsari which was on an out crop of hills near Galilee! Which is also Northern Israel! That was closer to Syria and they spoke Aramaic regularly there! The Aramaic name for the savior is, "Eashoa ha m'sheeka!"
Luke 4:16-30 - He went to Nazareth, where He had been brought up!..........
The Messiah's name is spelled, Yoot Sheen Waw Ein (Eashoa) in Aramaic!
Isho or Eesho, is in fact, the Aramaic name of Messiah!
To the American ear it sounds like 'Isho or Ishoa or Eashoa'
Eashoa' means, "The Life-Giver"
M'sheekha means, "The Anointed One"
Eashoa' M'sheekha means, "The Anointed Life-Giver"
"Eashoa'" is a pronunciation of ישוע as found 28 times in the Tanach. It comes from a young eastern (specifically Syriac) dialect, also known as a western dialect of Aramaic, the dialect that Yahusha and his compatriots would have regularly spoken (in all likelihood) a western Judean Aramaic with a Galilean accent!
Eashoa and Yeshua are spelled exactly the same way! The first Aramaic letter י Yoot is also the Hebrew letter Yad, also called Yud is pronounced with an, "I" instead of a, "Y"
"EASHOA" (ARAMAIC) E SHO - The two, A'S Have no sound, they are silent!
"EASHOA" (HEBREW) EASH O A - The "O" In Hebrew is always. "OO" like in School. EASHOA Becomes, "ESHU" Spelled as, ישוע. To the American ear it sounds like 'Isho or Ishoa! The Yoot or Yud
HEBREW HAS NO LETTERS, "J-U-W-X". SO ANY FORM OF SHUA WITH U A IS NOT POSSABLE, ARE NEEDED "OO" IS THE SOUND, "O" IN ARAMAIC!
PRONOUNCED, "ISHO OR ISHOA," EVEN THOUGH ITS SPELLED EASHOA IN ENGLISH AND ישוע in Hebrew!
So, when Jews see the spelling, ישוע they pronounce, "Yeshua" but when someone who speaks Aramaic sees this spelling they pronounce is as, "Eashoa" .
In Arabic they call him Isa (keep in mind that the Arabic view of Messiah is false)
For those who don't know, "Jesus" wasn't and ISN'T "Messiah's" NAME! If He were standing in front of you right now and you called Him this, He would look at you all funny! "Jesus" is the Greek form of honoring ZEUS, and this, through the centuries became IEOSUS. Seeing that Yahusha wasn't Greek, did not worship Greek gods, and said that His reason was to come to the lost sheep of the house of ISRAEL, He would not respond to, "Jesus" which in English actually means…ABSOLUTLEY NOTHING! There is no meaning behind this name. However, Yahusha means, "Yahuah's Saves or Yahuah's Salvation" and Eashoa is similar, "The Anointed Life Giver."
His true name is Yahusha! It is also EASHOA (in Aramaic, which was his primary language). Yahusha and Eashoa are exactly the same in that they both have meaning, in spelling, and in speech! However, the difference between that two is simply this, INFLECTION. Nothing more, nothing less! "Inflection" definition - A change in the form of a word to reflect different grammatical functions of the word in a sentence! English has lost most of its inflections!
I believe that it is time for Christians to start worshiping the way we were meant to…in spirit and in TRUTH. Yahusha is the Messiah (Mashiach).
published:27 Jan 2015
views:8
Qurbana in East Syriac (Suriyani or Aramaic) - Full Video
http://theoscholar.blogspot.com/ http://bible-geeks.com A very good and very literal translation of the Peshitto New Testament by Herb Jahn. Here is my Amazo...
http://theoscholar.blogspot.com/ http://bible-geeks.com A very good and very literal translation of the Peshitto New Testament by Herb Jahn. Here is my Amazo...
North Eastern Neo/New Aramaic Lessons Meeting In Jerusalem ISRAEL. Video No. 3 מפגשי לישנא דני ללימוד כורדית/ארמית חדשה צפון מזרחית בבית הופמן ירושלים ישראל....
North Eastern Neo/New Aramaic Lessons Meeting In Jerusalem ISRAEL. Video No. 3 מפגשי לישנא דני ללימוד כורדית/ארמית חדשה צפון מזרחית בבית הופמן ירושלים ישראל....
A popular name in Sufi music, Abeer Nehme excels in the art of singing the spiritual repertory of Maronite, Byzantine and Syrian origins. She is sober, touching and with her Sufi songs she revives the Aramean roots of an ancient tradition. Her clear and limpid voice seems to fly over time, elevating our spirits on a boundless heavenly journey.
Drawing upon Eastern traditions, Christianity and the Arabic culture, she has completely mastered both the Gregorian as well as Orthodox heritages.
Infused with an extremely vivid memory of a Biblical Middle East, Abeer Nehmé reminds us of the historical importance of the Aramean language; the language which was spoken at the time of Christ and which had its own script.
Venue: World Sufi Spirit Festival at Mehrangarh Fort, Jodhpur, Rajasthan
Video Details:
Music Director :-Traditional
Lyrics :-Traditional
Theme & Mood :- Sufi
Label- Saregama India Limited
For more Sufi Songs log on & subscribe
https://www.youtube.com/c/saregamasufi
For more videos log on & subscribe to our channel
https://www.youtube.com/saregama
Follow us on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/Saregama
Follow us on Twitter: http://twitter.com/Saregamaindia
A popular name in Sufi music, Abeer Nehme excels in the art of singing the spiritual repertory of Maronite, Byzantine and Syrian origins. She is sober, touching and with her Sufi songs she revives the Aramean roots of an ancient tradition. Her clear and limpid voice seems to fly over time, elevating our spirits on a boundless heavenly journey.
Drawing upon Eastern traditions, Christianity and the Arabic culture, she has completely mastered both the Gregorian as well as Orthodox heritages.
Infused with an extremely vivid memory of a Biblical Middle East, Abeer Nehmé reminds us of the historical importance of the Aramean language; the language which was spoken at the time of Christ and which had its own script.
Venue: World Sufi Spirit Festival at Mehrangarh Fort, Jodhpur, Rajasthan
Video Details:
Music Director :-Traditional
Lyrics :-Traditional
Theme & Mood :- Sufi
Label- Saregama India Limited
For more Sufi Songs log on & subscribe
https://www.youtube.com/c/saregamasufi
For more videos log on & subscribe to our channel
https://www.youtube.com/saregama
Follow us on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/Saregama
Follow us on Twitter: http://twitter.com/Saregamaindia
The Lord's Prayer, Proclaimed in the Syriac (Aramaic) language [Eastern Dialect], that Jesus Christ Spoke, the Prayer that was taught to the Apostles by our ...
The Lord's Prayer, Proclaimed in the Syriac (Aramaic) language [Eastern Dialect], that Jesus Christ Spoke, the Prayer that was taught to the Apostles by our ...
How one of the oldest continuos languages in the world is suffering neglect. Vatican has replaced the language of the Catholic Eastern Churches with Arabic, ...
How one of the oldest continuos languages in the world is suffering neglect. Vatican has replaced the language of the Catholic Eastern Churches with Arabic, ...
http://theoscholar.blogspot.com/ http://bible-geeks.com The introduction to my series on the Aramaic Peshitta. It is an ancient Bible written in Aramaic, the...
http://theoscholar.blogspot.com/ http://bible-geeks.com The introduction to my series on the Aramaic Peshitta. It is an ancient Bible written in Aramaic, the...
Neo-Aramaic, or Modern Aramaic, languages are varieties of Aramaic that are spoken vernaculars in the medieval to modern era, evolving out of Middle Aramaic dialects around AD 1200 (conventional date). The term strictly excludes those Aramaic languages that are used only as literary, sacred or classical languages today (for example, Targumic Aramaic, Classical Syriac and Classical Mandaic). However, these classical languages continue to have influence over the colloquial, Neo-Aramaic languages. Eastern Aramaic dialects are spoken primarily by ethnic Assyrians, who are members of the Assyrian Church of the East, Chaldean Catholic Church (Assyr
22:33
Assyrian people
Assyrian people
Assyrian people
The Assyrians (Syriac: ܐܬܘܪܝܐ), also known as Chaldeans, Syriacs, and Arameans (see names of Syriac Christians) are an ethnic group whose origins lie in ancient Mesopotamia. They speak, read, and write distinct dialects of Eastern Aramaic exclusive to Mesopotamia and its immediate surroundings. Today that ancient territory is part of several nations: part of northern Iraq, southeastern Turkey, northeastern Syria and northwestern Iran. They are indigenous to, and have traditionally lived all over what is now northern Iraq, northeastern Syria, northwestern Iran, and southeastern Turkey.[better source needed] Most Assyrians speak an Eastern Aram
3:06
Assyrian people
Assyrian people
Assyrian people
The Assyrians (Syriac: ܣܘܪܝܝܐ), also known as Chaldeans, Syriacs, and Arameans (see names of Syriac Christians) are an ethnic group whose origins lie in ancient Mesopotamia. They speak, read, and write distinct dialects of Eastern Aramaic exclusive to Mesopotamia and its immediate surroundings. Today that ancient territory is part of several nations: part of northern Iraq, southeastern Turkey, northeastern Syria and northwestern Iran. They are indigenous to, and have traditionally lived all over what is now northern Iraq, northeastern Syria, northwestern Iran, and southeastern Turkey.[better source needed] Most Assyrians speak an Eastern Aram
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Arameans
Arameans
Arameans
The Arameans, or Aramaeans, (Aramaic: ܐܪ̈ܡܝܐ, ארמיא ; ʼaramáyé) were a Northwest Semitic people who originated in what is now present-day western, southern and central Syria (Biblical Aram) during the Late Bronze Age and the Iron Age. Large groups migrated to Babylonia in southern Mesopotamia during the 11th and 10th centuries BC, where they established small semi-independent Aramaic kingdoms, in the Levant and in Mesopotamia conquered Aramean populations were forcibly deported throughout the Assyrian Empire, e.g. under the rule of king Tiglath-Pileser III. Some Syriac Christians in the Middle East (particularly in Syria and Lebanon) still e
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Aramaic language
Aramaic language
Aramaic language
Aramaic (Classical Syriac: ܐܪܡܝܐ Arāmāyā) is a family of languages or dialects, belonging to the Semitic family. More specifically, it is a part of the Northwest Semitic subfamily, which also includes Canaanite languages such as Hebrew and Phoenician. The Aramaic script was widely adopted for other languages and is ancestral to both the Arabic and modern Hebrew alphabets. During its approximately 3,100 years of written history, Aramaic has served variously as a language of administration of empires and as a language of divine worship. It was the lingua franca of the Neo-Assyrian Empire (911–605 BC), Neo-Babylonian Empire (605–539 BC) and Acha
5:29
Aramaic language
Aramaic language
Aramaic language
Aramaic (Classical Syriac: ܐܪܡܝܐ Arāmāyā) is a family of languages or dialects, belonging to the Semitic family. More specifically, it is a part of the Northwest Semitic subfamily, which also includes Canaanite languages such as Hebrew and Phoenician. The Aramaic script was widely adopted for other languages and is ancestral to both the Arabic and modern Hebrew alphabets. During its approximately 3,100 years of written history, Aramaic has served variously as a language of administration of empires and as a language of divine worship. It was the lingua franca of the Neo-Assyrian Empire (911-605 BC), Neo-Babylonian Empire (605-539 BC) and Acha
12:05
Christianity in Iraq
Christianity in Iraq
Christianity in Iraq
The Christians of Iraq are considered to be one of the oldest continuous Christian communities in the world. The vast majority are Eastern Aramaic-speaking ethnic Assyrians; however, there is a very small community of Armenians, too. In Iraq, Christians numbered about 1,500,000 in 2003, representing just over 6% of the population of the country down from 12% on 1947 in a population of 4.7 million. They numbered over 1.4 million in 1987 or 8% of the population. After the Iraq War, it was estimated that the number of Christians in Iraq had dropped to less than 450,000 by 2013 - with estimates as low as 200,000. Chaldean Catholics, formerly 'Nes
8:55
Syriac Christianity
Syriac Christianity
Syriac Christianity
Syriac Christianity (Syriac: ܡܫܝܚܝܘܬܐ ܣܘܪܝܝܬܐ / mšiḥāiūṯā suryāiṯā) encompasses the multiple Churches of Eastern Christianity whose services tend to feature liturgical use of ancient Syriac, a dialect of Middle Aramaic that emerged in Edessa in the early 1st century AD, and is closely related to the Aramaic of Jesus. Jesus Christ was known as Yešua` mšiḥā in Aramaic. With a history going back to the 1st century AD, in modern times Syriac Christianity is represented by denominations primarily in the Middle East, Asia Minor and in Kerala, India. Christianity began in the Middle East in Jerusalem among Jewish Aramaic-speaking Semitic peoples of
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Emran El-Badawi: "The Qur’an and the Aramaic Gospel Traditions" (NBIS, 17/7/15)
Emran El-Badawi: "The Qur’an and the Aramaic Gospel Traditions" (NBIS, 17/7/15)
Emran El-Badawi: "The Qur’an and the Aramaic Gospel Traditions" (NBIS, 17/7/15)
*** The Qur'an and the Aramaic Gospel Traditions (Routledge, 2013) written by Emran El-Badawi, professor and director of the Arab Studies program at the University of Houston, is a recent addition to the field of research on the Qur'an and Aramaic and Syriac biblical texts. Professor El-Badawi asserts that the Qur'an is a product of an environment steeped in the Aramaic gospel traditions. Not a "borrowing" from the Aramaic gospel tradition, but rather the Qur'an contains a "dogmatic re-articulation" of elements from that tradition for an Arab audience. He introduces and examines this context in the second chapter, and then proceeds to compare
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Aramaic Lord's Prayer by Brian Mitchell
Aramaic Lord's Prayer by Brian Mitchell
Aramaic Lord's Prayer by Brian Mitchell
This original form of the Lord's Prayer has come to us in Greek. The scholar Joseph Fitzmeyer has translated the original text into first century Aramaic, the mother-tongue of Jesus. The musical mode used for the chant is Middle Eastern.
Words and music from the recording: "Songs of Presence: Contemplative Chants for the New Millennium - A Learning CD" produced by Praxis and All Saints' Episcopal Church. Executive Producer: Lynn C. Bauman (Available from www.praxisofprayer.com).
Body gestures from Lynn C. Bauman at Praxis: Resources for Spiritual Formation and Contemplative Living (www.praxisofprayer.com).
Brian Puida Mitchell can be reache
6:17
Syrian civil war takes over small Aramaic village
Syrian civil war takes over small Aramaic village
Syrian civil war takes over small Aramaic village
While lawmakers in the US debate on what to do in Syria, the Syrian government and anti-government rebels clashed once again on Thursday near the small town of Maaloula. The small Christian Aramaic town Maloula, in the north of Damascus holds one of the oldest minority Syrian populations in the country. The recent conflict has many minorities in the area worried about the repercussion the community faces in the country's civil war. The arch Bishop of the Syrian Church for Eastern US, Mor Cyril Aphrem Karim, joins us for more.
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Holy Bible From the Ancient Eastern Text George M Lamsa's Translation From the Aramaic of the Peshi
Holy Bible From the Ancient Eastern Text George M Lamsa's Translation From the Aramaic of the Peshi
Holy Bible From the Ancient Eastern Text George M Lamsa's Translation From the Aramaic of the Peshi
DOWNLOAD PDF books/ebooks here: http://bit.ly/bags858
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Aramaic Project-Part 24. Marianne Thaila sings the famous chant, "Qambel Maran"
Aramaic Project-Part 24. Marianne Thaila sings the famous chant, "Qambel Maran"
Aramaic Project-Part 24. Marianne Thaila sings the famous chant, "Qambel Maran"
JESUS & INDIA: A CONNECTION THROUGH LANUAGE AND MUSIC. The Aramaic Project
(http://www.TheCMSIndia.org/Aramaic-Project.html).
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Marianne Thaila in conversation with Joseph J. Palackal (http://www.TheCMSIndia.org/palackal.html). Recorded on 16 May 2015 at Marianne's house at New Hyde Park, New York.
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Please acknowledge TheCMSIndia.org and/or Joseph J. Palackal (http://www.TheCMSIndia.org/palackal.html) when this video is used for academic
0:38
The Lord's Prayer in Aramaic recited by Tony Lamair Burks II
The Lord's Prayer in Aramaic recited by Tony Lamair Burks II
The Lord's Prayer in Aramaic recited by Tony Lamair Burks II
Tony Lamair Burks II reciting The Lord's Prayer in Aramaic as taught by the Rev. Dr. Rococo A. Errico, one of the world's foremost experts on the Bible, Aramaic language, and Near Eastern culture.
67:02
All About - Aramaic language (Extended)
All About - Aramaic language (Extended)
All About - Aramaic language (Extended)
What is Aramaic language?
A documentary report all about Aramaic language for the blind and visually impaired or for homework/assignment.
Aramaic ( Arāmāyā) is a family of languages or dialects, belonging to the Semitic family. More specifically, it is a part of the Northwest Semitic subfamily, which also includes Canaanite languages such as Hebrew and Phoenician. The Aramaic script was widely adopted for other languages and is ancestral to both the Arabic and modern Hebrew alphabets.
Intro/Outro music:
Discovery Hit/Chucky the Construction Worker - Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under CC-BY-3.0
Text derived from:
http:
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The Aramaic Worldview of Yeshua Jesus A Native Middle Eastern Cosmology YouTube
The Aramaic Worldview of Yeshua Jesus A Native Middle Eastern Cosmology YouTube
The Aramaic Worldview of Yeshua Jesus A Native Middle Eastern Cosmology YouTube
Assyrian Hymn & Spiritual Teaching ترانيم وتعاليم روحية لكنيسة المشرق
The Light From The East .Hymn & Spiritual Teaching in Assyrian language part ( 5 )
. AVAILABLE At ST.PETER ASSYRIAN CHURCH OF THE EAST AZ.USA
نور من المشرق
ترانيم وتعاليم روحية. متوفر في كنيسة مار بطرس كنيسة المشرق الآشورية اريزونا اميركا
Assyrian Assyrian bible study
4:11
Aramaic Project-Part 20. Rahme Suqaanaa, Rite of Reconcilation in Syriac during Qurbana in Malayalam
Aramaic Project-Part 20. Rahme Suqaanaa, Rite of Reconcilation in Syriac during Qurbana in Malayalam
Aramaic Project-Part 20. Rahme Suqaanaa, Rite of Reconcilation in Syriac during Qurbana in Malayalam
JESUS & INDIA: A CONNECTION THROUGH LANUAGE AND MUSIC. (http://www.TheCMSIndia.org/Aramaic-Project.html).
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Aramaic Project - Part 20. Fr. Sebastian Sankoorikkal leading the reconciliation rite in Syriac during Mass in Malayalam.
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Live recording at the Novitiate House of the Daughters of St. Mary of Leuca. Thrikkakkara, Kochi, Kerala. 8 March 2015
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Please acknowledge TheCMSIndia.org and/or Joseph J. P
2:32
Abeer Nehme: Aramaic Sacred Song 2 (World Sufi Spirit Festival | Live Recording)
Abeer Nehme: Aramaic Sacred Song 2 (World Sufi Spirit Festival | Live Recording)
Abeer Nehme: Aramaic Sacred Song 2 (World Sufi Spirit Festival | Live Recording)
A popular name in Sufi music, Abeer Nehme excels in the art of singing the spiritual repertory of Maronite, Byzantine and Syrian origins. She is sober, touching and with her Sufi songs she revives the Aramean roots of an ancient tradition. Her clear and limpid voice seems to fly over time, elevating our spirits on a boundless heavenly journey.
Drawing upon Eastern traditions, Christianity and the Arabic culture, she has completely mastered both the Gregorian as well as Orthodox heritages.
Infused with an extremely vivid memory of a Biblical Middle East, Abeer Nehmé reminds us of the historical importance of the Aramean language; the language
2:49
Abeer Nehme: Aramaic Sacred Song 8 (World Sufi Spirit Festival | Live Recording)
Abeer Nehme: Aramaic Sacred Song 8 (World Sufi Spirit Festival | Live Recording)
Abeer Nehme: Aramaic Sacred Song 8 (World Sufi Spirit Festival | Live Recording)
A popular name in Sufi music, Abeer Nehme excels in the art of singing the spiritual repertory of Maronite, Byzantine and Syrian origins. She is sober, touching and with her Sufi songs she revives the Aramean roots of an ancient tradition. Her clear and limpid voice seems to fly over time, elevating our spirits on a boundless heavenly journey.
Drawing upon Eastern traditions, Christianity and the Arabic culture, she has completely mastered both the Gregorian as well as Orthodox heritages.
Infused with an extremely vivid memory of a Biblical Middle East, Abeer Nehmé reminds us of the historical importance of the Aramean language; the language
Neo-Aramaic, or Modern Aramaic, languages are varieties of Aramaic that are spoken vernaculars in the medieval to modern era, evolving out of Middle Aramaic dialects around AD 1200 (conventional date). The term strictly excludes those Aramaic languages that are used only as literary, sacred or classical languages today (for example, Targumic Aramaic, Classical Syriac and Classical Mandaic). However, these classical languages continue to have influence over the colloquial, Neo-Aramaic languages. Eastern Aramaic dialects are spoken primarily by ethnic Assyrians, who are members of the Assyrian Church of the East, Chaldean Catholic Church (Assyrian Catholics), Syriac Orthodox Church, Ancient Church of the East, Assyrian Pentecostal Church and Assyrian Evangelical Church. As of 2014[update] that number is significantly smaller and newer generations of Assyrians generally are not acquiring the language.
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Neo-Aramaic, or Modern Aramaic, languages are varieties of Aramaic that are spoken vernaculars in the medieval to modern era, evolving out of Middle Aramaic dialects around AD 1200 (conventional date). The term strictly excludes those Aramaic languages that are used only as literary, sacred or classical languages today (for example, Targumic Aramaic, Classical Syriac and Classical Mandaic). However, these classical languages continue to have influence over the colloquial, Neo-Aramaic languages. Eastern Aramaic dialects are spoken primarily by ethnic Assyrians, who are members of the Assyrian Church of the East, Chaldean Catholic Church (Assyrian Catholics), Syriac Orthodox Church, Ancient Church of the East, Assyrian Pentecostal Church and Assyrian Evangelical Church. As of 2014[update] that number is significantly smaller and newer generations of Assyrians generally are not acquiring the language.
Video is targeted to blind users
Attribution:
Article text available under CC-BY-SA
The Assyrians (Syriac: ܐܬܘܪܝܐ), also known as Chaldeans, Syriacs, and Arameans (see names of Syriac Christians) are an ethnic group whose origins lie in ancient Mesopotamia. They speak, read, and write distinct dialects of Eastern Aramaic exclusive to Mesopotamia and its immediate surroundings. Today that ancient territory is part of several nations: part of northern Iraq, southeastern Turkey, northeastern Syria and northwestern Iran. They are indigenous to, and have traditionally lived all over what is now northern Iraq, northeastern Syria, northwestern Iran, and southeastern Turkey.[better source needed] Most Assyrians speak an Eastern Aramaic language whose subdivisions include Assyrian Neo-Aramaic, Chaldean and Turoyo. The Assyrians are a Christian people, with most of them following various Eastern Rite Churches. Divisions exist between the speakers of Northeastern Neo-Aramaic, who mostly belong to the Assyrian Church of the East, Ancient Church of the East and Chaldean Catholic Church and have been historically concentrated in what is now northern Iraq, northwestern Iran, and southeastern Turkey, and speakers of Central Neo-Aramaic, who traditionally belong to the Syriac Orthodox Church and Syriac Catholic Church and have been historically concentrated in what is now southern Turkey, northern Syria and northern Iraq. Many have migrated to the Caucasus, North America, Australia and Europe during the past century or so. Diaspora and refugee communities are based in Europe (particularly Sweden, Germany, Netherlands, and France), North America, New Zealand, Lebanon, Armenia, Georgia, southern Russia, Israel, Azerbaijan and Jordan. Emigration was triggered by such events as the Assyrian Genocide by the Ottoman Empire during World War I, the Simele massacre in Iraq (1933), the Islamic revolution in Iran (1979), Arab Nationalist Baathist policies in Iraq and Syria, the Al-Anfal Campaign of Saddam Hussein, and Kurdish nationalist policies in northern Iraq. Most recently, the Iraq War has displaced the regional Assyrian community, as its people have faced ethnic and religious persecution at the hands of Islamic extremists and Arab and Kurdish nationalists. Of the one million or more Iraqis reported by the United Nations to have fled Iraq since the occupation, nearly 40% are Assyrian, although Assyrians comprised around 3% of the pre-war Iraqi population. According to a 2013 report by a Chaldean Syriac Assyrian Popular Council official, it is estimated that only 300,000 Assyrians remain in Iraq.
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Article text available under CC-BY-SA
=======Image-Info=======
Image is in public domainImage Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Abgarwithimageofedessa10thcentury.jpg
=======Image-Info========
The Assyrians (Syriac: ܐܬܘܪܝܐ), also known as Chaldeans, Syriacs, and Arameans (see names of Syriac Christians) are an ethnic group whose origins lie in ancient Mesopotamia. They speak, read, and write distinct dialects of Eastern Aramaic exclusive to Mesopotamia and its immediate surroundings. Today that ancient territory is part of several nations: part of northern Iraq, southeastern Turkey, northeastern Syria and northwestern Iran. They are indigenous to, and have traditionally lived all over what is now northern Iraq, northeastern Syria, northwestern Iran, and southeastern Turkey.[better source needed] Most Assyrians speak an Eastern Aramaic language whose subdivisions include Assyrian Neo-Aramaic, Chaldean and Turoyo. The Assyrians are a Christian people, with most of them following various Eastern Rite Churches. Divisions exist between the speakers of Northeastern Neo-Aramaic, who mostly belong to the Assyrian Church of the East, Ancient Church of the East and Chaldean Catholic Church and have been historically concentrated in what is now northern Iraq, northwestern Iran, and southeastern Turkey, and speakers of Central Neo-Aramaic, who traditionally belong to the Syriac Orthodox Church and Syriac Catholic Church and have been historically concentrated in what is now southern Turkey, northern Syria and northern Iraq. Many have migrated to the Caucasus, North America, Australia and Europe during the past century or so. Diaspora and refugee communities are based in Europe (particularly Sweden, Germany, Netherlands, and France), North America, New Zealand, Lebanon, Armenia, Georgia, southern Russia, Israel, Azerbaijan and Jordan. Emigration was triggered by such events as the Assyrian Genocide by the Ottoman Empire during World War I, the Simele massacre in Iraq (1933), the Islamic revolution in Iran (1979), Arab Nationalist Baathist policies in Iraq and Syria, the Al-Anfal Campaign of Saddam Hussein, and Kurdish nationalist policies in northern Iraq. Most recently, the Iraq War has displaced the regional Assyrian community, as its people have faced ethnic and religious persecution at the hands of Islamic extremists and Arab and Kurdish nationalists. Of the one million or more Iraqis reported by the United Nations to have fled Iraq since the occupation, nearly 40% are Assyrian, although Assyrians comprised around 3% of the pre-war Iraqi population. According to a 2013 report by a Chaldean Syriac Assyrian Popular Council official, it is estimated that only 300,000 Assyrians remain in Iraq.
Video is targeted to blind users
Attribution:
Article text available under CC-BY-SA
=======Image-Info=======
Image is in public domainImage Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Abgarwithimageofedessa10thcentury.jpg
=======Image-Info========
The Assyrians (Syriac: ܣܘܪܝܝܐ), also known as Chaldeans, Syriacs, and Arameans (see names of Syriac Christians) are an ethnic group whose origins lie in ancient Mesopotamia. They speak, read, and write distinct dialects of Eastern Aramaic exclusive to Mesopotamia and its immediate surroundings. Today that ancient territory is part of several nations: part of northern Iraq, southeastern Turkey, northeastern Syria and northwestern Iran. They are indigenous to, and have traditionally lived all over what is now northern Iraq, northeastern Syria, northwestern Iran, and southeastern Turkey.[better source needed] Most Assyrians speak an Eastern Aramaic language whose subdivisions include Assyrian Neo-Aramaic, Chaldean and Turoyo. The Assyrians are a Christian people, with most of them following various Eastern Rite Churches. Divisions exist between the speakers of Northeastern Neo-Aramaic, who mostly belong to the Assyrian Church of the East, Ancient Church of the East and Chaldean Catholic Church and have been historically concentrated in what is now northern Iraq, northwestern Iran, and southeastern Turkey, and speakers of Central Neo-Aramaic, who traditionally belong to the Syriac Orthodox Church and Syriac Catholic Church and have been historically concentrated in what is now southern Turkey, northern Syria and northern Iraq. Many have migrated to the Caucasus, North America, Australia and Europe during the past century or so. Diaspora and refugee communities are based in Europe (particularly Sweden, Germany, Netherlands, and France), North America, New Zealand, Lebanon, Armenia, Georgia, southern Russia, Israel, Azerbaijan and Jordan. Emigration was triggered by such events as the Assyrian Genocide by the Ottoman Empire during World War I, the Simele massacre in Iraq (1933), the Islamic revolution in Iran (1979), Arab Nationalist Baathist policies in Iraq and Syria, the Al-Anfal Campaign of Saddam Hussein, and Kurdish nationalist policies in northern Iraq. Most recently, the Iraq War has displaced the regional Assyrian community, as its people have faced ethnic and religious persecution at the hands of Islamic extremists and Arab and Kurdish nationalists. Of the one million or more Iraqis reported by the United Nations to have fled Iraq since the occupation, nearly 40% are Assyrian, although Assyrians comprised around 3% of the pre-war Iraqi population. According to a 2013 report by a Chaldean Syriac Assyrian Popular Council official, it is estimated that only 300,000 Assyrians remain in Iraq.
Video is targeted to blind users
Attribution:
Article text available under CC-BY-SA
image Source in the video.
=======Image-Info=======
Image is in public domainImage Source in the Video
=======Image-Info========
The Assyrians (Syriac: ܣܘܪܝܝܐ), also known as Chaldeans, Syriacs, and Arameans (see names of Syriac Christians) are an ethnic group whose origins lie in ancient Mesopotamia. They speak, read, and write distinct dialects of Eastern Aramaic exclusive to Mesopotamia and its immediate surroundings. Today that ancient territory is part of several nations: part of northern Iraq, southeastern Turkey, northeastern Syria and northwestern Iran. They are indigenous to, and have traditionally lived all over what is now northern Iraq, northeastern Syria, northwestern Iran, and southeastern Turkey.[better source needed] Most Assyrians speak an Eastern Aramaic language whose subdivisions include Assyrian Neo-Aramaic, Chaldean and Turoyo. The Assyrians are a Christian people, with most of them following various Eastern Rite Churches. Divisions exist between the speakers of Northeastern Neo-Aramaic, who mostly belong to the Assyrian Church of the East, Ancient Church of the East and Chaldean Catholic Church and have been historically concentrated in what is now northern Iraq, northwestern Iran, and southeastern Turkey, and speakers of Central Neo-Aramaic, who traditionally belong to the Syriac Orthodox Church and Syriac Catholic Church and have been historically concentrated in what is now southern Turkey, northern Syria and northern Iraq. Many have migrated to the Caucasus, North America, Australia and Europe during the past century or so. Diaspora and refugee communities are based in Europe (particularly Sweden, Germany, Netherlands, and France), North America, New Zealand, Lebanon, Armenia, Georgia, southern Russia, Israel, Azerbaijan and Jordan. Emigration was triggered by such events as the Assyrian Genocide by the Ottoman Empire during World War I, the Simele massacre in Iraq (1933), the Islamic revolution in Iran (1979), Arab Nationalist Baathist policies in Iraq and Syria, the Al-Anfal Campaign of Saddam Hussein, and Kurdish nationalist policies in northern Iraq. Most recently, the Iraq War has displaced the regional Assyrian community, as its people have faced ethnic and religious persecution at the hands of Islamic extremists and Arab and Kurdish nationalists. Of the one million or more Iraqis reported by the United Nations to have fled Iraq since the occupation, nearly 40% are Assyrian, although Assyrians comprised around 3% of the pre-war Iraqi population. According to a 2013 report by a Chaldean Syriac Assyrian Popular Council official, it is estimated that only 300,000 Assyrians remain in Iraq.
Video is targeted to blind users
Attribution:
Article text available under CC-BY-SA
image Source in the video.
=======Image-Info=======
Image is in public domainImage Source in the Video
=======Image-Info========
The Arameans, or Aramaeans, (Aramaic: ܐܪ̈ܡܝܐ, ארמיא ; ʼaramáyé) were a Northwest Semitic people who originated in what is now present-day western, southern and central Syria (Biblical Aram) during the Late Bronze Age and the Iron Age. Large groups migrated to Babylonia in southern Mesopotamia during the 11th and 10th centuries BC, where they established small semi-independent Aramaic kingdoms, in the Levant and in Mesopotamia conquered Aramean populations were forcibly deported throughout the Assyrian Empire, e.g. under the rule of king Tiglath-Pileser III. Some Syriac Christians in the Middle East (particularly in Syria and Lebanon) still espouse an Aramean ethnic identity to this day and a minority still speak various Aramaic dialects or languages. In northeast Syria, northern Iraq, northwest Iran and south eastern Turkey, Akkadian influenced Eastern Aramaic-Northeastern Neo-Aramaic dialects are still spoken fluently by between 575,000 and 1,000,000 people, but most of the speakers of these dialects are ethnic Mesopotamian Assyrians, the indigenous people of Upper Mesopotamia, rather than Levantine Arameans. The Western Aramaic language of the Arameans in Maalula is in danger of extinction, although Aramean personal and family names are still found among the Syriac Christians throughout the Middle East. The Arameans never had a unified nation; they were divided into small independent kingdoms across parts of the Near East, particularly in what is now more Syria and Jordan. After the Bronze Age collapse, their political influence was confined to a number of states such as Aram Damascus and the partly Aramean Syro-Hittite states, which were entirely absorbed into the Neo-Assyrian Empire by the 9th century BC. By contrast, Imperial Aramaic came to be the lingua franca of the entire Near East and Asia Minor when introduced as the official language of the vast Neo-Assyrian Empire by Tiglath-pileser III in the mid-8th century BC. This empire stretched from Cyprus and the East Mediterranean in the west to Persia and Elam to India in the east, and from Armenia and the Caucasus in the north to Egypt and Arabia in the south. This version of Aramaic later developed in Mesopotamia into the literary languages such as Syriac and Mandaic. Scholars have used the term "Aramaization" for the process by which the Assyrian and Babylonian Akkadian-speaking peoples became eastern Aramaic-speaking during the later Iron Age and intermingled with the Arameans.
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=======Image-Info=======
Image is in public domain
Author-Info: Selfmade
Image Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Israel_i_Judà.jpg
=======Image-Info========
The Arameans, or Aramaeans, (Aramaic: ܐܪ̈ܡܝܐ, ארמיא ; ʼaramáyé) were a Northwest Semitic people who originated in what is now present-day western, southern and central Syria (Biblical Aram) during the Late Bronze Age and the Iron Age. Large groups migrated to Babylonia in southern Mesopotamia during the 11th and 10th centuries BC, where they established small semi-independent Aramaic kingdoms, in the Levant and in Mesopotamia conquered Aramean populations were forcibly deported throughout the Assyrian Empire, e.g. under the rule of king Tiglath-Pileser III. Some Syriac Christians in the Middle East (particularly in Syria and Lebanon) still espouse an Aramean ethnic identity to this day and a minority still speak various Aramaic dialects or languages. In northeast Syria, northern Iraq, northwest Iran and south eastern Turkey, Akkadian influenced Eastern Aramaic-Northeastern Neo-Aramaic dialects are still spoken fluently by between 575,000 and 1,000,000 people, but most of the speakers of these dialects are ethnic Mesopotamian Assyrians, the indigenous people of Upper Mesopotamia, rather than Levantine Arameans. The Western Aramaic language of the Arameans in Maalula is in danger of extinction, although Aramean personal and family names are still found among the Syriac Christians throughout the Middle East. The Arameans never had a unified nation; they were divided into small independent kingdoms across parts of the Near East, particularly in what is now more Syria and Jordan. After the Bronze Age collapse, their political influence was confined to a number of states such as Aram Damascus and the partly Aramean Syro-Hittite states, which were entirely absorbed into the Neo-Assyrian Empire by the 9th century BC. By contrast, Imperial Aramaic came to be the lingua franca of the entire Near East and Asia Minor when introduced as the official language of the vast Neo-Assyrian Empire by Tiglath-pileser III in the mid-8th century BC. This empire stretched from Cyprus and the East Mediterranean in the west to Persia and Elam to India in the east, and from Armenia and the Caucasus in the north to Egypt and Arabia in the south. This version of Aramaic later developed in Mesopotamia into the literary languages such as Syriac and Mandaic. Scholars have used the term "Aramaization" for the process by which the Assyrian and Babylonian Akkadian-speaking peoples became eastern Aramaic-speaking during the later Iron Age and intermingled with the Arameans.
Video is targeted to blind users
Attribution:
Article text available under CC-BY-SA
=======Image-Info=======
Image is in public domain
Author-Info: Selfmade
Image Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Israel_i_Judà.jpg
=======Image-Info========
Aramaic (Classical Syriac: ܐܪܡܝܐ Arāmāyā) is a family of languages or dialects, belonging to the Semitic family. More specifically, it is a part of the Northwest Semitic subfamily, which also includes Canaanite languages such as Hebrew and Phoenician. The Aramaic script was widely adopted for other languages and is ancestral to both the Arabic and modern Hebrew alphabets. During its approximately 3,100 years of written history, Aramaic has served variously as a language of administration of empires and as a language of divine worship. It was the lingua franca of the Neo-Assyrian Empire (911–605 BC), Neo-Babylonian Empire (605–539 BC) and Achaemenid Empire (539–323 BC), of the Neo-Assyrian states of Assur, Adiabene, Osroene and Hatra, the Aramean state of Palmyra, and the day-to-day language of Yehud Medinata and of Judaea (539 BC – 70 AD), the language that Jesus probably used the most, the language of large sections of the biblical books of Daniel and Ezra, and is the main language of the Talmud and Syriac Christianity, in particular the Church of the East, the Chaldean Catholic Church, the Saint Thomas Christian Churches in India, the Syriac Orthodox Church, the Assyrian Pentecostal Church, and the Maronite Church. It is also the language of the Mandeans and their Gnostic religion, Mandeanism, as well as the language of the once widespread but now extinct Manichaean religion. However, Jewish Aramaic was different from the other forms both in lettering and grammar. Parts of the Dead Sea Scrolls are in Jewish Aramaic showing the Jewish lettering, related to the Hebrew script. Aramaic was also the original language of the Bahrani people of Eastern Arabia. Aramaic's long history and diverse and widespread use has led to the development of many divergent varieties, which are sometimes considered dialects, though they are distinct enough that they are sometimes considered languages. Therefore, there is not one singular, static Aramaic language; each time and place rather has had its own variation. Aramaic is retained as a liturgical language by certain Eastern Christian churches, in the form of Syriac, the Aramaic variety by which Eastern Christianity was diffused, whether or not those communities once spoke it or another form of Aramaic as their vernacular, but have since shifted to another language as their primary community language. Modern Aramaic is spoken today as a first language by many scattered, predominantly small, and largely isolated communities of differing Christian, Jewish, and Mandean ethnic groups of West Asia—most numerously by the Assyrians in the form of Assyrian Neo-Aramaic and Chaldean Neo-Aramaic—that have all retained use of the once dominant lingua franca despite subsequent language shifts experienced throughout the Middle East. The Aramaic languages are now considered endangered.
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Article text available under CC-BY-SA
=======Image-Info========
License: Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 (CC BY-SA 3.0)
LicenseLink: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0
Author-Info: Mathen Payyappilly Palakkappilly (User:Achayan)
Image Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Syriac_Aramaic.jpg
=======Image-Info========
Aramaic (Classical Syriac: ܐܪܡܝܐ Arāmāyā) is a family of languages or dialects, belonging to the Semitic family. More specifically, it is a part of the Northwest Semitic subfamily, which also includes Canaanite languages such as Hebrew and Phoenician. The Aramaic script was widely adopted for other languages and is ancestral to both the Arabic and modern Hebrew alphabets. During its approximately 3,100 years of written history, Aramaic has served variously as a language of administration of empires and as a language of divine worship. It was the lingua franca of the Neo-Assyrian Empire (911–605 BC), Neo-Babylonian Empire (605–539 BC) and Achaemenid Empire (539–323 BC), of the Neo-Assyrian states of Assur, Adiabene, Osroene and Hatra, the Aramean state of Palmyra, and the day-to-day language of Yehud Medinata and of Judaea (539 BC – 70 AD), the language that Jesus probably used the most, the language of large sections of the biblical books of Daniel and Ezra, and is the main language of the Talmud and Syriac Christianity, in particular the Church of the East, the Chaldean Catholic Church, the Saint Thomas Christian Churches in India, the Syriac Orthodox Church, the Assyrian Pentecostal Church, and the Maronite Church. It is also the language of the Mandeans and their Gnostic religion, Mandeanism, as well as the language of the once widespread but now extinct Manichaean religion. However, Jewish Aramaic was different from the other forms both in lettering and grammar. Parts of the Dead Sea Scrolls are in Jewish Aramaic showing the Jewish lettering, related to the Hebrew script. Aramaic was also the original language of the Bahrani people of Eastern Arabia. Aramaic's long history and diverse and widespread use has led to the development of many divergent varieties, which are sometimes considered dialects, though they are distinct enough that they are sometimes considered languages. Therefore, there is not one singular, static Aramaic language; each time and place rather has had its own variation. Aramaic is retained as a liturgical language by certain Eastern Christian churches, in the form of Syriac, the Aramaic variety by which Eastern Christianity was diffused, whether or not those communities once spoke it or another form of Aramaic as their vernacular, but have since shifted to another language as their primary community language. Modern Aramaic is spoken today as a first language by many scattered, predominantly small, and largely isolated communities of differing Christian, Jewish, and Mandean ethnic groups of West Asia—most numerously by the Assyrians in the form of Assyrian Neo-Aramaic and Chaldean Neo-Aramaic—that have all retained use of the once dominant lingua franca despite subsequent language shifts experienced throughout the Middle East. The Aramaic languages are now considered endangered.
Video is targeted to blind users
Attribution:
Article text available under CC-BY-SA
=======Image-Info========
License: Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 (CC BY-SA 3.0)
LicenseLink: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0
Author-Info: Mathen Payyappilly Palakkappilly (User:Achayan)
Image Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Syriac_Aramaic.jpg
=======Image-Info========
Aramaic (Classical Syriac: ܐܪܡܝܐ Arāmāyā) is a family of languages or dialects, belonging to the Semitic family. More specifically, it is a part of the Northwest Semitic subfamily, which also includes Canaanite languages such as Hebrew and Phoenician. The Aramaic script was widely adopted for other languages and is ancestral to both the Arabic and modern Hebrew alphabets. During its approximately 3,100 years of written history, Aramaic has served variously as a language of administration of empires and as a language of divine worship. It was the lingua franca of the Neo-Assyrian Empire (911-605 BC), Neo-Babylonian Empire (605-539 BC) and Achaemenid Empire (539-323 BC), of the Neo-Assyrian states of Assur, Adiabene, Osroene and Hatra, the Aramean state of Palmyra, and the day-to-day language of Yehud Medinata and of Judaea (539 BC – 70 AD), the language that Jesus probably used the most, the language of large sections of the biblical books of Daniel and Ezra, and is the main language of the Talmud and Syriac Christianity, in particular the Assyrian Church of the East, the Nestorian Church, the Chaldean Catholic Church, the Ancient Church of the East, the Saint Thomas Christian Churches in India, the Syriac Orthodox Church, the Assyrian Pentecostal Church, and the Maronite Church. It is also the language of the Mandeans and their Gnostic religion, Mandeanism, as well as the language of the once widespread but now extinct Manichaean religion. However, Jewish Aramaic was different from the other forms both in lettering and grammar. Parts of the Dead Sea Scrolls are in Jewish Aramaic showing the Jewish lettering, related to the Hebrew script. Aramaic was also the original language of the Bahrani people of Eastern Arabia. Aramaic's long history and diverse and widespread use has led to the development of many divergent varieties, which are sometimes considered dialects, though they are distinct enough that they are sometimes considered languages. Therefore, there is not one singular, static Aramaic language; each time and place rather has had its own variation. Aramaic is retained as a liturgical language by certain Eastern Christian churches, in the form of Syriac, the Aramaic variety by which Eastern Christianity was diffused, whether or not those communities once spoke it or another form of Aramaic as their vernacular, but have since shifted to another language as their primary community language. Modern Aramaic is spoken today as a first language by many scattered, predominantly small, and largely isolated communities of differing Christian, Jewish, and Mandean ethnic groups of West Asia—most numerously by the Assyrians in the form of Assyrian Neo-Aramaic and Chaldean Neo-Aramaic—that have all retained use of the once dominant lingua franca despite subsequent language shifts experienced throughout the Middle East. The Aramaic languages are now considered endangered.
Video is targeted to blind users
Attribution:
Article text available under CC-BY-SA
image Source in the video.
=======Image-Info========
License: Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 (CC BY-SA 3.0)
LicenseLink: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0
Author-Info: Mathen Payyappilly Palakkappilly (User:Achayan)
=======Image-Info========
Aramaic (Classical Syriac: ܐܪܡܝܐ Arāmāyā) is a family of languages or dialects, belonging to the Semitic family. More specifically, it is a part of the Northwest Semitic subfamily, which also includes Canaanite languages such as Hebrew and Phoenician. The Aramaic script was widely adopted for other languages and is ancestral to both the Arabic and modern Hebrew alphabets. During its approximately 3,100 years of written history, Aramaic has served variously as a language of administration of empires and as a language of divine worship. It was the lingua franca of the Neo-Assyrian Empire (911-605 BC), Neo-Babylonian Empire (605-539 BC) and Achaemenid Empire (539-323 BC), of the Neo-Assyrian states of Assur, Adiabene, Osroene and Hatra, the Aramean state of Palmyra, and the day-to-day language of Yehud Medinata and of Judaea (539 BC – 70 AD), the language that Jesus probably used the most, the language of large sections of the biblical books of Daniel and Ezra, and is the main language of the Talmud and Syriac Christianity, in particular the Assyrian Church of the East, the Nestorian Church, the Chaldean Catholic Church, the Ancient Church of the East, the Saint Thomas Christian Churches in India, the Syriac Orthodox Church, the Assyrian Pentecostal Church, and the Maronite Church. It is also the language of the Mandeans and their Gnostic religion, Mandeanism, as well as the language of the once widespread but now extinct Manichaean religion. However, Jewish Aramaic was different from the other forms both in lettering and grammar. Parts of the Dead Sea Scrolls are in Jewish Aramaic showing the Jewish lettering, related to the Hebrew script. Aramaic was also the original language of the Bahrani people of Eastern Arabia. Aramaic's long history and diverse and widespread use has led to the development of many divergent varieties, which are sometimes considered dialects, though they are distinct enough that they are sometimes considered languages. Therefore, there is not one singular, static Aramaic language; each time and place rather has had its own variation. Aramaic is retained as a liturgical language by certain Eastern Christian churches, in the form of Syriac, the Aramaic variety by which Eastern Christianity was diffused, whether or not those communities once spoke it or another form of Aramaic as their vernacular, but have since shifted to another language as their primary community language. Modern Aramaic is spoken today as a first language by many scattered, predominantly small, and largely isolated communities of differing Christian, Jewish, and Mandean ethnic groups of West Asia—most numerously by the Assyrians in the form of Assyrian Neo-Aramaic and Chaldean Neo-Aramaic—that have all retained use of the once dominant lingua franca despite subsequent language shifts experienced throughout the Middle East. The Aramaic languages are now considered endangered.
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Author-Info: Mathen Payyappilly Palakkappilly (User:Achayan)
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The Christians of Iraq are considered to be one of the oldest continuous Christian communities in the world. The vast majority are Eastern Aramaic-speaking ethnic Assyrians; however, there is a very small community of Armenians, too. In Iraq, Christians numbered about 1,500,000 in 2003, representing just over 6% of the population of the country down from 12% on 1947 in a population of 4.7 million. They numbered over 1.4 million in 1987 or 8% of the population. After the Iraq War, it was estimated that the number of Christians in Iraq had dropped to less than 450,000 by 2013 - with estimates as low as 200,000. Chaldean Catholics, formerly 'Nestorians' (Church of the East which denies they are Nestorian), are the majority among the Christians of Iraq. Christians live primarily in Baghdad, Basra, Mosul, Arbil and Kirkuk and in Assyrian towns and regions such as the Nineveh Plains in the north. Christians in Iraq are not allowed to proselytise, especially to Muslims. Muslims who change their faith to Christianity, are subject to societal and official pressure, which may lead to death penalty. However, there are cases in which a Muslim will adopt the Christian faith, secretly declaring his/her apostasy. In effect, they are practising Christians, but legally Muslims; thus, the statistics of Iraqi Christians does not include Muslim apostates to Christianity.
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Author-Info: voy:fr:Utilisateur:Fogg, Peter Fitzgerald
Image Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Continents_colour2.svg
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The Christians of Iraq are considered to be one of the oldest continuous Christian communities in the world. The vast majority are Eastern Aramaic-speaking ethnic Assyrians; however, there is a very small community of Armenians, too. In Iraq, Christians numbered about 1,500,000 in 2003, representing just over 6% of the population of the country down from 12% on 1947 in a population of 4.7 million. They numbered over 1.4 million in 1987 or 8% of the population. After the Iraq War, it was estimated that the number of Christians in Iraq had dropped to less than 450,000 by 2013 - with estimates as low as 200,000. Chaldean Catholics, formerly 'Nestorians' (Church of the East which denies they are Nestorian), are the majority among the Christians of Iraq. Christians live primarily in Baghdad, Basra, Mosul, Arbil and Kirkuk and in Assyrian towns and regions such as the Nineveh Plains in the north. Christians in Iraq are not allowed to proselytise, especially to Muslims. Muslims who change their faith to Christianity, are subject to societal and official pressure, which may lead to death penalty. However, there are cases in which a Muslim will adopt the Christian faith, secretly declaring his/her apostasy. In effect, they are practising Christians, but legally Muslims; thus, the statistics of Iraqi Christians does not include Muslim apostates to Christianity.
Video is targeted to blind users
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Article text available under CC-BY-SA
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License: Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 (CC BY-SA 3.0)
LicenseLink: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0
Author-Info: voy:fr:Utilisateur:Fogg, Peter Fitzgerald
Image Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Continents_colour2.svg
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Syriac Christianity (Syriac: ܡܫܝܚܝܘܬܐ ܣܘܪܝܝܬܐ / mšiḥāiūṯā suryāiṯā) encompasses the multiple Churches of Eastern Christianity whose services tend to feature liturgical use of ancient Syriac, a dialect of Middle Aramaic that emerged in Edessa in the early 1st century AD, and is closely related to the Aramaic of Jesus. Jesus Christ was known as Yešua` mšiḥā in Aramaic. With a history going back to the 1st century AD, in modern times Syriac Christianity is represented by denominations primarily in the Middle East, Asia Minor and in Kerala, India. Christianity began in the Middle East in Jerusalem among Jewish Aramaic-speaking Semitic peoples of Judah (modern Israel, Palestinian Territories and Jordan). It quickly spread, initially to other Semitic peoples, in Parthian-ruled Assyria and Mesopotamia (modern Iraq), Roman-ruled Syria (ancient Aramea), Phoenicia (modern Lebanon), southern and eastern Asia Minor (modern Turkey), and northwestern Persia (modern Iran) and Malta. From there it spread to Greece, Armenia, Egypt, Georgia, the Caucasus region and on into The Balkans, India, North Africa, Rome, Ethiopia, Nubia (modern Sudan) and Arabia, and eventually southern and western Europe. Syriac Christianity is divided into two major traditions: The East Syrian Rite, historically centered in Assyria/Upper Mesopotamia, and the West Syrian Rite, centered in Antioch and the Mediterranean coast (the Levant). The East Syrian Rite tradition was historically associated with the Assyrian founded Church of the East, and is currently employed by the Middle Eastern churches that descend from it, the Assyrian Church of the East, the Ancient Church of the East, and the Chaldean Catholic Church (the members of these churches are Eastern Aramaic-speaking ethnic Assyrians), as well as by the Syro-Malabar Catholic Church of India. The West Syrian tradition is used by the Syriac Orthodox Church, the Maronite Church, the Syriac Catholic Church, and churches that descend from them, as well as by the Malankara Churches of India, which follow the Saint Thomas Christian tradition.
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Artist-Info: Byzantinischer Mosaizist des 12. Jahrhunderts
Image Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:00058_christ_pantocrator_mosaic_hagia_sophia_656x800.jpg
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Syriac Christianity (Syriac: ܡܫܝܚܝܘܬܐ ܣܘܪܝܝܬܐ / mšiḥāiūṯā suryāiṯā) encompasses the multiple Churches of Eastern Christianity whose services tend to feature liturgical use of ancient Syriac, a dialect of Middle Aramaic that emerged in Edessa in the early 1st century AD, and is closely related to the Aramaic of Jesus. Jesus Christ was known as Yešua` mšiḥā in Aramaic. With a history going back to the 1st century AD, in modern times Syriac Christianity is represented by denominations primarily in the Middle East, Asia Minor and in Kerala, India. Christianity began in the Middle East in Jerusalem among Jewish Aramaic-speaking Semitic peoples of Judah (modern Israel, Palestinian Territories and Jordan). It quickly spread, initially to other Semitic peoples, in Parthian-ruled Assyria and Mesopotamia (modern Iraq), Roman-ruled Syria (ancient Aramea), Phoenicia (modern Lebanon), southern and eastern Asia Minor (modern Turkey), and northwestern Persia (modern Iran) and Malta. From there it spread to Greece, Armenia, Egypt, Georgia, the Caucasus region and on into The Balkans, India, North Africa, Rome, Ethiopia, Nubia (modern Sudan) and Arabia, and eventually southern and western Europe. Syriac Christianity is divided into two major traditions: The East Syrian Rite, historically centered in Assyria/Upper Mesopotamia, and the West Syrian Rite, centered in Antioch and the Mediterranean coast (the Levant). The East Syrian Rite tradition was historically associated with the Assyrian founded Church of the East, and is currently employed by the Middle Eastern churches that descend from it, the Assyrian Church of the East, the Ancient Church of the East, and the Chaldean Catholic Church (the members of these churches are Eastern Aramaic-speaking ethnic Assyrians), as well as by the Syro-Malabar Catholic Church of India. The West Syrian tradition is used by the Syriac Orthodox Church, the Maronite Church, the Syriac Catholic Church, and churches that descend from them, as well as by the Malankara Churches of India, which follow the Saint Thomas Christian tradition.
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Article text available under CC-BY-SA
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Artist-Info: Byzantinischer Mosaizist des 12. Jahrhunderts
Image Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:00058_christ_pantocrator_mosaic_hagia_sophia_656x800.jpg
=======Image-Info========
published:05 Aug 2015
views:0
Emran El-Badawi: "The Qur’an and the Aramaic Gospel Traditions" (NBIS, 17/7/15)
*** The Qur'an and the Aramaic Gospel Traditions (Routledge, 2013) written by Emran El-Badawi, professor and director of the Arab Studies program at the University of Houston, is a recent addition to the field of research on the Qur'an and Aramaic and Syriac biblical texts. Professor El-Badawi asserts that the Qur'an is a product of an environment steeped in the Aramaic gospel traditions. Not a "borrowing" from the Aramaic gospel tradition, but rather the Qur'an contains a "dogmatic re-articulation" of elements from that tradition for an Arab audience. He introduces and examines this context in the second chapter, and then proceeds to compare passages of the Qur'an and passages of the Aramaic gospel in the subsequent four chapters.
These comparisons are organized according to four primary themes: prophets, clergy, the divine, and the apocalypse. Each chapter contains numerous images constituting the larger theme at work. For example in the chapter "Divine Judgment and the Apocalypse," images of paradise and hell taken from gospel traditions are compared to the Qur'anic casting of these images. Moreover, Professor El-Badawi includes three indices following his concluding chapter that provide a great deal of raw data and textual parallels between the Qur'an and the wide range of sources he has employed. The value of his work is evidenced by the fact it was nominated for the 2014 British-Kuwait Friendship Society's Book Prize in Middle Eastern Studies. ***
*** The Qur'an and the Aramaic Gospel Traditions (Routledge, 2013) written by Emran El-Badawi, professor and director of the Arab Studies program at the University of Houston, is a recent addition to the field of research on the Qur'an and Aramaic and Syriac biblical texts. Professor El-Badawi asserts that the Qur'an is a product of an environment steeped in the Aramaic gospel traditions. Not a "borrowing" from the Aramaic gospel tradition, but rather the Qur'an contains a "dogmatic re-articulation" of elements from that tradition for an Arab audience. He introduces and examines this context in the second chapter, and then proceeds to compare passages of the Qur'an and passages of the Aramaic gospel in the subsequent four chapters.
These comparisons are organized according to four primary themes: prophets, clergy, the divine, and the apocalypse. Each chapter contains numerous images constituting the larger theme at work. For example in the chapter "Divine Judgment and the Apocalypse," images of paradise and hell taken from gospel traditions are compared to the Qur'anic casting of these images. Moreover, Professor El-Badawi includes three indices following his concluding chapter that provide a great deal of raw data and textual parallels between the Qur'an and the wide range of sources he has employed. The value of his work is evidenced by the fact it was nominated for the 2014 British-Kuwait Friendship Society's Book Prize in Middle Eastern Studies. ***
This original form of the Lord's Prayer has come to us in Greek. The scholar Joseph Fitzmeyer has translated the original text into first century Aramaic, the mother-tongue of Jesus. The musical mode used for the chant is Middle Eastern.
Words and music from the recording: "Songs of Presence: Contemplative Chants for the New Millennium - A Learning CD" produced by Praxis and All Saints' Episcopal Church. Executive Producer: Lynn C. Bauman (Available from www.praxisofprayer.com).
Body gestures from Lynn C. Bauman at Praxis: Resources for Spiritual Formation and Contemplative Living (www.praxisofprayer.com).
Brian Puida Mitchell can be reached at bmitchell@truc.ca. He is a member of the Kamloops Contemplative Group in Kamloops, BC.
Words and music from the recording: "Songs of Presence: Contemplative Chants for the New Millennium - A Learning CD" produced by Praxis and All Saints' Episcopal Church. Executive Producer: Lynn C. Bauman (Available from www.praxisofprayer.com)
Body gestures from Lynn C. Bauman at Praxis: Resources for Spiritual Formation and Contemplative Living (www.praxisofprayer.com)
This original form of the Lord's Prayer has come to us in Greek. The scholar Joseph Fitzmeyer has translated the original text into first century Aramaic, the mother-tongue of Jesus. The musical mode used for the chant is Middle Eastern.
Words and music from the recording: "Songs of Presence: Contemplative Chants for the New Millennium - A Learning CD" produced by Praxis and All Saints' Episcopal Church. Executive Producer: Lynn C. Bauman (Available from www.praxisofprayer.com).
Body gestures from Lynn C. Bauman at Praxis: Resources for Spiritual Formation and Contemplative Living (www.praxisofprayer.com).
Brian Puida Mitchell can be reached at bmitchell@truc.ca. He is a member of the Kamloops Contemplative Group in Kamloops, BC.
Words and music from the recording: "Songs of Presence: Contemplative Chants for the New Millennium - A Learning CD" produced by Praxis and All Saints' Episcopal Church. Executive Producer: Lynn C. Bauman (Available from www.praxisofprayer.com)
Body gestures from Lynn C. Bauman at Praxis: Resources for Spiritual Formation and Contemplative Living (www.praxisofprayer.com)
While lawmakers in the US debate on what to do in Syria, the Syrian government and anti-government rebels clashed once again on Thursday near the small town of Maaloula. The small Christian Aramaic town Maloula, in the north of Damascus holds one of the oldest minority Syrian populations in the country. The recent conflict has many minorities in the area worried about the repercussion the community faces in the country's civil war. The arch Bishop of the Syrian Church for Eastern US, Mor Cyril Aphrem Karim, joins us for more.
While lawmakers in the US debate on what to do in Syria, the Syrian government and anti-government rebels clashed once again on Thursday near the small town of Maaloula. The small Christian Aramaic town Maloula, in the north of Damascus holds one of the oldest minority Syrian populations in the country. The recent conflict has many minorities in the area worried about the repercussion the community faces in the country's civil war. The arch Bishop of the Syrian Church for Eastern US, Mor Cyril Aphrem Karim, joins us for more.
published:16 Jun 2015
views:11
Holy Bible From the Ancient Eastern Text George M Lamsa's Translation From the Aramaic of the Peshi
JESUS & INDIA: A CONNECTION THROUGH LANUAGE AND MUSIC. The Aramaic Project
(http://www.TheCMSIndia.org/Aramaic-Project.html).
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Marianne Thaila in conversation with Joseph J. Palackal (http://www.TheCMSIndia.org/palackal.html). Recorded on 16 May 2015 at Marianne's house at New Hyde Park, New York.
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Please acknowledge TheCMSIndia.org and/or Joseph J. Palackal (http://www.TheCMSIndia.org/palackal.html) when this video is used for academic or other purposes.
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***To purchase resources on Indian Christianity published by the Christian Musicological Society of India, please visit Product Gallery at http://josefross.com/html/ ***
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JESUS & INDIA: A CONNECTION THROUGH LANUAGE AND MUSIC. The Aramaic Project
(http://www.TheCMSIndia.org/Aramaic-Project.html).
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Marianne Thaila in conversation with Joseph J. Palackal (http://www.TheCMSIndia.org/palackal.html). Recorded on 16 May 2015 at Marianne's house at New Hyde Park, New York.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Please acknowledge TheCMSIndia.org and/or Joseph J. Palackal (http://www.TheCMSIndia.org/palackal.html) when this video is used for academic or other purposes.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
***To purchase resources on Indian Christianity published by the Christian Musicological Society of India, please visit Product Gallery at http://josefross.com/html/ ***
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To donate to the cause of the Digital Library of Christian Music in India, please contact info@TheCMSIndia.org
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To contribute to the Aramaic Project, please contact info@TheCMSIndia.org
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published:01 Jun 2015
views:13
The Lord's Prayer in Aramaic recited by Tony Lamair Burks II
Tony Lamair Burks II reciting The Lord's Prayer in Aramaic as taught by the Rev. Dr. Rococo A. Errico, one of the world's foremost experts on the Bible, Aramaic language, and Near Eastern culture.
Tony Lamair Burks II reciting The Lord's Prayer in Aramaic as taught by the Rev. Dr. Rococo A. Errico, one of the world's foremost experts on the Bible, Aramaic language, and Near Eastern culture.
What is Aramaic language?
A documentary report all about Aramaic language for the blind and visually impaired or for homework/assignment.
Aramaic ( Arāmāyā) is a family of languages or dialects, belonging to the Semitic family. More specifically, it is a part of the Northwest Semitic subfamily, which also includes Canaanite languages such as Hebrew and Phoenician. The Aramaic script was widely adopted for other languages and is ancestral to both the Arabic and modern Hebrew alphabets.
Intro/Outro music:
Discovery Hit/Chucky the Construction Worker - Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under CC-BY-3.0
Text derived from:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aramaic_language
Text to Speech powered by tts-api.com
Images are Public Domain or CC-BY-3.0:
Targum.jpg from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aramaic_language
Estrangela.jpg from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aramaic_language
300px-Jewish-Aramaic_map.png from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Judeo-Aramaic_language
220px-Inscription_of_Abraham_son_of_Sarah_from_Mtskheta,_Georgia._4th-6th_cc_CE..JPG from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Judeo-Aramaic_language
Bar-rakib.jpg from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aramaic_language
Aramaic_Inscriptures_in_Sarnath.jpg from http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Aramaic_Inscriptures_in_Sarnath.jpg
Syriac_Sert%C3%A2_book_script.jpg from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aramaic_language
Stele_Salm_Louvre_AO5009.jpg from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tayma
3a42660ca6acae46c3e45a32fa1bfab3.png from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aramaic_language
AsokaKandahar.jpg from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aramaic_alphabet
What is Aramaic language?
A documentary report all about Aramaic language for the blind and visually impaired or for homework/assignment.
Aramaic ( Arāmāyā) is a family of languages or dialects, belonging to the Semitic family. More specifically, it is a part of the Northwest Semitic subfamily, which also includes Canaanite languages such as Hebrew and Phoenician. The Aramaic script was widely adopted for other languages and is ancestral to both the Arabic and modern Hebrew alphabets.
Intro/Outro music:
Discovery Hit/Chucky the Construction Worker - Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under CC-BY-3.0
Text derived from:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aramaic_language
Text to Speech powered by tts-api.com
Images are Public Domain or CC-BY-3.0:
Targum.jpg from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aramaic_language
Estrangela.jpg from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aramaic_language
300px-Jewish-Aramaic_map.png from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Judeo-Aramaic_language
220px-Inscription_of_Abraham_son_of_Sarah_from_Mtskheta,_Georgia._4th-6th_cc_CE..JPG from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Judeo-Aramaic_language
Bar-rakib.jpg from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aramaic_language
Aramaic_Inscriptures_in_Sarnath.jpg from http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Aramaic_Inscriptures_in_Sarnath.jpg
Syriac_Sert%C3%A2_book_script.jpg from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aramaic_language
Stele_Salm_Louvre_AO5009.jpg from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tayma
3a42660ca6acae46c3e45a32fa1bfab3.png from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aramaic_language
AsokaKandahar.jpg from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aramaic_alphabet
published:30 Apr 2015
views:0
The Aramaic Worldview of Yeshua Jesus A Native Middle Eastern Cosmology YouTube
Assyrian Hymn & Spiritual Teaching ترانيم وتعاليم روحية لكنيسة المشرق
The Light From The East .Hymn & Spiritual Teaching in Assyrian language part ( 5 )
. AVAILABLE At ST.PETER ASSYRIAN CHURCH OF THE EAST AZ.USA
نور من المشرق
ترانيم وتعاليم روحية. متوفر في كنيسة مار بطرس كنيسة المشرق الآشورية اريزونا اميركا
Assyrian Assyrian bible study
Assyrian Hymn & Spiritual Teaching ترانيم وتعاليم روحية لكنيسة المشرق
The Light From The East .Hymn & Spiritual Teaching in Assyrian language part ( 5 )
. AVAILABLE At ST.PETER ASSYRIAN CHURCH OF THE EAST AZ.USA
نور من المشرق
ترانيم وتعاليم روحية. متوفر في كنيسة مار بطرس كنيسة المشرق الآشورية اريزونا اميركا
Assyrian Assyrian bible study
published:30 Mar 2015
views:18
Aramaic Project-Part 20. Rahme Suqaanaa, Rite of Reconcilation in Syriac during Qurbana in Malayalam
JESUS & INDIA: A CONNECTION THROUGH LANUAGE AND MUSIC. (http://www.TheCMSIndia.org/Aramaic-Project.html).
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Aramaic Project - Part 20. Fr. Sebastian Sankoorikkal leading the reconciliation rite in Syriac during Mass in Malayalam.
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Live recording at the Novitiate House of the Daughters of St. Mary of Leuca. Thrikkakkara, Kochi, Kerala. 8 March 2015
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Please acknowledge TheCMSIndia.org and/or Joseph J. Palackal when this video is used for academic or other purposes.
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***To purchase resources on Indian Christianity published by the Christian Musicological Society of India, please visit Product Gallery at http://josefross.com/html/ ***
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
To donate to the cause of the Digital Library of Christian Music in India, please contact info@TheCMSIndia.org
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
To contribute to the Aramaic Project, please contact info@TheCMSIndia.org
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For information on the history of early Christianity in India http://TheCMSIndia.org/releases.html#cradle
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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JESUS & INDIA: A CONNECTION THROUGH LANUAGE AND MUSIC. (http://www.TheCMSIndia.org/Aramaic-Project.html).
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Aramaic Project - Part 20. Fr. Sebastian Sankoorikkal leading the reconciliation rite in Syriac during Mass in Malayalam.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Live recording at the Novitiate House of the Daughters of St. Mary of Leuca. Thrikkakkara, Kochi, Kerala. 8 March 2015
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Please acknowledge TheCMSIndia.org and/or Joseph J. Palackal when this video is used for academic or other purposes.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
***To purchase resources on Indian Christianity published by the Christian Musicological Society of India, please visit Product Gallery at http://josefross.com/html/ ***
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
To donate to the cause of the Digital Library of Christian Music in India, please contact info@TheCMSIndia.org
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
To contribute to the Aramaic Project, please contact info@TheCMSIndia.org
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
For updates, please subscribe to the CMSIndia channel
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For information on the history of early Christianity in India http://TheCMSIndia.org/releases.html#cradle
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Kindly leave your comments on the videos
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published:18 Mar 2015
views:9
Abeer Nehme: Aramaic Sacred Song 2 (World Sufi Spirit Festival | Live Recording)
A popular name in Sufi music, Abeer Nehme excels in the art of singing the spiritual repertory of Maronite, Byzantine and Syrian origins. She is sober, touching and with her Sufi songs she revives the Aramean roots of an ancient tradition. Her clear and limpid voice seems to fly over time, elevating our spirits on a boundless heavenly journey.
Drawing upon Eastern traditions, Christianity and the Arabic culture, she has completely mastered both the Gregorian as well as Orthodox heritages.
Infused with an extremely vivid memory of a Biblical Middle East, Abeer Nehmé reminds us of the historical importance of the Aramean language; the language which was spoken at the time of Christ and which had its own script.
Venue: World Sufi Spirit Festival at Mehrangarh Fort, Jodhpur, Rajasthan
Video Details:
Music Director :-Traditional
Lyrics :-Traditional
Theme & Mood :- Sufi
Label- Saregama India Limited
For more Sufi Songs log on & subscribe
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For more videos log on & subscribe to our channel
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A popular name in Sufi music, Abeer Nehme excels in the art of singing the spiritual repertory of Maronite, Byzantine and Syrian origins. She is sober, touching and with her Sufi songs she revives the Aramean roots of an ancient tradition. Her clear and limpid voice seems to fly over time, elevating our spirits on a boundless heavenly journey.
Drawing upon Eastern traditions, Christianity and the Arabic culture, she has completely mastered both the Gregorian as well as Orthodox heritages.
Infused with an extremely vivid memory of a Biblical Middle East, Abeer Nehmé reminds us of the historical importance of the Aramean language; the language which was spoken at the time of Christ and which had its own script.
Venue: World Sufi Spirit Festival at Mehrangarh Fort, Jodhpur, Rajasthan
Video Details:
Music Director :-Traditional
Lyrics :-Traditional
Theme & Mood :- Sufi
Label- Saregama India Limited
For more Sufi Songs log on & subscribe
https://www.youtube.com/c/saregamasufi
For more videos log on & subscribe to our channel
https://www.youtube.com/saregama
Follow us on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/Saregama
Follow us on Twitter: http://twitter.com/Saregamaindia
published:15 Mar 2015
views:6
Abeer Nehme: Aramaic Sacred Song 8 (World Sufi Spirit Festival | Live Recording)
A popular name in Sufi music, Abeer Nehme excels in the art of singing the spiritual repertory of Maronite, Byzantine and Syrian origins. She is sober, touching and with her Sufi songs she revives the Aramean roots of an ancient tradition. Her clear and limpid voice seems to fly over time, elevating our spirits on a boundless heavenly journey.
Drawing upon Eastern traditions, Christianity and the Arabic culture, she has completely mastered both the Gregorian as well as Orthodox heritages.
Infused with an extremely vivid memory of a Biblical Middle East, Abeer Nehmé reminds us of the historical importance of the Aramean language; the language which was spoken at the time of Christ and which had its own script.
Venue: World Sufi Spirit Festival at Mehrangarh Fort, Jodhpur, Rajasthan
Video Details:
Music Director :-Traditional
Lyrics :-Traditional
Theme & Mood :- Sufi
Label- Saregama India Limited
For more Sufi Songs log on & subscribe
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A popular name in Sufi music, Abeer Nehme excels in the art of singing the spiritual repertory of Maronite, Byzantine and Syrian origins. She is sober, touching and with her Sufi songs she revives the Aramean roots of an ancient tradition. Her clear and limpid voice seems to fly over time, elevating our spirits on a boundless heavenly journey.
Drawing upon Eastern traditions, Christianity and the Arabic culture, she has completely mastered both the Gregorian as well as Orthodox heritages.
Infused with an extremely vivid memory of a Biblical Middle East, Abeer Nehmé reminds us of the historical importance of the Aramean language; the language which was spoken at the time of Christ and which had its own script.
Venue: World Sufi Spirit Festival at Mehrangarh Fort, Jodhpur, Rajasthan
Video Details:
Music Director :-Traditional
Lyrics :-Traditional
Theme & Mood :- Sufi
Label- Saregama India Limited
For more Sufi Songs log on & subscribe
https://www.youtube.com/c/saregamasufi
For more videos log on & subscribe to our channel
https://www.youtube.com/saregama
Follow us on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/Saregama
Follow us on Twitter: http://twitter.com/Saregamaindia
Syriac liturgy, courtesy of the Assyrian Church of the East.
21:50
Mandaeism
Mandaeism
Mandaeism
Mandaeism or Mandaeanism (Modern Mandaic: מנדעיותא Mandaʻiūtā; Arabic: مندائية Mandāʼīyah/Mandāʾiyyah) is a gnostic religion with a strongly dualistic worldview. Its adherents, the Mandaeans, revere Adam, Abel, Seth, Enosh, Noah, Shem, Aram and especially John the Baptist, but reject Abraham, Moses and Jesus of Nazareth. The Aramaic manda means "knowledge," as does Greek gnosis. According to most scholars, Mandaeans migrated from the Southern Levant to Mesopotamia in the first centuries CE, and are of pre-Arab and pre-Islamic origin. They are Semites and speak a dialect of Eastern Aramaic known as Mandaic. They may well be related to the "N
26:07
Mandaeism
Mandaeism
Mandaeism
Mandaeism or Mandaeanism (Modern Mandaic: Mandaʻiūtā (מנדעיותא); Arabic: مندائية Mandāʼīyah/Mandāʾiyyah) is a gnostic religion (Aramaic manda means "knowledge," as does Greek gnosis) with a strongly dualistic worldview. Its adherents, the Mandaeans, revere Adam, Abel, Seth, Enosh, Noah, Shem, Aram and especially John the Baptist, but reject Abraham, Moses and Jesus of Nazareth.
According to most scholars, Mandaeans migrated from the Southern Levant to Mesopotamia in the first centuries CE, and are of pre-Arab and pre-Islamic origin. They are Semites and speak a dialect of Eastern Aramaic known as Mandaic. They may well be related to the "Na
151:55
The Gospel of Matthew in Aramaic (complete) Evangelium nach Matthäus auf Aramäisch
The Gospel of Matthew in Aramaic (complete) Evangelium nach Matthäus auf Aramäisch
The Gospel of Matthew in Aramaic (complete) Evangelium nach Matthäus auf Aramäisch
The Gospel of Matthew in Aramaic (complete, 152 minutes) Evangelium nach Matthäus auf Aramäisch (komplett, 152 Minuten) Speaker: Amanuel Benjamin Recording: ...
58:26
Unity. FM Radio Host Jesse Herriott Interviews Aramaic Spirituality Teacher Dale Allen Hoffman.wmv
Unity. FM Radio Host Jesse Herriott Interviews Aramaic Spirituality Teacher Dale Allen Hoffman.wmv
Unity. FM Radio Host Jesse Herriott Interviews Aramaic Spirituality Teacher Dale Allen Hoffman.wmv
Jesse Herriott is joined this week by Aramaic spirituality teacher and mystic, Dale Allen Hoffman. Mystic Dale Allen Hoffman brings the words of Yeshua (Jesu...
28:33
Dr. Rocco Errico: A commentary on Mel Gibson's "The Passion of the Christ"
Dr. Rocco Errico: A commentary on Mel Gibson's "The Passion of the Christ"
Dr. Rocco Errico: A commentary on Mel Gibson's "The Passion of the Christ"
A commentary on THE PASSION by Mel Gibson. Dr. Rocco A. Errico, author/scholar in the ancient near eastern culture and the language of Aramaic, the language ...
37:45
Learn to read and write Assyrian (Syriac-Aramaic) in five minutes
Learn to read and write Assyrian (Syriac-Aramaic) in five minutes
Learn to read and write Assyrian (Syriac-Aramaic) in five minutes
Learn to read, write, and type the Assyrian (Syriac-Aramaic) language in five minutes. You will be amazed how fast and easy you will learn. Challenge yourself to find a more beautiful script and you will find none.
Obviously, this is not meant to replace a class or a passionate teacher for each teacher of this language is passionate and caring about his/her language.
If you know of a location that teaches the language, please post it and any other pertinent information. For example, I think Northeastern University in Chicago teaches the class. Also our churches and Assyrian National Council (Mootwaa) teaches the language, but I don'
39:43
East Is East ... West Is West
East Is East ... West Is West
East Is East ... West Is West
Alan talks about the meanings of the original Aramaic Hebrew words for "East" and "West" and how you can understand many scriptural passages in deeper and mo...
29:15
Dr, Rocco Errico (part 1 of 2)
Dr, Rocco Errico (part 1 of 2)
Dr, Rocco Errico (part 1 of 2)
In Part 1, Dr. Errico discusses the Aramaic language spoken by Jesus and how western influences and interpretations have often lead to a misunderstanding of ...
28:38
The Lord's Prayer in Aramaic - Episode 1
The Lord's Prayer in Aramaic - Episode 1
The Lord's Prayer in Aramaic - Episode 1
On the season premiere of The Lord's Prayer in Aramaic we have an in-depth conversation with the program's instructor Dr. Rocco Errico. Join us as he gives u...
28:38
The Lord's Prayer in Aramaic - Episode 6
The Lord's Prayer in Aramaic - Episode 6
The Lord's Prayer in Aramaic - Episode 6
On this episode of The Lord's Prayer in Aramaic. Dr. Rocco Errico explores the phrase "And do not let us enter into temptation but free us from evil because yours are the kingdom and the power, and the glory from all ages, throughout all the ages. Amen" in the English translation of the Western Peshitta Text of The Lord's Prayer.
22:22
Aramaic Voice of Jesus with Stephen Andrew Missick
Aramaic Voice of Jesus with Stephen Andrew Missick
Aramaic Voice of Jesus with Stephen Andrew Missick
Stephen Andrew Missick discusses the Aramaic language of Jesus and the Assyrian Christians the last speakers of the language of Jesus Christ.
20:07
The Aramaic New Testament
The Aramaic New Testament
The Aramaic New Testament
The Peshitta Aramaic version of the New Testament and English translations of the Peshitta and George Lamsa.
25:50
سلسلة تعليم اللغة السريانية الدرس الرابع: الأحرف. Syriac Aramaic language -4
سلسلة تعليم اللغة السريانية الدرس الرابع: الأحرف. Syriac Aramaic language -4
سلسلة تعليم اللغة السريانية الدرس الرابع: الأحرف. Syriac Aramaic language -4
سلسلة تعليم اللغة السريانية الآرامية الدرس الرابع. Syriac Aramaic language - 4 تابع درس الاحرف The Electronic Christian church on Facebook Presents series of...
80:35
The Scriptures Through Near East Eyes
The Scriptures Through Near East Eyes
The Scriptures Through Near East Eyes
Dr. Rocco Errico clarifies the original intent of biblical texts by comparing Aramaic texts with Greek and Hebrew versions. He shows how ancient idioms have ...
20:36
National Geographic insults Middle Eastern Christians
National Geographic insults Middle Eastern Christians
National Geographic insults Middle Eastern Christians
In over 100 years-National Geographic magazine has not featured an article on Aramaic Chrisitans (Assyrians and Chaldeans) or Coptic (Egyptian) Christians-but has presented perhaps hundreds of articles on Arabs and Muslims. A 2009 article on "Arab Christians" (the first in a century) contains very offensive comments.
36:14
Sebastian Brock — on the Syriac Mystics (Interview with James Bean) Part 2
Sebastian Brock — on the Syriac Mystics (Interview with James Bean) Part 2
Sebastian Brock — on the Syriac Mystics (Interview with James Bean) Part 2
Meet the "great grandchildren" of Saint Thomas, Apostle of the East. No doubt this is one of the few programs on radio that has ever explored this little-kno...
96:58
Esoteric Philosophy and Peacebuilding in the Middle East
Esoteric Philosophy and Peacebuilding in the Middle East
Esoteric Philosophy and Peacebuilding in the Middle East
A talk given at the Middle Eastern Festival of Spirituality and Peace in Edinburgh, Dr Thomas Daffern explores the esoteric commonalities of the great Middle Eastern and Indo-European spiritual teaching systems. What do Kabbalah, Sufism, Esoteric Christianity and ancient Pagan traditions have in common? What clues and signs are there that point towards a common overarching unity on which peace can be built?
Different understandings of the divine energy can be reconciled through mapping the sounds of the Hebrew, Arabic, Aramaic, Greek, Latin, Sanskrit and Gaelic alphabets, and learning to follow the journey of the ancient sounds themselves, to
Mandaeism or Mandaeanism (Modern Mandaic: מנדעיותא Mandaʻiūtā; Arabic: مندائية Mandāʼīyah/Mandāʾiyyah) is a gnostic religion with a strongly dualistic worldview. Its adherents, the Mandaeans, revere Adam, Abel, Seth, Enosh, Noah, Shem, Aram and especially John the Baptist, but reject Abraham, Moses and Jesus of Nazareth. The Aramaic manda means "knowledge," as does Greek gnosis. According to most scholars, Mandaeans migrated from the Southern Levant to Mesopotamia in the first centuries CE, and are of pre-Arab and pre-Islamic origin. They are Semites and speak a dialect of Eastern Aramaic known as Mandaic. They may well be related to the "Nabateans of Iraq" who were pagan, Aramaic-speaking indigenous pre-Arab and pre-Islamic inhabitants of southern Iraq. Mandaeans appear to have settled in northern Mesopotamia, but the religion has been practised primarily around the lower Karun, Euphrates and Tigris and the rivers that surround the Shatt-al-Arab waterway, part of southern Iraq and Khuzestan Province in Iran. There are thought to be between 60,000 and 70,000 Mandaeans worldwide. Until the 2003 Iraq war, almost all of them lived in Iraq. Many Mandaean Iraqis have since fled their country (as have many other Iraqis) because of the turmoil created by the 2003 invasion of Iraq and subsequent occupation by U.S. armed forces, and the related rise in sectarian violence by Muslim extremists. By 2007, the population of Mandaeans in Iraq had fallen to approximately 5,000. Most Mandaean Iraqis have sought refuge in Iran, with fellow Mandaeans there. Others have moved to northern Iraq. There has been a much smaller influx into Syria and Jordan, with smaller populations in Sweden, Australia, the United States and other Western countries. The Mandaeans have remained separate and intensely private—reports of them and of their religion have come primarily from outsiders, particularly from the Orientalist Julius Heinrich Petermann, Nicolas Siouffi (a Yazidi) and Lady Drower. An Anglican vicar, Rev. Peter Owen-Jones, included a short segment on a Mandaean group in Sydney, Australia, in his BBC series, Around the World in 80 Faiths.
Video is targeted to blind users
Attribution:
Article text available under CC-BY-SA
=======Image-Info=======
Image is in public domain
Author-Info: Charles W. King
Image Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Gema_o_Piedra_Abraxas_de_la_obra_"The_Gnostics_and_their_remains"_de_Charles_W._King,_1887.jpg
=======Image-Info========
Mandaeism or Mandaeanism (Modern Mandaic: מנדעיותא Mandaʻiūtā; Arabic: مندائية Mandāʼīyah/Mandāʾiyyah) is a gnostic religion with a strongly dualistic worldview. Its adherents, the Mandaeans, revere Adam, Abel, Seth, Enosh, Noah, Shem, Aram and especially John the Baptist, but reject Abraham, Moses and Jesus of Nazareth. The Aramaic manda means "knowledge," as does Greek gnosis. According to most scholars, Mandaeans migrated from the Southern Levant to Mesopotamia in the first centuries CE, and are of pre-Arab and pre-Islamic origin. They are Semites and speak a dialect of Eastern Aramaic known as Mandaic. They may well be related to the "Nabateans of Iraq" who were pagan, Aramaic-speaking indigenous pre-Arab and pre-Islamic inhabitants of southern Iraq. Mandaeans appear to have settled in northern Mesopotamia, but the religion has been practised primarily around the lower Karun, Euphrates and Tigris and the rivers that surround the Shatt-al-Arab waterway, part of southern Iraq and Khuzestan Province in Iran. There are thought to be between 60,000 and 70,000 Mandaeans worldwide. Until the 2003 Iraq war, almost all of them lived in Iraq. Many Mandaean Iraqis have since fled their country (as have many other Iraqis) because of the turmoil created by the 2003 invasion of Iraq and subsequent occupation by U.S. armed forces, and the related rise in sectarian violence by Muslim extremists. By 2007, the population of Mandaeans in Iraq had fallen to approximately 5,000. Most Mandaean Iraqis have sought refuge in Iran, with fellow Mandaeans there. Others have moved to northern Iraq. There has been a much smaller influx into Syria and Jordan, with smaller populations in Sweden, Australia, the United States and other Western countries. The Mandaeans have remained separate and intensely private—reports of them and of their religion have come primarily from outsiders, particularly from the Orientalist Julius Heinrich Petermann, Nicolas Siouffi (a Yazidi) and Lady Drower. An Anglican vicar, Rev. Peter Owen-Jones, included a short segment on a Mandaean group in Sydney, Australia, in his BBC series, Around the World in 80 Faiths.
Video is targeted to blind users
Attribution:
Article text available under CC-BY-SA
=======Image-Info=======
Image is in public domain
Author-Info: Charles W. King
Image Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Gema_o_Piedra_Abraxas_de_la_obra_"The_Gnostics_and_their_remains"_de_Charles_W._King,_1887.jpg
=======Image-Info========
Mandaeism or Mandaeanism (Modern Mandaic: Mandaʻiūtā (מנדעיותא); Arabic: مندائية Mandāʼīyah/Mandāʾiyyah) is a gnostic religion (Aramaic manda means "knowledge," as does Greek gnosis) with a strongly dualistic worldview. Its adherents, the Mandaeans, revere Adam, Abel, Seth, Enosh, Noah, Shem, Aram and especially John the Baptist, but reject Abraham, Moses and Jesus of Nazareth.
According to most scholars, Mandaeans migrated from the Southern Levant to Mesopotamia in the first centuries CE, and are of pre-Arab and pre-Islamic origin. They are Semites and speak a dialect of Eastern Aramaic known as Mandaic. They may well be related to the "Nabateans of Iraq" who were pagan, Aramaic-speaking indigenous pre-Arab and pre-Islamic inhabitants of southern Iraq.
This video is targeted to blind users.
Attribution:
Article text available under CC-BY-SA
Creative Commons image source in video
Mandaeism or Mandaeanism (Modern Mandaic: Mandaʻiūtā (מנדעיותא); Arabic: مندائية Mandāʼīyah/Mandāʾiyyah) is a gnostic religion (Aramaic manda means "knowledge," as does Greek gnosis) with a strongly dualistic worldview. Its adherents, the Mandaeans, revere Adam, Abel, Seth, Enosh, Noah, Shem, Aram and especially John the Baptist, but reject Abraham, Moses and Jesus of Nazareth.
According to most scholars, Mandaeans migrated from the Southern Levant to Mesopotamia in the first centuries CE, and are of pre-Arab and pre-Islamic origin. They are Semites and speak a dialect of Eastern Aramaic known as Mandaic. They may well be related to the "Nabateans of Iraq" who were pagan, Aramaic-speaking indigenous pre-Arab and pre-Islamic inhabitants of southern Iraq.
This video is targeted to blind users.
Attribution:
Article text available under CC-BY-SA
Creative Commons image source in video
published:29 Nov 2014
views:2
The Gospel of Matthew in Aramaic (complete) Evangelium nach Matthäus auf Aramäisch
The Gospel of Matthew in Aramaic (complete, 152 minutes) Evangelium nach Matthäus auf Aramäisch (komplett, 152 Minuten) Speaker: Amanuel Benjamin Recording: ...
The Gospel of Matthew in Aramaic (complete, 152 minutes) Evangelium nach Matthäus auf Aramäisch (komplett, 152 Minuten) Speaker: Amanuel Benjamin Recording: ...
Jesse Herriott is joined this week by Aramaic spirituality teacher and mystic, Dale Allen Hoffman. Mystic Dale Allen Hoffman brings the words of Yeshua (Jesu...
Jesse Herriott is joined this week by Aramaic spirituality teacher and mystic, Dale Allen Hoffman. Mystic Dale Allen Hoffman brings the words of Yeshua (Jesu...
A commentary on THE PASSION by Mel Gibson. Dr. Rocco A. Errico, author/scholar in the ancient near eastern culture and the language of Aramaic, the language ...
A commentary on THE PASSION by Mel Gibson. Dr. Rocco A. Errico, author/scholar in the ancient near eastern culture and the language of Aramaic, the language ...
Learn to read, write, and type the Assyrian (Syriac-Aramaic) language in five minutes. You will be amazed how fast and easy you will learn. Challenge yourself to find a more beautiful script and you will find none.
Obviously, this is not meant to replace a class or a passionate teacher for each teacher of this language is passionate and caring about his/her language.
If you know of a location that teaches the language, please post it and any other pertinent information. For example, I think Northeastern University in Chicago teaches the class. Also our churches and Assyrian National Council (Mootwaa) teaches the language, but I don't know the details.
visit www.LearnAssyrian.com for details and
www.AssyrianLibrary.com for more publications.
Learn to read, write, and type the Assyrian (Syriac-Aramaic) language in five minutes. You will be amazed how fast and easy you will learn. Challenge yourself to find a more beautiful script and you will find none.
Obviously, this is not meant to replace a class or a passionate teacher for each teacher of this language is passionate and caring about his/her language.
If you know of a location that teaches the language, please post it and any other pertinent information. For example, I think Northeastern University in Chicago teaches the class. Also our churches and Assyrian National Council (Mootwaa) teaches the language, but I don't know the details.
visit www.LearnAssyrian.com for details and
www.AssyrianLibrary.com for more publications.
Alan talks about the meanings of the original Aramaic Hebrew words for "East" and "West" and how you can understand many scriptural passages in deeper and mo...
Alan talks about the meanings of the original Aramaic Hebrew words for "East" and "West" and how you can understand many scriptural passages in deeper and mo...
In Part 1, Dr. Errico discusses the Aramaic language spoken by Jesus and how western influences and interpretations have often lead to a misunderstanding of ...
In Part 1, Dr. Errico discusses the Aramaic language spoken by Jesus and how western influences and interpretations have often lead to a misunderstanding of ...
On the season premiere of The Lord's Prayer in Aramaic we have an in-depth conversation with the program's instructor Dr. Rocco Errico. Join us as he gives u...
On the season premiere of The Lord's Prayer in Aramaic we have an in-depth conversation with the program's instructor Dr. Rocco Errico. Join us as he gives u...
On this episode of The Lord's Prayer in Aramaic. Dr. Rocco Errico explores the phrase "And do not let us enter into temptation but free us from evil because yours are the kingdom and the power, and the glory from all ages, throughout all the ages. Amen" in the English translation of the Western Peshitta Text of The Lord's Prayer.
On this episode of The Lord's Prayer in Aramaic. Dr. Rocco Errico explores the phrase "And do not let us enter into temptation but free us from evil because yours are the kingdom and the power, and the glory from all ages, throughout all the ages. Amen" in the English translation of the Western Peshitta Text of The Lord's Prayer.
published:22 Sep 2014
views:5
Aramaic Voice of Jesus with Stephen Andrew Missick
سلسلة تعليم اللغة السريانية الآرامية الدرس الرابع. Syriac Aramaic language - 4 تابع درس الاحرف The Electronic Christian church on Facebook Presents series of...
سلسلة تعليم اللغة السريانية الآرامية الدرس الرابع. Syriac Aramaic language - 4 تابع درس الاحرف The Electronic Christian church on Facebook Presents series of...
Dr. Rocco Errico clarifies the original intent of biblical texts by comparing Aramaic texts with Greek and Hebrew versions. He shows how ancient idioms have ...
Dr. Rocco Errico clarifies the original intent of biblical texts by comparing Aramaic texts with Greek and Hebrew versions. He shows how ancient idioms have ...
In over 100 years-National Geographic magazine has not featured an article on Aramaic Chrisitans (Assyrians and Chaldeans) or Coptic (Egyptian) Christians-but has presented perhaps hundreds of articles on Arabs and Muslims. A 2009 article on "Arab Christians" (the first in a century) contains very offensive comments.
In over 100 years-National Geographic magazine has not featured an article on Aramaic Chrisitans (Assyrians and Chaldeans) or Coptic (Egyptian) Christians-but has presented perhaps hundreds of articles on Arabs and Muslims. A 2009 article on "Arab Christians" (the first in a century) contains very offensive comments.
published:23 Jan 2012
views:1149
Sebastian Brock — on the Syriac Mystics (Interview with James Bean) Part 2
Meet the "great grandchildren" of Saint Thomas, Apostle of the East. No doubt this is one of the few programs on radio that has ever explored this little-kno...
Meet the "great grandchildren" of Saint Thomas, Apostle of the East. No doubt this is one of the few programs on radio that has ever explored this little-kno...
A talk given at the Middle Eastern Festival of Spirituality and Peace in Edinburgh, Dr Thomas Daffern explores the esoteric commonalities of the great Middle Eastern and Indo-European spiritual teaching systems. What do Kabbalah, Sufism, Esoteric Christianity and ancient Pagan traditions have in common? What clues and signs are there that point towards a common overarching unity on which peace can be built?
Different understandings of the divine energy can be reconciled through mapping the sounds of the Hebrew, Arabic, Aramaic, Greek, Latin, Sanskrit and Gaelic alphabets, and learning to follow the journey of the ancient sounds themselves, to the primal source of peace and wisdom.
The author has been a student of the mysteries of philosophy for many years. He is the Peace Druid of Britain, and has a PhD in the transpersonal history of the modern search for peace 1945-2001 from the University of London. He directs the International Institute of Peace Studies and Global Philosophy from a castle on Loch Goil in Argyll, Scotland. See www.educationaid.net for details and www.lulu.com/iipsgp for Dr Daffern's publications.
A talk given at the Middle Eastern Festival of Spirituality and Peace in Edinburgh, Dr Thomas Daffern explores the esoteric commonalities of the great Middle Eastern and Indo-European spiritual teaching systems. What do Kabbalah, Sufism, Esoteric Christianity and ancient Pagan traditions have in common? What clues and signs are there that point towards a common overarching unity on which peace can be built?
Different understandings of the divine energy can be reconciled through mapping the sounds of the Hebrew, Arabic, Aramaic, Greek, Latin, Sanskrit and Gaelic alphabets, and learning to follow the journey of the ancient sounds themselves, to the primal source of peace and wisdom.
The author has been a student of the mysteries of philosophy for many years. He is the Peace Druid of Britain, and has a PhD in the transpersonal history of the modern search for peace 1945-2001 from the University of London. He directs the International Institute of Peace Studies and Global Philosophy from a castle on Loch Goil in Argyll, Scotland. See www.educationaid.net for details and www.lulu.com/iipsgp for Dr Daffern's publications.
Aramaic Interview with Fr Brutos Bethlehem, Syrian Orthodox Church Virgin Mary
Aramaic Interview with Fr Brutos Bethlehem, Syrian Orthodox Church Virgin Mary
Directed By: John-Roger, Dss & Jsu Garcia, Dss
Aramaic (Classical Syriac: ܐܪܡܝܐ Aramaya) is a family of languages or dialects, belonging to the Semitic family. More specifically, it is a part of the Northwest Semitic subfamily, which also includes Canaanite languages such as Hebrew and Phoenician. The Aramaic script was widely adopted for other languages and is ancestral to both the Arabic and modern Hebrew alphabets.
During its over 3,000 years of written history,[2] Aramaic has served variously as a language of administration of empires and as a language of divine worship. It was the lingua franca of the Neo-Assyrian Empire, Neo-Babylonian Empire and Achaemenid Empire, the day-to-day language of Yehud Medinata and of Judaea (539 BC – 70 AD), the language that Jesus probably used the most,[3][4][5] the language of large sections of the biblical books of Daniel and Ezra, and is the main language of the Talmud and Syriac Christianity, in particular the Assyrian Church of the East, the Chaldean Catholic Church, the Ancient Church of the East, the Saint Thomas Christian Churches in India, the Syriac Orthodox Church and the Maronite Church.[6] However, Jewish Aramaic was different from the other forms both in lettering and grammar. Parts of the Dead Sea Scrolls are in Jewish Aramaic showing the Jewish lettering, related to the Hebrew script. Aramaic was also the original language of the Bahrani people of Eastern Arabia.[7]
Aramaic's long history and diverse and widespread use has led to the development of many divergent varieties, which are sometimes considered dialects, though they are distinct enough that they are sometimes considered languages. Therefore, there is not one singular, static Aramaic language; each time and place rather has had its own variation. Aramaic is retained as a liturgical language by certain Eastern Christian churches, in the form of Syriac, the Aramaic variety by which Eastern Christianity was diffused, whether or not those communities once spoke it or another form of Aramaic as their vernacular, but have since shifted to another language as their primary community language.
Modern Aramaic is spoken today as a first language by many scattered, predominantly small, and largely isolated communities of differing Christian, Jewish, and Mandean ethnic groups of West Asia[8]—most numerously by the Assyrians in the form of Assyrian Neo-Aramaic and Chaldean Neo-Aramaic—that have all retained use of the once dominant lingua franca despite subsequent language shifts experienced throughout the Middle East. The Aramaic languages are now considered endangered.[9]
published:25 Sep 2014
views:8
2:00
Learn to Write Aramaic - modern Eastern Assyrian alphabet (cursive script 5 of 5)
In previous videos, you learned to write the classical cursive alphabet, cursive ligatures...
Learn to Write Aramaic - modern Eastern Assyrian alphabet (cursive script 5 of 5)
Learn to Write Aramaic - modern Eastern Assyrian alphabet (cursive script 5 of 5)
In previous videos, you learned to write the classical cursive alphabet, cursive ligatures and final letter forms. Now take a look at the same letters in the...
Ghada Shbeir - Aramaic lullaby غادة شبير Specialist and professional performer of traditional Middle Eastern folks and Arabo Andalusian songs, Syriac and Anc...
Aramaic Project-Part 27. The Syriac East meets the Latin West in Kerala, India
Excerpt from Dr. Joseph J. Palackal’s presentation at the conference on “Safeguarding the ...
published:10 Jun 2015
Aramaic Project-Part 27. The Syriac East meets the Latin West in Kerala, India
Aramaic Project-Part 27. The Syriac East meets the Latin West in Kerala, India
Excerpt from Dr. Joseph J. Palackal’s presentation at the conference on “Safeguarding the Musical Traditions of Eastern Christianity” at the Rome campus of the University of Notre Dame, Indiana. May 24-26, 2015.
http://sacredmusic.nd.edu/assets/164559/rome_eastern_christian_music_congress_2015_final.pdf
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The pronunciation of Syriac in Kerala and Iraq. Conversations with Dr. Koonammakkal Thoma Kathanar, Fr. Emmanuel Thelly, CMI, and Joseph J. Palackal (http://www.TheCMSIndia.org/palackal.html).
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Please acknowledge TheCMSIndia.org and/or Joseph J. Palackal (http://www.TheCMSIndia.org/palackal.html) when this video is used for academic or other purposes.
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JESUS & INDIA: A CONNECTION THROUGH LANUAGE AND MUSIC. The Aramaic Project
(http://www.TheCMSIndia.org/Aramaic-Project.html).
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A Syriac Aramaic Hymn from the Holy Syriac Orthodox Liturgy,the first Christian Church in the Middle East which Jesus Christ talked its Holy Aramaic Language...
THE LORD'S PRAYER IN ARAMAIC WITH ENGLISH TRANSLATION
THE LORD'S PRAYER IN ARAMAIC WITH ENGLISH TRANSLATION
Aramaic Language: The Language of Christ The Aramaic language is a Semitic language closely related to Hebrew. Originally the language of the Aramaeans (Aram...
Ghada Shbeir ia a specialist and a professional performer of traditional Middle Eastern fo...
published:27 Jun 2015
Ghada Shbeir - Aramaic hymns
Ghada Shbeir - Aramaic hymns
Ghada Shbeir ia a specialist and a professional performer of traditional Middle Eastern folks and Arabo Andalusian songs, Syriac Aramaic and Ancient Maronite chants, Ghada Shbeir has an exquisite talent and the ability to move easily and with professionalism from traditional folk songs to religious chants. She has earned frequent comparison to some of the best Middle Eastern singers - 26 June 2015.
published:27 Jun 2015
views:63
12:05
Bible Translations: Peshitta- Aramaic English New Testament (AENT)
http://theoscholar.blogspot.com/ http://bible-geeks.com A look at the translation of the P...
Bible Translations: Peshitta- Aramaic English New Testament (AENT)
Bible Translations: Peshitta- Aramaic English New Testament (AENT)
http://theoscholar.blogspot.com/ http://bible-geeks.com A look at the translation of the Peshitta by Messianic Jewish teacher Andrew Gabriel Roth. It is a li...
Syriac Christian militias at war against IS. Syriac-Aramaic (Assyrians) and Kurds fight the IS.
French TV channel "France24" reports about the fight of the Syriac (Assyrian) Christians a...
published:08 Feb 2015
Syriac Christian militias at war against IS. Syriac-Aramaic (Assyrians) and Kurds fight the IS.
Syriac Christian militias at war against IS. Syriac-Aramaic (Assyrians) and Kurds fight the IS.
French TV channel "France24" reports about the fight of the Syriac (Assyrian) Christians and Kurds against the IS terrorist organisation.
In north-eastern Syria, Kurds and the Syriac Christian community have begun carving out an autonomous region for themselves.
Der Französiche Sender "France24" berichtet über den Kampf der Syrisch-Aramäischen (Assyrischen) Christen und der Kurden gegen die Terrororganisation des "Islmaischen Staates" gleichzeitg wird über die Autonome Region berichtet die von den Kurden und den Syrisch-Aramäischen Christen aufgebaut wurde.
published:08 Feb 2015
views:22
5:55
Aramaic Project-Part 28. The Pronunciation Syriac in India and Iraq
Excerpt from Dr. Joseph J. Palackal’s presentation at the conference on “Safeguarding the ...
published:10 Jun 2015
Aramaic Project-Part 28. The Pronunciation Syriac in India and Iraq
Aramaic Project-Part 28. The Pronunciation Syriac in India and Iraq
Excerpt from Dr. Joseph J. Palackal’s presentation at the conference on “Safeguarding the Musical Traditions of Eastern Christianity” ( http://sacredmusic.nd.edu/assets/164559/rome_eastern_christian_music_congress_2015_final.pdf)
at the Rome campus (http://international.nd.edu/global-gateways/rome/) of the University of Notre Dame, Indiana (https://www.nd.edu). May 24-26, 2015.
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The pronunciation of Syriac in Kerala and Iraq. Conversations with Dr. Koonammakkal Thoma Kathanar, Fr. Emmanuel Thelly, CMI, and Joseph J. Palackal (http://www.TheCMSIndia.org/palackal.html).
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JESUS & INDIA: A CONNECTION THROUGH LANUAGE AND MUSIC. The Aramaic Project
(http://www.TheCMSIndia.org/Aramaic-Project.html).
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published:10 Jun 2015
views:25
4:21
Report about the Assyrian Syriac-Aramaic Christian Sootoro Militia GPF (Gozarto Protection Force)
Report about the Assyrian Syriac-Aramaic Christian Sootoro Militia also know as the GPF (G...
published:08 Aug 2015
Report about the Assyrian Syriac-Aramaic Christian Sootoro Militia GPF (Gozarto Protection Force)
Report about the Assyrian Syriac-Aramaic Christian Sootoro Militia GPF (Gozarto Protection Force)
Report about the Assyrian Syriac-Aramaic Christian Sootoro Militia also know as the GPF (Gozarto Protection Force) that are fighting ISIS in Hassakeh in North Eastern Syria (Gozarto).
Reportage über die Aramäische/Assyrische Sootoro (GPF Gozarto Protection Force) die die IS Terroristen im Nordosten Syriens bekämpft.
Haseke Süryani SOOTORO Birlikleri Suriye Ordusu'nun Safında Savaşıyor
published:08 Aug 2015
views:29
2:51
Torah in Aramaic
Reciting verses in Genesis 28:10 in the ancient near eastern dialect of Judean Aramaic. I ...
Reciting verses in Genesis 28:10 in the ancient near eastern dialect of Judean Aramaic. I am pronouncing the words relatively slowly and deliberately in orde...
Neo-Aramaic, or Modern Aramaic, languages are varieties of Aramaic that are spoken vernacu...
published:05 Aug 2015
Neo-Aramaic languages
Neo-Aramaic languages
Neo-Aramaic, or Modern Aramaic, languages are varieties of Aramaic that are spoken vernaculars in the medieval to modern era, evolving out of Middle Aramaic dialects around AD 1200 (conventional date). The term strictly excludes those Aramaic languages that are used only as literary, sacred or classical languages today (for example, Targumic Aramaic, Classical Syriac and Classical Mandaic). However, these classical languages continue to have influence over the colloquial, Neo-Aramaic languages. Eastern Aramaic dialects are spoken primarily by ethnic Assyrians, who are members of the Assyrian Church of the East, Chaldean Catholic Church (Assyrian Catholics), Syriac Orthodox Church, Ancient Church of the East, Assyrian Pentecostal Church and Assyrian Evangelical Church. As of 2014[update] that number is significantly smaller and newer generations of Assyrians generally are not acquiring the language.
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published:05 Aug 2015
views:0
22:33
Assyrian people
The Assyrians (Syriac: ܐܬܘܪܝܐ), also known as Chaldeans, Syriacs, and Arameans (see names ...
published:05 Aug 2015
Assyrian people
Assyrian people
The Assyrians (Syriac: ܐܬܘܪܝܐ), also known as Chaldeans, Syriacs, and Arameans (see names of Syriac Christians) are an ethnic group whose origins lie in ancient Mesopotamia. They speak, read, and write distinct dialects of Eastern Aramaic exclusive to Mesopotamia and its immediate surroundings. Today that ancient territory is part of several nations: part of northern Iraq, southeastern Turkey, northeastern Syria and northwestern Iran. They are indigenous to, and have traditionally lived all over what is now northern Iraq, northeastern Syria, northwestern Iran, and southeastern Turkey.[better source needed] Most Assyrians speak an Eastern Aramaic language whose subdivisions include Assyrian Neo-Aramaic, Chaldean and Turoyo. The Assyrians are a Christian people, with most of them following various Eastern Rite Churches. Divisions exist between the speakers of Northeastern Neo-Aramaic, who mostly belong to the Assyrian Church of the East, Ancient Church of the East and Chaldean Catholic Church and have been historically concentrated in what is now northern Iraq, northwestern Iran, and southeastern Turkey, and speakers of Central Neo-Aramaic, who traditionally belong to the Syriac Orthodox Church and Syriac Catholic Church and have been historically concentrated in what is now southern Turkey, northern Syria and northern Iraq. Many have migrated to the Caucasus, North America, Australia and Europe during the past century or so. Diaspora and refugee communities are based in Europe (particularly Sweden, Germany, Netherlands, and France), North America, New Zealand, Lebanon, Armenia, Georgia, southern Russia, Israel, Azerbaijan and Jordan. Emigration was triggered by such events as the Assyrian Genocide by the Ottoman Empire during World War I, the Simele massacre in Iraq (1933), the Islamic revolution in Iran (1979), Arab Nationalist Baathist policies in Iraq and Syria, the Al-Anfal Campaign of Saddam Hussein, and Kurdish nationalist policies in northern Iraq. Most recently, the Iraq War has displaced the regional Assyrian community, as its people have faced ethnic and religious persecution at the hands of Islamic extremists and Arab and Kurdish nationalists. Of the one million or more Iraqis reported by the United Nations to have fled Iraq since the occupation, nearly 40% are Assyrian, although Assyrians comprised around 3% of the pre-war Iraqi population. According to a 2013 report by a Chaldean Syriac Assyrian Popular Council official, it is estimated that only 300,000 Assyrians remain in Iraq.
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published:05 Aug 2015
views:0
3:06
Assyrian people
The Assyrians (Syriac: ܣܘܪܝܝܐ), also known as Chaldeans, Syriacs, and Arameans (see names ...
published:05 Jul 2015
Assyrian people
Assyrian people
The Assyrians (Syriac: ܣܘܪܝܝܐ), also known as Chaldeans, Syriacs, and Arameans (see names of Syriac Christians) are an ethnic group whose origins lie in ancient Mesopotamia. They speak, read, and write distinct dialects of Eastern Aramaic exclusive to Mesopotamia and its immediate surroundings. Today that ancient territory is part of several nations: part of northern Iraq, southeastern Turkey, northeastern Syria and northwestern Iran. They are indigenous to, and have traditionally lived all over what is now northern Iraq, northeastern Syria, northwestern Iran, and southeastern Turkey.[better source needed] Most Assyrians speak an Eastern Aramaic language whose subdivisions include Assyrian Neo-Aramaic, Chaldean and Turoyo. The Assyrians are a Christian people, with most of them following various Eastern Rite Churches. Divisions exist between the speakers of Northeastern Neo-Aramaic, who mostly belong to the Assyrian Church of the East, Ancient Church of the East and Chaldean Catholic Church and have been historically concentrated in what is now northern Iraq, northwestern Iran, and southeastern Turkey, and speakers of Central Neo-Aramaic, who traditionally belong to the Syriac Orthodox Church and Syriac Catholic Church and have been historically concentrated in what is now southern Turkey, northern Syria and northern Iraq. Many have migrated to the Caucasus, North America, Australia and Europe during the past century or so. Diaspora and refugee communities are based in Europe (particularly Sweden, Germany, Netherlands, and France), North America, New Zealand, Lebanon, Armenia, Georgia, southern Russia, Israel, Azerbaijan and Jordan. Emigration was triggered by such events as the Assyrian Genocide by the Ottoman Empire during World War I, the Simele massacre in Iraq (1933), the Islamic revolution in Iran (1979), Arab Nationalist Baathist policies in Iraq and Syria, the Al-Anfal Campaign of Saddam Hussein, and Kurdish nationalist policies in northern Iraq. Most recently, the Iraq War has displaced the regional Assyrian community, as its people have faced ethnic and religious persecution at the hands of Islamic extremists and Arab and Kurdish nationalists. Of the one million or more Iraqis reported by the United Nations to have fled Iraq since the occupation, nearly 40% are Assyrian, although Assyrians comprised around 3% of the pre-war Iraqi population. According to a 2013 report by a Chaldean Syriac Assyrian Popular Council official, it is estimated that only 300,000 Assyrians remain in Iraq.
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published:05 Jul 2015
views:1
23:32
Arameans
The Arameans, or Aramaeans, (Aramaic: ܐܪ̈ܡܝܐ, ארמיא ; ʼaramáyé) were a Northwest Semitic ...
published:05 Aug 2015
Arameans
Arameans
The Arameans, or Aramaeans, (Aramaic: ܐܪ̈ܡܝܐ, ארמיא ; ʼaramáyé) were a Northwest Semitic people who originated in what is now present-day western, southern and central Syria (Biblical Aram) during the Late Bronze Age and the Iron Age. Large groups migrated to Babylonia in southern Mesopotamia during the 11th and 10th centuries BC, where they established small semi-independent Aramaic kingdoms, in the Levant and in Mesopotamia conquered Aramean populations were forcibly deported throughout the Assyrian Empire, e.g. under the rule of king Tiglath-Pileser III. Some Syriac Christians in the Middle East (particularly in Syria and Lebanon) still espouse an Aramean ethnic identity to this day and a minority still speak various Aramaic dialects or languages. In northeast Syria, northern Iraq, northwest Iran and south eastern Turkey, Akkadian influenced Eastern Aramaic-Northeastern Neo-Aramaic dialects are still spoken fluently by between 575,000 and 1,000,000 people, but most of the speakers of these dialects are ethnic Mesopotamian Assyrians, the indigenous people of Upper Mesopotamia, rather than Levantine Arameans. The Western Aramaic language of the Arameans in Maalula is in danger of extinction, although Aramean personal and family names are still found among the Syriac Christians throughout the Middle East. The Arameans never had a unified nation; they were divided into small independent kingdoms across parts of the Near East, particularly in what is now more Syria and Jordan. After the Bronze Age collapse, their political influence was confined to a number of states such as Aram Damascus and the partly Aramean Syro-Hittite states, which were entirely absorbed into the Neo-Assyrian Empire by the 9th century BC. By contrast, Imperial Aramaic came to be the lingua franca of the entire Near East and Asia Minor when introduced as the official language of the vast Neo-Assyrian Empire by Tiglath-pileser III in the mid-8th century BC. This empire stretched from Cyprus and the East Mediterranean in the west to Persia and Elam to India in the east, and from Armenia and the Caucasus in the north to Egypt and Arabia in the south. This version of Aramaic later developed in Mesopotamia into the literary languages such as Syriac and Mandaic. Scholars have used the term "Aramaization" for the process by which the Assyrian and Babylonian Akkadian-speaking peoples became eastern Aramaic-speaking during the later Iron Age and intermingled with the Arameans.
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published:05 Aug 2015
views:0
1:12
Aramaic language
Aramaic (Classical Syriac: ܐܪܡܝܐ Arāmāyā) is a family of languages or dialects, belonging ...
published:05 Aug 2015
Aramaic language
Aramaic language
Aramaic (Classical Syriac: ܐܪܡܝܐ Arāmāyā) is a family of languages or dialects, belonging to the Semitic family. More specifically, it is a part of the Northwest Semitic subfamily, which also includes Canaanite languages such as Hebrew and Phoenician. The Aramaic script was widely adopted for other languages and is ancestral to both the Arabic and modern Hebrew alphabets. During its approximately 3,100 years of written history, Aramaic has served variously as a language of administration of empires and as a language of divine worship. It was the lingua franca of the Neo-Assyrian Empire (911–605 BC), Neo-Babylonian Empire (605–539 BC) and Achaemenid Empire (539–323 BC), of the Neo-Assyrian states of Assur, Adiabene, Osroene and Hatra, the Aramean state of Palmyra, and the day-to-day language of Yehud Medinata and of Judaea (539 BC – 70 AD), the language that Jesus probably used the most, the language of large sections of the biblical books of Daniel and Ezra, and is the main language of the Talmud and Syriac Christianity, in particular the Church of the East, the Chaldean Catholic Church, the Saint Thomas Christian Churches in India, the Syriac Orthodox Church, the Assyrian Pentecostal Church, and the Maronite Church. It is also the language of the Mandeans and their Gnostic religion, Mandeanism, as well as the language of the once widespread but now extinct Manichaean religion. However, Jewish Aramaic was different from the other forms both in lettering and grammar. Parts of the Dead Sea Scrolls are in Jewish Aramaic showing the Jewish lettering, related to the Hebrew script. Aramaic was also the original language of the Bahrani people of Eastern Arabia. Aramaic's long history and diverse and widespread use has led to the development of many divergent varieties, which are sometimes considered dialects, though they are distinct enough that they are sometimes considered languages. Therefore, there is not one singular, static Aramaic language; each time and place rather has had its own variation. Aramaic is retained as a liturgical language by certain Eastern Christian churches, in the form of Syriac, the Aramaic variety by which Eastern Christianity was diffused, whether or not those communities once spoke it or another form of Aramaic as their vernacular, but have since shifted to another language as their primary community language. Modern Aramaic is spoken today as a first language by many scattered, predominantly small, and largely isolated communities of differing Christian, Jewish, and Mandean ethnic groups of West Asia—most numerously by the Assyrians in the form of Assyrian Neo-Aramaic and Chaldean Neo-Aramaic—that have all retained use of the once dominant lingua franca despite subsequent language shifts experienced throughout the Middle East. The Aramaic languages are now considered endangered.
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published:05 Aug 2015
views:0
5:29
Aramaic language
Aramaic (Classical Syriac: ܐܪܡܝܐ Arāmāyā) is a family of languages or dialects, belonging ...
published:05 Jul 2015
Aramaic language
Aramaic language
Aramaic (Classical Syriac: ܐܪܡܝܐ Arāmāyā) is a family of languages or dialects, belonging to the Semitic family. More specifically, it is a part of the Northwest Semitic subfamily, which also includes Canaanite languages such as Hebrew and Phoenician. The Aramaic script was widely adopted for other languages and is ancestral to both the Arabic and modern Hebrew alphabets. During its approximately 3,100 years of written history, Aramaic has served variously as a language of administration of empires and as a language of divine worship. It was the lingua franca of the Neo-Assyrian Empire (911-605 BC), Neo-Babylonian Empire (605-539 BC) and Achaemenid Empire (539-323 BC), of the Neo-Assyrian states of Assur, Adiabene, Osroene and Hatra, the Aramean state of Palmyra, and the day-to-day language of Yehud Medinata and of Judaea (539 BC – 70 AD), the language that Jesus probably used the most, the language of large sections of the biblical books of Daniel and Ezra, and is the main language of the Talmud and Syriac Christianity, in particular the Assyrian Church of the East, the Nestorian Church, the Chaldean Catholic Church, the Ancient Church of the East, the Saint Thomas Christian Churches in India, the Syriac Orthodox Church, the Assyrian Pentecostal Church, and the Maronite Church. It is also the language of the Mandeans and their Gnostic religion, Mandeanism, as well as the language of the once widespread but now extinct Manichaean religion. However, Jewish Aramaic was different from the other forms both in lettering and grammar. Parts of the Dead Sea Scrolls are in Jewish Aramaic showing the Jewish lettering, related to the Hebrew script. Aramaic was also the original language of the Bahrani people of Eastern Arabia. Aramaic's long history and diverse and widespread use has led to the development of many divergent varieties, which are sometimes considered dialects, though they are distinct enough that they are sometimes considered languages. Therefore, there is not one singular, static Aramaic language; each time and place rather has had its own variation. Aramaic is retained as a liturgical language by certain Eastern Christian churches, in the form of Syriac, the Aramaic variety by which Eastern Christianity was diffused, whether or not those communities once spoke it or another form of Aramaic as their vernacular, but have since shifted to another language as their primary community language. Modern Aramaic is spoken today as a first language by many scattered, predominantly small, and largely isolated communities of differing Christian, Jewish, and Mandean ethnic groups of West Asia—most numerously by the Assyrians in the form of Assyrian Neo-Aramaic and Chaldean Neo-Aramaic—that have all retained use of the once dominant lingua franca despite subsequent language shifts experienced throughout the Middle East. The Aramaic languages are now considered endangered.
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published:05 Jul 2015
views:0
12:05
Christianity in Iraq
The Christians of Iraq are considered to be one of the oldest continuous Christian communi...
published:05 Aug 2015
Christianity in Iraq
Christianity in Iraq
The Christians of Iraq are considered to be one of the oldest continuous Christian communities in the world. The vast majority are Eastern Aramaic-speaking ethnic Assyrians; however, there is a very small community of Armenians, too. In Iraq, Christians numbered about 1,500,000 in 2003, representing just over 6% of the population of the country down from 12% on 1947 in a population of 4.7 million. They numbered over 1.4 million in 1987 or 8% of the population. After the Iraq War, it was estimated that the number of Christians in Iraq had dropped to less than 450,000 by 2013 - with estimates as low as 200,000. Chaldean Catholics, formerly 'Nestorians' (Church of the East which denies they are Nestorian), are the majority among the Christians of Iraq. Christians live primarily in Baghdad, Basra, Mosul, Arbil and Kirkuk and in Assyrian towns and regions such as the Nineveh Plains in the north. Christians in Iraq are not allowed to proselytise, especially to Muslims. Muslims who change their faith to Christianity, are subject to societal and official pressure, which may lead to death penalty. However, there are cases in which a Muslim will adopt the Christian faith, secretly declaring his/her apostasy. In effect, they are practising Christians, but legally Muslims; thus, the statistics of Iraqi Christians does not include Muslim apostates to Christianity.
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Syriac Christianity (Syriac: ܡܫܝܚܝܘܬܐ ܣܘܪܝܝܬܐ / mšiḥāiūṯā suryāiṯā) encompasses the multiple Churches of Eastern Christianity whose services tend to feature liturgical use of ancient Syriac, a dialect of Middle Aramaic that emerged in Edessa in the early 1st century AD, and is closely related to the Aramaic of Jesus. Jesus Christ was known as Yešua` mšiḥā in Aramaic. With a history going back to the 1st century AD, in modern times Syriac Christianity is represented by denominations primarily in the Middle East, Asia Minor and in Kerala, India. Christianity began in the Middle East in Jerusalem among Jewish Aramaic-speaking Semitic peoples of Judah (modern Israel, Palestinian Territories and Jordan). It quickly spread, initially to other Semitic peoples, in Parthian-ruled Assyria and Mesopotamia (modern Iraq), Roman-ruled Syria (ancient Aramea), Phoenicia (modern Lebanon), southern and eastern Asia Minor (modern Turkey), and northwestern Persia (modern Iran) and Malta. From there it spread to Greece, Armenia, Egypt, Georgia, the Caucasus region and on into The Balkans, India, North Africa, Rome, Ethiopia, Nubia (modern Sudan) and Arabia, and eventually southern and western Europe. Syriac Christianity is divided into two major traditions: The East Syrian Rite, historically centered in Assyria/Upper Mesopotamia, and the West Syrian Rite, centered in Antioch and the Mediterranean coast (the Levant). The East Syrian Rite tradition was historically associated with the Assyrian founded Church of the East, and is currently employed by the Middle Eastern churches that descend from it, the Assyrian Church of the East, the Ancient Church of the East, and the Chaldean Catholic Church (the members of these churches are Eastern Aramaic-speaking ethnic Assyrians), as well as by the Syro-Malabar Catholic Church of India. The West Syrian tradition is used by the Syriac Orthodox Church, the Maronite Church, the Syriac Catholic Church, and churches that descend from them, as well as by the Malankara Churches of India, which follow the Saint Thomas Christian tradition.
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published:05 Aug 2015
views:0
67:26
Emran El-Badawi: "The Qur’an and the Aramaic Gospel Traditions" (NBIS, 17/7/15)
*** The Qur'an and the Aramaic Gospel Traditions (Routledge, 2013) written by Emran El-Bad...
published:29 Jul 2015
Emran El-Badawi: "The Qur’an and the Aramaic Gospel Traditions" (NBIS, 17/7/15)
Emran El-Badawi: "The Qur’an and the Aramaic Gospel Traditions" (NBIS, 17/7/15)
*** The Qur'an and the Aramaic Gospel Traditions (Routledge, 2013) written by Emran El-Badawi, professor and director of the Arab Studies program at the University of Houston, is a recent addition to the field of research on the Qur'an and Aramaic and Syriac biblical texts. Professor El-Badawi asserts that the Qur'an is a product of an environment steeped in the Aramaic gospel traditions. Not a "borrowing" from the Aramaic gospel tradition, but rather the Qur'an contains a "dogmatic re-articulation" of elements from that tradition for an Arab audience. He introduces and examines this context in the second chapter, and then proceeds to compare passages of the Qur'an and passages of the Aramaic gospel in the subsequent four chapters.
These comparisons are organized according to four primary themes: prophets, clergy, the divine, and the apocalypse. Each chapter contains numerous images constituting the larger theme at work. For example in the chapter "Divine Judgment and the Apocalypse," images of paradise and hell taken from gospel traditions are compared to the Qur'anic casting of these images. Moreover, Professor El-Badawi includes three indices following his concluding chapter that provide a great deal of raw data and textual parallels between the Qur'an and the wide range of sources he has employed. The value of his work is evidenced by the fact it was nominated for the 2014 British-Kuwait Friendship Society's Book Prize in Middle Eastern Studies. ***
published:29 Jul 2015
views:28
1:51
Aramaic Lord's Prayer by Brian Mitchell
This original form of the Lord's Prayer has come to us in Greek. The scholar Joseph Fitzme...
published:13 Jul 2015
Aramaic Lord's Prayer by Brian Mitchell
Aramaic Lord's Prayer by Brian Mitchell
This original form of the Lord's Prayer has come to us in Greek. The scholar Joseph Fitzmeyer has translated the original text into first century Aramaic, the mother-tongue of Jesus. The musical mode used for the chant is Middle Eastern.
Words and music from the recording: "Songs of Presence: Contemplative Chants for the New Millennium - A Learning CD" produced by Praxis and All Saints' Episcopal Church. Executive Producer: Lynn C. Bauman (Available from www.praxisofprayer.com).
Body gestures from Lynn C. Bauman at Praxis: Resources for Spiritual Formation and Contemplative Living (www.praxisofprayer.com).
Brian Puida Mitchell can be reached at bmitchell@truc.ca. He is a member of the Kamloops Contemplative Group in Kamloops, BC.
Words and music from the recording: "Songs of Presence: Contemplative Chants for the New Millennium - A Learning CD" produced by Praxis and All Saints' Episcopal Church. Executive Producer: Lynn C. Bauman (Available from www.praxisofprayer.com)
Body gestures from Lynn C. Bauman at Praxis: Resources for Spiritual Formation and Contemplative Living (www.praxisofprayer.com)
published:13 Jul 2015
views:4
6:17
Syrian civil war takes over small Aramaic village
While lawmakers in the US debate on what to do in Syria, the Syrian government and anti-go...
published:16 Jun 2015
Syrian civil war takes over small Aramaic village
Syrian civil war takes over small Aramaic village
While lawmakers in the US debate on what to do in Syria, the Syrian government and anti-government rebels clashed once again on Thursday near the small town of Maaloula. The small Christian Aramaic town Maloula, in the north of Damascus holds one of the oldest minority Syrian populations in the country. The recent conflict has many minorities in the area worried about the repercussion the community faces in the country's civil war. The arch Bishop of the Syrian Church for Eastern US, Mor Cyril Aphrem Karim, joins us for more.
published:16 Jun 2015
views:11
0:23
Holy Bible From the Ancient Eastern Text George M Lamsa's Translation From the Aramaic of the Peshi
DOWNLOAD PDF books/ebooks here: http://bit.ly/bags858...
published:03 Jun 2015
Holy Bible From the Ancient Eastern Text George M Lamsa's Translation From the Aramaic of the Peshi
Holy Bible From the Ancient Eastern Text George M Lamsa's Translation From the Aramaic of the Peshi
DOWNLOAD PDF books/ebooks here: http://bit.ly/bags858
published:03 Jun 2015
views:4
4:09
Aramaic Project-Part 24. Marianne Thaila sings the famous chant, "Qambel Maran"
JESUS & INDIA: A CONNECTION THROUGH LANUAGE AND MUSIC. The Aramaic Project
(http://www.Th...
published:01 Jun 2015
Aramaic Project-Part 24. Marianne Thaila sings the famous chant, "Qambel Maran"
Aramaic Project-Part 24. Marianne Thaila sings the famous chant, "Qambel Maran"
JESUS & INDIA: A CONNECTION THROUGH LANUAGE AND MUSIC. The Aramaic Project
(http://www.TheCMSIndia.org/Aramaic-Project.html).
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Marianne Thaila in conversation with Joseph J. Palackal (http://www.TheCMSIndia.org/palackal.html). Recorded on 16 May 2015 at Marianne's house at New Hyde Park, New York.
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Please acknowledge TheCMSIndia.org and/or Joseph J. Palackal (http://www.TheCMSIndia.org/palackal.html) when this video is used for academic or other purposes.
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published:01 Jun 2015
views:13
0:38
The Lord's Prayer in Aramaic recited by Tony Lamair Burks II
Tony Lamair Burks II reciting The Lord's Prayer in Aramaic as taught by the Rev. Dr. Rococ...
published:29 May 2015
The Lord's Prayer in Aramaic recited by Tony Lamair Burks II
The Lord's Prayer in Aramaic recited by Tony Lamair Burks II
Tony Lamair Burks II reciting The Lord's Prayer in Aramaic as taught by the Rev. Dr. Rococo A. Errico, one of the world's foremost experts on the Bible, Aramaic language, and Near Eastern culture.
Mandaeism or Mandaeanism (Modern Mandaic: מנדעיותא Mandaʻiūtā; Arabic: مندائية Mandāʼīya...
published:05 Aug 2015
Mandaeism
Mandaeism
Mandaeism or Mandaeanism (Modern Mandaic: מנדעיותא Mandaʻiūtā; Arabic: مندائية Mandāʼīyah/Mandāʾiyyah) is a gnostic religion with a strongly dualistic worldview. Its adherents, the Mandaeans, revere Adam, Abel, Seth, Enosh, Noah, Shem, Aram and especially John the Baptist, but reject Abraham, Moses and Jesus of Nazareth. The Aramaic manda means "knowledge," as does Greek gnosis. According to most scholars, Mandaeans migrated from the Southern Levant to Mesopotamia in the first centuries CE, and are of pre-Arab and pre-Islamic origin. They are Semites and speak a dialect of Eastern Aramaic known as Mandaic. They may well be related to the "Nabateans of Iraq" who were pagan, Aramaic-speaking indigenous pre-Arab and pre-Islamic inhabitants of southern Iraq. Mandaeans appear to have settled in northern Mesopotamia, but the religion has been practised primarily around the lower Karun, Euphrates and Tigris and the rivers that surround the Shatt-al-Arab waterway, part of southern Iraq and Khuzestan Province in Iran. There are thought to be between 60,000 and 70,000 Mandaeans worldwide. Until the 2003 Iraq war, almost all of them lived in Iraq. Many Mandaean Iraqis have since fled their country (as have many other Iraqis) because of the turmoil created by the 2003 invasion of Iraq and subsequent occupation by U.S. armed forces, and the related rise in sectarian violence by Muslim extremists. By 2007, the population of Mandaeans in Iraq had fallen to approximately 5,000. Most Mandaean Iraqis have sought refuge in Iran, with fellow Mandaeans there. Others have moved to northern Iraq. There has been a much smaller influx into Syria and Jordan, with smaller populations in Sweden, Australia, the United States and other Western countries. The Mandaeans have remained separate and intensely private—reports of them and of their religion have come primarily from outsiders, particularly from the Orientalist Julius Heinrich Petermann, Nicolas Siouffi (a Yazidi) and Lady Drower. An Anglican vicar, Rev. Peter Owen-Jones, included a short segment on a Mandaean group in Sydney, Australia, in his BBC series, Around the World in 80 Faiths.
Video is targeted to blind users
Attribution:
Article text available under CC-BY-SA
=======Image-Info=======
Image is in public domain
Author-Info: Charles W. King
Image Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Gema_o_Piedra_Abraxas_de_la_obra_"The_Gnostics_and_their_remains"_de_Charles_W._King,_1887.jpg
=======Image-Info========
published:05 Aug 2015
views:1
26:07
Mandaeism
Mandaeism or Mandaeanism (Modern Mandaic: Mandaʻiūtā (מנדעיותא); Arabic: مندائية Mandāʼī...
published:29 Nov 2014
Mandaeism
Mandaeism
Mandaeism or Mandaeanism (Modern Mandaic: Mandaʻiūtā (מנדעיותא); Arabic: مندائية Mandāʼīyah/Mandāʾiyyah) is a gnostic religion (Aramaic manda means "knowledge," as does Greek gnosis) with a strongly dualistic worldview. Its adherents, the Mandaeans, revere Adam, Abel, Seth, Enosh, Noah, Shem, Aram and especially John the Baptist, but reject Abraham, Moses and Jesus of Nazareth.
According to most scholars, Mandaeans migrated from the Southern Levant to Mesopotamia in the first centuries CE, and are of pre-Arab and pre-Islamic origin. They are Semites and speak a dialect of Eastern Aramaic known as Mandaic. They may well be related to the "Nabateans of Iraq" who were pagan, Aramaic-speaking indigenous pre-Arab and pre-Islamic inhabitants of southern Iraq.
This video is targeted to blind users.
Attribution:
Article text available under CC-BY-SA
Creative Commons image source in video
published:29 Nov 2014
views:2
151:55
The Gospel of Matthew in Aramaic (complete) Evangelium nach Matthäus auf Aramäisch
The Gospel of Matthew in Aramaic (complete, 152 minutes) Evangelium nach Matthäus auf Aram...
The Gospel of Matthew in Aramaic (complete) Evangelium nach Matthäus auf Aramäisch
The Gospel of Matthew in Aramaic (complete) Evangelium nach Matthäus auf Aramäisch
The Gospel of Matthew in Aramaic (complete, 152 minutes) Evangelium nach Matthäus auf Aramäisch (komplett, 152 Minuten) Speaker: Amanuel Benjamin Recording: ...
Unity. FM Radio Host Jesse Herriott Interviews Aramaic Spirituality Teacher Dale Allen Hoffman.wmv
Unity. FM Radio Host Jesse Herriott Interviews Aramaic Spirituality Teacher Dale Allen Hoffman.wmv
Jesse Herriott is joined this week by Aramaic spirituality teacher and mystic, Dale Allen Hoffman. Mystic Dale Allen Hoffman brings the words of Yeshua (Jesu...
Dr. Rocco Errico: A commentary on Mel Gibson's "The Passion of the Christ"
Dr. Rocco Errico: A commentary on Mel Gibson's "The Passion of the Christ"
A commentary on THE PASSION by Mel Gibson. Dr. Rocco A. Errico, author/scholar in the ancient near eastern culture and the language of Aramaic, the language ...
Learn to read and write Assyrian (Syriac-Aramaic) in five minutes
Learn to read, write, and type the Assyrian (Syriac-Aramaic) language in five minutes. Yo...
published:23 Apr 2015
Learn to read and write Assyrian (Syriac-Aramaic) in five minutes
Learn to read and write Assyrian (Syriac-Aramaic) in five minutes
Learn to read, write, and type the Assyrian (Syriac-Aramaic) language in five minutes. You will be amazed how fast and easy you will learn. Challenge yourself to find a more beautiful script and you will find none.
Obviously, this is not meant to replace a class or a passionate teacher for each teacher of this language is passionate and caring about his/her language.
If you know of a location that teaches the language, please post it and any other pertinent information. For example, I think Northeastern University in Chicago teaches the class. Also our churches and Assyrian National Council (Mootwaa) teaches the language, but I don't know the details.
visit www.LearnAssyrian.com for details and
www.AssyrianLibrary.com for more publications.
published:23 Apr 2015
views:14
39:43
East Is East ... West Is West
Alan talks about the meanings of the original Aramaic Hebrew words for "East" and "West" a...
Alan talks about the meanings of the original Aramaic Hebrew words for "East" and "West" and how you can understand many scriptural passages in deeper and mo...
In Part 1, Dr. Errico discusses the Aramaic language spoken by Jesus and how western influences and interpretations have often lead to a misunderstanding of ...
On the season premiere of The Lord's Prayer in Aramaic we have an in-depth conversation with the program's instructor Dr. Rocco Errico. Join us as he gives u...
On this episode of The Lord's Prayer in Aramaic. Dr. Rocco Errico explores the phrase "And...
published:22 Sep 2014
The Lord's Prayer in Aramaic - Episode 6
The Lord's Prayer in Aramaic - Episode 6
On this episode of The Lord's Prayer in Aramaic. Dr. Rocco Errico explores the phrase "And do not let us enter into temptation but free us from evil because yours are the kingdom and the power, and the glory from all ages, throughout all the ages. Amen" in the English translation of the Western Peshitta Text of The Lord's Prayer.
published:22 Sep 2014
views:5
22:22
Aramaic Voice of Jesus with Stephen Andrew Missick
Stephen Andrew Missick discusses the Aramaic language of Jesus and the Assyrian Christians...
published:12 Jan 2015
Aramaic Voice of Jesus with Stephen Andrew Missick
Aramaic Voice of Jesus with Stephen Andrew Missick
Stephen Andrew Missick discusses the Aramaic language of Jesus and the Assyrian Christians the last speakers of the language of Jesus Christ.
published:12 Jan 2015
views:10
20:07
The Aramaic New Testament
The Peshitta Aramaic version of the New Testament and English translations of the Peshitta...
سلسلة تعليم اللغة السريانية الدرس الرابع: الأحرف. Syriac Aramaic language -4
سلسلة تعليم اللغة السريانية الدرس الرابع: الأحرف. Syriac Aramaic language -4
سلسلة تعليم اللغة السريانية الآرامية الدرس الرابع. Syriac Aramaic language - 4 تابع درس الاحرف The Electronic Christian church on Facebook Presents series of...
The mystery of a Nazi gold train said to be buried in Poland has taken another strange turn, after the location where the armoured train is believed to be hidden was engulfed in flames - after the Polish government cast doubt over its existence. The train has caught the imagination of locals in the town of Walbrzych and the international media alike, after two men told the authorities they had pinpointed the location of the train ... AP)....
Janet Jackson exposed a breast on national television a decade ago and it sparked national outrage. Miley Cyrus' flash barely caused a shrug. Cyrus' exposure — you can't call it a wardrobe malfunction because no wardrobe was involved — came near the end of Sunday's MTV Video Music Awards. She peeked her head out from behind a black curtain that covered up all but her head, then it slipped to briefly reveal a bare breast ... "Oh, sorry ... ___....
Article by WN.com Correspondent DallasDarling. A video showing a Palestinian boy with a broken arm being held in a chokehold and at gunpoint by an Israeli soldier is a teachable moment for the world ... Meanwhile, several women and a young girl, the boy’s mother, aunt and sister, desperately attempt to pry the soldier from the boy with the girl biting the soldier’s hand ... In fact, Israel eventually occupied the West Bank and Gaza ... *(Note....
In prison interview, Baghdad commander is defiant as he details his deadly campaign that left more than 100 people dead, including children. For almost a year Abu Abdullah was the most wanted man in Baghdad. He was known among his bosses inside Islamic State as “the planner” – the man responsible for dispatching suicide bombers to attack mosques, universities, checkpoints and market places across the Iraqi capital ... His eyes flashed ... ....
Image caption Some people managed to cross into Hungary on Monday from Serbia - despite recently increased Hungarian border controls. German ChancellorAngela Merkel says "Europe as a whole needs to move" on how to deal with refugees and migrants arriving in the EU ... She was speaking after Austrian authorities arrested five suspected people smugglers along the country's eastern borders ... "The number of people... ....
The Syrian ArabArmed Forces are fighting the Islamic State in easternSyria. Australia is planning to bomb ISIS targets in eastern Syria ... But according to the Defense MinisterKevin Andrews last week, Australia will somehow be able to bomb ISIS targets in eastern Syria without becoming involved in the broader Syrian conflict ... The government would somehow have us believe that the Syrian military is absent in eastern Syria....
EasternUniversityAthletics) ...DAVIDS, Pa.-Eastern University Men's Soccer comes into the 2015 season with high expectations ... The Eastern team, according to Wagner, responded to the disappointment of last season's finish with an increased commitment to each other and a clear-eyed view of what it would take to get to the next level ... Eastern's home-opener is on Sept ... Eastern will be Manhattanville that day....
DalstonEasternCurveGarden in London... The legendary Woodburner is back! Every Tuesday night this summer, come and enjoy the beautiful Dalston Eastern Curve Garden with us, with ......
HAZARD — The details are coming together for construction to begin soon on a high-speed Internet network in EasternKentucky. The contract is in place to build and operate the system, which will come first to Eastern Kentucky but ultimately stretch across the state ... The broadband system is scheduled to be done in the eastern part of the state in the spring and across Kentucky in 2018....
A bill granting autonomy to Ukraine’s restive eastern regions cleared its first parliamentary hurdle on Monday, but it also sparked a violent right-wing protest that left a national guardsman dead and more than 120 people injured ... Kremlin officials deny involvement in the war in the east, which has ravaged eastern Ukraine and left at least 6,800 dead over the past 16 months, according to United Nations’ estimates....
A bill granting autonomy to Ukraine's restive eastern regions cleared its first parliamentary hurdle on Monday but sparked a violent right-wing protest that left a national guardsman dead and more than 120 people injured ... Kremlin officials deny involvement in the war that has ravaged eastern Ukraine and left at least 6800 dead over the last 16 months, according to United Nations' estimates....
The Andrews LaborGovernment is committed to improving regional roads with an 'alliance model' starting from today for South Western, Eastern and NorthEasternVictoria... The alliance builds on the success of the existing partnership in the North EasternRegion, which has been extended until 2020. The North Eastern Maintenance Alliance between ......
(Source. EasternOregon University) News contact. LauraHancock . University Advancement. 541-962-3585 ... August 31, 2015 ... 5 in the GilbertCenter at Eastern Oregon University ... Funds raised will benefit all easternOregon fire victims who have lost their homes and livelihoods, particularly those in Grant, Baker and Wallowa counties ... This content was issued by Eastern Oregon University on the 2015-08-31 and was initially posted on www.eou.edu....
Press TV has interviewed James Jatras, a former US Senate foreign policy analyst from Washington, and Peter Sinnott, an independent scholar from New York, to discuss the protests in Kiev that erupted after Ukrainian MPs backed the first reading of constitutional reforms that give greater powers to eastern regions....
GuangzhouRailway (Group) Co announced on Monday that construction of the western part of the high-speed railway circle in Hainan province is done, forming a complete railway circle around the island with the eastern part of the railway, which is already in operation. The eastern part of the circle started operation in December 2010, with an average occupancy rate of 90 percent....
On Tuesday Ms Dlamini-Zuma was speaking in Lusikisiki, Eastern Cape, at the launch of a women development centre in Palmerton...Eastern Cape MEC for agrarian and land reform Mlibo Qoboshiyane, speaking on behalf of premier Phumulo Masualle, said most state resources should be directed at empowering women, especially those in rural areas....
GuangzhouRailway (Group) Co announced on Aug 31 that construction of the western part of the high-speed railway circle in Hainan province is done, forming a complete railway circle around the island with the eastern part of the railway, which is already in operation. The eastern part of the circle started operation in December 2010, with an average occupancy rate of 90 percent....