- published: 15 Dec 2008
- author: journeymanpictures
7:20
Aramaic - Syria
December 2008 In a remote village nestled in Syrias picturesque Oalamoun mountains, reside...
published: 15 Dec 2008
author: journeymanpictures
Aramaic - Syria
December 2008 In a remote village nestled in Syrias picturesque Oalamoun mountains, resides a small Aramaic community. It is one of the last and it is devote...
- published: 15 Dec 2008
- author: journeymanpictures
10:01
The Syro-Aramaic Reading of the Quran
From Wikipedia: Christoph Luxenberg is the pseudonym of the author of The Syro-Aramaic Rea...
published: 15 Nov 2009
author: AtheistMediaDotCom
The Syro-Aramaic Reading of the Quran
From Wikipedia: Christoph Luxenberg is the pseudonym of the author of The Syro-Aramaic Reading of the Koran: A Contribution to the Decoding of the Language o...
- published: 15 Nov 2009
- views: 29343
- author: AtheistMediaDotCom
2:43
Syrian village clings to Aramaic language - 25 Dec 07
As Christians around the world mark the birth of Jesus Christ, for one Syrian village the ...
published: 25 Dec 2007
author: AlJazeeraEnglish
Syrian village clings to Aramaic language - 25 Dec 07
As Christians around the world mark the birth of Jesus Christ, for one Syrian village the day has a little extra significance. Maaloula is one of very few pl...
- published: 25 Dec 2007
- views: 73404
- author: AlJazeeraEnglish
49:04
The Language Of Jesus: Hebrew or Aramaic?
As a Bible student, you have probably noticed that in some translations in Acts Paul is sa...
published: 16 May 2012
author: Doug Hamp
The Language Of Jesus: Hebrew or Aramaic?
As a Bible student, you have probably noticed that in some translations in Acts Paul is said to have spoken Hebrew while speaking to the crowd in the Temple ...
- published: 16 May 2012
- views: 4610
- author: Doug Hamp
4:06
Aramaic - the most beautiful language in the world
Aramaic is the most beautiful language in the world and we Arameans can be proud. Aramaic,...
published: 12 May 2010
author: ArameansIraq
Aramaic - the most beautiful language in the world
Aramaic is the most beautiful language in the world and we Arameans can be proud. Aramaic, one of the oldest language in the world, spoken by Jesus , Moses a...
- published: 12 May 2010
- views: 55041
- author: ArameansIraq
2:23
Aramaic 'an endangered language'
The common language in the time of Jesus, Aramaic, is now so endangered the written versio...
published: 04 Apr 2010
author: theworldvideos1
Aramaic 'an endangered language'
The common language in the time of Jesus, Aramaic, is now so endangered the written version has become practically extinct. Now the only place left in the wo...
- published: 04 Apr 2010
- author: theworldvideos1
7:08
The Aramaic languages, by Father Yakup Aydin
Image & sound France: Baptiste Etchegaray Image & sound Turkey: Jean-Claude Luyat Editing:...
published: 25 Apr 2011
author: SorosoroTV
The Aramaic languages, by Father Yakup Aydin
Image & sound France: Baptiste Etchegaray Image & sound Turkey: Jean-Claude Luyat Editing: Caroline Laurent Learn more: http://www.sorosoro.org/en/the-aramai...
- published: 25 Apr 2011
- author: SorosoroTV
20:07
The Aramaic New Testament
The Peshitta Aramaic version of the New Testament and English translations of the Peshitta...
published: 10 Jan 2012
author: Aramaic12
The Aramaic New Testament
The Peshitta Aramaic version of the New Testament and English translations of the Peshitta and George Lamsa.
- published: 10 Jan 2012
- author: Aramaic12
0:34
Lord's Prayer in the Ancient Aramaic language
This is a recitation of the Lord's Prayer by the Bible translator Victor Alexander. it is ...
published: 22 Jul 2011
author: aramaicbible
Lord's Prayer in the Ancient Aramaic language
This is a recitation of the Lord's Prayer by the Bible translator Victor Alexander. it is in the Galilean dialect, with transliteration and translation in En...
- published: 22 Jul 2011
- author: aramaicbible
15:00
Syriac aramaic, the most beautifull language in the world...
Syriac aramaic, the most beautifull language in the world...made for the unity of all syri...
published: 15 Oct 2011
author: Ahridium777
Syriac aramaic, the most beautifull language in the world...
Syriac aramaic, the most beautifull language in the world...made for the unity of all syriacs(Arameans,Assyrians,Chaldeans,Maronites..ecc)
- published: 15 Oct 2011
- views: 13020
- author: Ahridium777
1:54
The Aramaic Language and the Gospels of Thomas and John
...
published: 15 Mar 2012
author: AbwoonResourceCenter
The Aramaic Language and the Gospels of Thomas and John
- published: 15 Mar 2012
- author: AbwoonResourceCenter
0:43
Aramaic language / język aramejski
Mieszkaniec wioski Ma'alula w Syrii mówi w języku aramejskim, którym posługiwał się Jezus ...
published: 17 Dec 2010
author: Wolandwropl
Aramaic language / język aramejski
Mieszkaniec wioski Ma'alula w Syrii mówi w języku aramejskim, którym posługiwał się Jezus Chrystus.
- published: 17 Dec 2010
- views: 5797
- author: Wolandwropl
5:56
Orthodox Church singing on Aramaic language
Orthodox Church singing on Aramaic language; Christ language. Crkveno pevanje na aramejsko...
published: 25 Nov 2012
author: blaza063
Orthodox Church singing on Aramaic language
Orthodox Church singing on Aramaic language; Christ language. Crkveno pevanje na aramejskom jeziku; jeziku kojim je govorio Hristos Gospod.
- published: 25 Nov 2012
- views: 180
- author: blaza063
1:41
Psalm 2 in Aramaic
Psalms in Aramaic Language Psalm 2 1 Why do the nations conspire [a] and the peoples plot ...
published: 07 Jul 2008
author: dawarda
Psalm 2 in Aramaic
Psalms in Aramaic Language Psalm 2 1 Why do the nations conspire [a] and the peoples plot in vain? 2 The kings of the earth take their stand and the rulers g...
- published: 07 Jul 2008
- views: 8871
- author: dawarda
Vimeo results:
91:38
TALKING TO GOD (HITBOD'DUT) complete (90 minutes)
Breslav Hassidim and Franciscan Catholics are told to talk to God in the woods. Gestalt Th...
published: 23 Mar 2011
author: franklyn wepner
TALKING TO GOD (HITBOD'DUT) complete (90 minutes)
Breslav Hassidim and Franciscan Catholics are told to talk to God in the woods. Gestalt Therapy provides us with many tools to help us get past our own ego trips and really speak to God. Part 1 of this project shows us "dumb hitbod'dut", all the wrong things to do, while parts 2-7 of this project attempt to demonstrate some of the right things to do to be more successful if and when you do talk to God.
TO VIEW OR DOWNLOAD ALL OF MY VIDEOS, PLUS 1500 PAGES OF MY EXPLANATORY ESSAYS (ALL AT NO CHARGE) PLEASE VISIT MY WEBSITE: franklynwepner.com. ALSO PLEASE NOTE MY NEW EMAIL ADDRESS, IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO SHARE WITH ME ANY COMMENTS ABOUT MY WORK: franklynwepner@gmail.com. IN THE LISTING OF VIDEOS THE LETTERS (HQ) REFER TO A HIGHER QUALITY VERSION OF THE VIDEO, WHICH IS AVAILABLE TO YOU IF YOUR COMPUTER CAN HANDLE IT.
"HITBOD'DUT"
CONVERSATIONS WITH MR. H
A LOWBROW, SLIGHTLY IRREVERENT
INTRODUCTION TO BRESLAV THEOLOGY
by franklyn wepner
december 2008
franklynwepner@gmail.com
PREFACE
(a) ON THE HYPOTHESIS OF THIS EXPERIMENT
The teachings of Rabbi Nachman of Breslav, as embodied in today's Breslav Hassidic sect of Judaism embody a form of what traditionally goes by the name of "Pietism". Pietism emphasizes faith and simplicity over against complex intellectual explanations of religious matters. But from the day that the Baal Shem Tov, it is said, sought God by talking to Him in the woods and jumping back and forth from one side of a stream to the other, until the day Nachman published his collected essays, "Likutei Moharan", much water in the stream of Jewish Pietism has passed under the bridge. That is to say, Likutei Moharan is not simple stuff. In order to write what he writes in those pages, Rabbi Nachman had to be well versed in the complex tradition of Pietist religion. Whether he got it from the original sources or from other compilations, he had to know something about the Neoplatonism of Philo, Ibn Gabirol, Judah Halevy , Abu-l-Barakat and Leone Ebreo. He had to know something about the responses of Hasdai Crescas to the Aristotelian Jewish tradition which crystallized in Maimonides "Guide For The Perplexed". To these two traditions, Nachman of Breslav added a strong emphasis upon the philosophy of language, in the sense that the Word of God is coming to us from a Jewish God who in a profound mystical sense is a speaking God, speaking to us and speaking through us. Though it is hard to find precedents to this in Judaism, we can find it in the work of the Christian theologian Johann Georg Hamann, which appeared, shortly before the time Nachman was born, in Konigsberg, East Prussia, not far from where Nachman lived in Eastern Europe. In the work of Hamann we find much of the philosophy of language which Nachman incorporated into his teachings. In other words, since the teachings of Rabbi Nachman of Breslav are so saturated with the complex tradition of Pietism, they are anything but a return to the naivete of the Bal Shem Tov. In this respect Nachman is deliberately deceptive when he tells his disciples again and again to keep it simple, and rely mainly on prayer.
But he also tells them to study! So he is not preaching mindlessness. Nor is he teaching blind following. His elevation of "the tsaddik of the generation" to the level of highest authority in the community of Hassidim is to be read both in the literal, "pshat", sense, and also in the profoundest philosophical sense as the Moses-Mashiach element potentially available in every person who submits himself to the theological process outlined in Likutei Moharan. Traditionally in Judaism it is said that each Jew shares in the living reality of Moses receiving the Torah on Mt. Sinai, but for Nachman this notion is merely the tip of an iceberg which is available to those who take the trouble to fathom the ideas of Likutei Moharan.
In view of these elements contained in Nachman's teachings, it should not be surprising that in what follows here I discover profundity rather than naivete in Nachman's advice to his disciples that they ought to sequester themselves every day and talk directly to God. Of course, we can talk naively to God in the manner of Tevye in Fiddler On the Roof. That procedure here I label "dumb hitbod'dut". Dumb hitbod'dut in that sense is in most cases better than no hitbod'dut at all. It can't hurt, and it might even be more useful than talking to oneself. But I am after bigger fish than that. My goal here is to begin to apply the principles of Likutei Moharan itself to the process of hitbod'dut. This introduction is not the place to spell out the complex principles of Likutei Moharan. You will find some of that in the sequel. Here I will just outline my basic assmptions for this project, which are that
(i) Since Neoplatonism and Hamann's philosophy of language are examples of dialectical thinking, therefore Likutei Moharan likewise is dialectical thinking.
(ii) Gestalt
14:34
TALKING TO GOD (HITBOD'DUT) part 7 (HQ)
Breslav Hassidim and Franciscan Catholics are told to talk to God in the woods. Gestalt Th...
published: 23 Dec 2010
author: franklyn wepner
TALKING TO GOD (HITBOD'DUT) part 7 (HQ)
Breslav Hassidim and Franciscan Catholics are told to talk to God in the woods. Gestalt Therapy provides us with many tools to help us get past our own ego trips and really speak to God. Part 1 of this project shows us "dumb hitbod'dut", all the wrong things to do, while parts 2-7 of this project attempt to demonstrate some of the right things to do to be more successful if and when you do talk to God.
"HITBOD'DUT" CONVERSATIONS WITH MR. H
A LOWBROW, SLIGHTLY IRREVERENT
INTRODUCTION TO BRESLAV THEOLOGY
by franklyn wepner
december 2008
franklynwepner@gmail.com
PREFACE
(a) ON THE HYPOTHESIS OF THIS EXPERIMENT
The teachings of Rabbi Nachman of Breslav, as embodied in today's Breslav Hassidic sect of Judaism embody a form of what traditionally goes by the name of "Pietism". Pietism emphasizes faith and simplicity over against complex intellectual explanations of religious matters. But from the day that the Baal Shem Tov, it is said, sought God by talking to Him in the woods and jumping back and forth from one side of a stream to the other, until the day Nachman published his collected essays, "Likutei Moharan", much water in the stream of Jewish Pietism has passed under the bridge. That is to say, Likutei Moharan is not simple stuff. In order to write what he writes in those pages, Rabbi Nachman had to be well versed in the complex tradition of Pietist religion. Whether he got it from the original sources or from other compilations, he had to know something about the Neoplatonism of Philo, Ibn Gabirol, Judah Halevy , Abu-l-Barakat and Leone Ebreo. He had to know something about the responses of Hasdai Crescas to the Aristotelian Jewish tradition which crystallized in Maimonides "Guide For The Perplexed". To these two traditions, Nachman of Breslav added a strong emphasis upon the philosophy of language, in the sense that the Word of God is coming to us from a Jewish God who in a profound mystical sense is a speaking God, speaking to us and speaking through us. Though it is hard to find precedents to this in Judaism, we can find it in the work of the Christian theologian Johann Georg Hamann, which appeared, shortly before the time Nachman was born, in Konigsberg, East Prussia, not far from where Nachman lived in Eastern Europe. In the work of Hamann we find much of the philosophy of language which Nachman incorporated into his teachings. In other words, since the teachings of Rabbi Nachman of Breslav are so saturated with the complex tradition of Pietism, they are anything but a return to the naivete of the Bal Shem Tov. In this respect Nachman is deliberately deceptive when he tells his disciples again and again to keep it simple, and rely mainly on prayer.
But he also tells them to study! So he is not preaching mindlessness. Nor is he teaching blind following. His elevation of "the tsaddik of the generation" to the level of highest authority in the community of Hassidim is to be read both in the literal, "pshat", sense, and also in the profoundest philosophical sense as the Moses-Mashiach element potentially available in every person who submits himself to the theological process outlined in Likutei Moharan. Traditionally in Judaism it is said that each Jew shares in the living reality of Moses receiving the Torah on Mt. Sinai, but for Nachman this notion is merely the tip of an iceberg which is available to those who take the trouble to fathom the ideas of Likutei Moharan.
In view of these elements contained in Nachman's teachings, it should not be surprising that in what follows here I discover profundity rather than naivete in Nachman's advice to his disciples that they ought to sequester themselves every day and talk directly to God. Of course, we can talk naively to God in the manner of Tevye in Fiddler On the Roof. That procedure here I label "dumb hitbod'dut". Dumb hitbod'dut in that sense is in most cases better than no hitbod'dut at all. It can't hurt, and it might even be more useful than talking to oneself. But I am after bigger fish than that. My goal here is to begin to apply the principles of Likutei Moharan itself to the process of hitbod'dut. This introduction is not the place to spell out the complex principles of Likutei Moharan. You will find some of that in the sequel. Here I will just outline my basic assmptions for this project, which are that
(i) Since Neoplatonism and Hamann's philosophy of language are examples of dialectical thinking, therefore Likutei Moharan likewise is dialectical thinking.
(ii) Gestalt Therapy also is dialectical thinking, containing both Platonic and Aristotelian aspects.
(iii) Therefore, applying dialectical thinking and Gestalt Therapy principles to hitbod'dut is entirely appropriate.
(iv) Hitbod'dut divested of the Gestalt Thrapy list of "self-interruptions" that rob our actions of their potential for authenticity and effectiveness is better than hitbod'dut saturated with this nonsense. Th
16:28
TALKING TO GOD (HITBOD'DUT) part 3 (HQ)
Breslav Hassidim and Franciscan Catholics are told to talk to God in the woods. Gestalt Th...
published: 23 Dec 2010
author: franklyn wepner
TALKING TO GOD (HITBOD'DUT) part 3 (HQ)
Breslav Hassidim and Franciscan Catholics are told to talk to God in the woods. Gestalt Therapy provides us with many tools to help us get past our own ego trips and really speak to God. Part 1 of this project shows us "dumb hitbod'dut", all the wrong things to do, while parts 2-7 of this project attempt to demonstrate some of the right things to do to be more successful if and when you do talk to God.
"HITBOD'DUT" CONVERSATIONS WITH MR. H
A LOWBROW, SLIGHTLY IRREVERENT
INTRODUCTION TO BRESLAV THEOLOGY
by franklyn wepner
december 2008
franklynwepner@gmail.com
PREFACE
(a) ON THE HYPOTHESIS OF THIS EXPERIMENT
The teachings of Rabbi Nachman of Breslav, as embodied in today's Breslav Hassidic sect of Judaism embody a form of what traditionally goes by the name of "Pietism". Pietism emphasizes faith and simplicity over against complex intellectual explanations of religious matters. But from the day that the Baal Shem Tov, it is said, sought God by talking to Him in the woods and jumping back and forth from one side of a stream to the other, until the day Nachman published his collected essays, "Likutei Moharan", much water in the stream of Jewish Pietism has passed under the bridge. That is to say, Likutei Moharan is not simple stuff. In order to write what he writes in those pages, Rabbi Nachman had to be well versed in the complex tradition of Pietist religion. Whether he got it from the original sources or from other compilations, he had to know something about the Neoplatonism of Philo, Ibn Gabirol, Judah Halevy , Abu-l-Barakat and Leone Ebreo. He had to know something about the responses of Hasdai Crescas to the Aristotelian Jewish tradition which crystallized in Maimonides "Guide For The Perplexed". To these two traditions, Nachman of Breslav added a strong emphasis upon the philosophy of language, in the sense that the Word of God is coming to us from a Jewish God who in a profound mystical sense is a speaking God, speaking to us and speaking through us. Though it is hard to find precedents to this in Judaism, we can find it in the work of the Christian theologian Johann Georg Hamann, which appeared, shortly before the time Nachman was born, in Konigsberg, East Prussia, not far from where Nachman lived in Eastern Europe. In the work of Hamann we find much of the philosophy of language which Nachman incorporated into his teachings. In other words, since the teachings of Rabbi Nachman of Breslav are so saturated with the complex tradition of Pietism, they are anything but a return to the naivete of the Bal Shem Tov. In this respect Nachman is deliberately deceptive when he tells his disciples again and again to keep it simple, and rely mainly on prayer.
But he also tells them to study! So he is not preaching mindlessness. Nor is he teaching blind following. His elevation of "the tsaddik of the generation" to the level of highest authority in the community of Hassidim is to be read both in the literal, "pshat", sense, and also in the profoundest philosophical sense as the Moses-Mashiach element potentially available in every person who submits himself to the theological process outlined in Likutei Moharan. Traditionally in Judaism it is said that each Jew shares in the living reality of Moses receiving the Torah on Mt. Sinai, but for Nachman this notion is merely the tip of an iceberg which is available to those who take the trouble to fathom the ideas of Likutei Moharan.
In view of these elements contained in Nachman's teachings, it should not be surprising that in what follows here I discover profundity rather than naivete in Nachman's advice to his disciples that they ought to sequester themselves every day and talk directly to God. Of course, we can talk naively to God in the manner of Tevye in Fiddler On the Roof. That procedure here I label "dumb hitbod'dut". Dumb hitbod'dut in that sense is in most cases better than no hitbod'dut at all. It can't hurt, and it might even be more useful than talking to oneself. But I am after bigger fish than that. My goal here is to begin to apply the principles of Likutei Moharan itself to the process of hitbod'dut. This introduction is not the place to spell out the complex principles of Likutei Moharan. You will find some of that in the sequel. Here I will just outline my basic assmptions for this project, which are that
(i) Since Neoplatonism and Hamann's philosophy of language are examples of dialectical thinking, therefore Likutei Moharan likewise is dialectical thinking.
(ii) Gestalt Therapy also is dialectical thinking, containing both Platonic and Aristotelian aspects.
(iii) Therefore, applying dialectical thinking and Gestalt Therapy principles to hitbod'dut is entirely appropriate.
(iv) Hitbod'dut divested of the Gestalt Thrapy list of "self-interruptions" that rob our actions of their potential for authenticity and effectiveness is better than hitbod'dut saturated with this nonsense. Th
14:25
TALKING TO GOD (HITBOD'DUT) part 5 (HQ)
Breslav Hassidim and Franciscan Catholics are told to talk to God in the woods. Gestalt Th...
published: 23 Dec 2010
author: franklyn wepner
TALKING TO GOD (HITBOD'DUT) part 5 (HQ)
Breslav Hassidim and Franciscan Catholics are told to talk to God in the woods. Gestalt Therapy provides us with many tools to help us get past our own ego trips and really speak to God. Part 1 of this project shows us "dumb hitbod'dut", all the wrong things to do, while parts 2-7 of this project attempt to demonstrate some of the right things to do to be more successful if and when you do talk to God.
"HITBOD'DUT" CONVERSATIONS WITH MR. H
A LOWBROW, SLIGHTLY IRREVERENT
INTRODUCTION TO BRESLAV THEOLOGY
by franklyn wepner
december 2008
franklynwepner@gmail.com
PREFACE
(a) ON THE HYPOTHESIS OF THIS EXPERIMENT
The teachings of Rabbi Nachman of Breslav, as embodied in today's Breslav Hassidic sect of Judaism embody a form of what traditionally goes by the name of "Pietism". Pietism emphasizes faith and simplicity over against complex intellectual explanations of religious matters. But from the day that the Baal Shem Tov, it is said, sought God by talking to Him in the woods and jumping back and forth from one side of a stream to the other, until the day Nachman published his collected essays, "Likutei Moharan", much water in the stream of Jewish Pietism has passed under the bridge. That is to say, Likutei Moharan is not simple stuff. In order to write what he writes in those pages, Rabbi Nachman had to be well versed in the complex tradition of Pietist religion. Whether he got it from the original sources or from other compilations, he had to know something about the Neoplatonism of Philo, Ibn Gabirol, Judah Halevy , Abu-l-Barakat and Leone Ebreo. He had to know something about the responses of Hasdai Crescas to the Aristotelian Jewish tradition which crystallized in Maimonides "Guide For The Perplexed". To these two traditions, Nachman of Breslav added a strong emphasis upon the philosophy of language, in the sense that the Word of God is coming to us from a Jewish God who in a profound mystical sense is a speaking God, speaking to us and speaking through us. Though it is hard to find precedents to this in Judaism, we can find it in the work of the Christian theologian Johann Georg Hamann, which appeared, shortly before the time Nachman was born, in Konigsberg, East Prussia, not far from where Nachman lived in Eastern Europe. In the work of Hamann we find much of the philosophy of language which Nachman incorporated into his teachings. In other words, since the teachings of Rabbi Nachman of Breslav are so saturated with the complex tradition of Pietism, they are anything but a return to the naivete of the Bal Shem Tov. In this respect Nachman is deliberately deceptive when he tells his disciples again and again to keep it simple, and rely mainly on prayer.
But he also tells them to study! So he is not preaching mindlessness. Nor is he teaching blind following. His elevation of "the tsaddik of the generation" to the level of highest authority in the community of Hassidim is to be read both in the literal, "pshat", sense, and also in the profoundest philosophical sense as the Moses-Mashiach element potentially available in every person who submits himself to the theological process outlined in Likutei Moharan. Traditionally in Judaism it is said that each Jew shares in the living reality of Moses receiving the Torah on Mt. Sinai, but for Nachman this notion is merely the tip of an iceberg which is available to those who take the trouble to fathom the ideas of Likutei Moharan.
In view of these elements contained in Nachman's teachings, it should not be surprising that in what follows here I discover profundity rather than naivete in Nachman's advice to his disciples that they ought to sequester themselves every day and talk directly to God. Of course, we can talk naively to God in the manner of Tevye in Fiddler On the Roof. That procedure here I label "dumb hitbod'dut". Dumb hitbod'dut in that sense is in most cases better than no hitbod'dut at all. It can't hurt, and it might even be more useful than talking to oneself. But I am after bigger fish than that. My goal here is to begin to apply the principles of Likutei Moharan itself to the process of hitbod'dut. This introduction is not the place to spell out the complex principles of Likutei Moharan. You will find some of that in the sequel. Here I will just outline my basic assmptions for this project, which are that
(i) Since Neoplatonism and Hamann's philosophy of language are examples of dialectical thinking, therefore Likutei Moharan likewise is dialectical thinking.
(ii) Gestalt Therapy also is dialectical thinking, containing both Platonic and Aristotelian aspects.
(iii) Therefore, applying dialectical thinking and Gestalt Therapy principles to hitbod'dut is entirely appropriate.
(iv) Hitbod'dut divested of the Gestalt Thrapy list of "self-interruptions" that rob our actions of their potential for authenticity and effectiveness is better than hitbod'dut saturated with this nonsense. Th
Youtube results:
3:20
The Aramaic Language comes back to life "Close Captioned"
The Aramaic Language comes back to life To view subtitles, press the CC buttoen located at...
published: 11 Jun 2012
author: PNNEnglish
The Aramaic Language comes back to life "Close Captioned"
The Aramaic Language comes back to life To view subtitles, press the CC buttoen located at the lower end of the Youtube player.
- published: 11 Jun 2012
- views: 3428
- author: PNNEnglish
3:09
The prayer " Our father " in Aramaic language
Молитва Отче Наш на арамейсков языке 7.01.2013 Moscow Ассирийская Апостольская Церковь Вос...
published: 07 Jan 2013
author: sargizov
The prayer " Our father " in Aramaic language
Молитва Отче Наш на арамейсков языке 7.01.2013 Moscow Ассирийская Апостольская Церковь Востока Рождество Христово.
- published: 07 Jan 2013
- views: 196
- author: sargizov
3:12
Kerdistan iran Jews, Aramaic language, Nash Didan Lisana nosan.לישנא נושן נאשה דידן
יהודי כורדיסטאן האירנית, הארמית החדשה (ג'בלית )לישנא נושן נאשה דידן. שפת לשון הקודש. צאצאי...
published: 10 Jan 2012
author: Orna Hoshiar
Kerdistan iran Jews, Aramaic language, Nash Didan Lisana nosan.לישנא נושן נאשה דידן
יהודי כורדיסטאן האירנית, הארמית החדשה (ג'בלית )לישנא נושן נאשה דידן. שפת לשון הקודש. צאצאי 10 השבטים, כאשר הוגלו עשרת השבטים על ידי אשור הם הוגלו לבבל, ובחלו...
- published: 10 Jan 2012
- author: Orna Hoshiar
8:55
Lebanese Cypriot Maronite - Aramaic Language Part 1
...
published: 22 Feb 2013
author: Mountain Precipitation
Lebanese Cypriot Maronite - Aramaic Language Part 1
- published: 22 Feb 2013
- author: Mountain Precipitation