Aramaic language
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Aramaic, the language of the Arameans, has been spoken in the Levant and Mesopotamia, (Aramaic "Aram Beth-Nahreen" or "Aram-Naharaim") from perhaps 700 BC until the present day. It is a member of the Semitic languages group.
Today Aramaic is spoken among about 500,000 native speakers[1] (http://www.ethnologue.com/show_family.asp?subid=950) (with varying degrees of fluency) in scattered communities across the Fertile Crescent. There are 15,000 speakers in three Syrian villages in the Qalamoun Mountains north of Damascus (Ma'aloula, Bakh`a, Jubb`adin), but most speakers live in the area often termed Kurdistan in English, from Lake Urmia to Hakkari - and even in the USA by Assyrian (also known as Chaldo-Assyrians, Syriacs, Maronites) immigrants from this area. A few live in Mesopotamia proper (called in Aramaic Bethnahrin).
Aramaic is used in many Jewish holy texts. Some of the later parts of the Hebrew Bible, most of the Gemara section of the Talmud, and the Zohar are written in Aramaic. The Parts of the Bible that are in Aramaic: Daniel 2:4b-7:28, Ezra 4:8-6:18;7:12-26 and Jeremiah 10:11.
Aramaic is divided into two groups: Western and Eastern.
Western - this group is extinct as a spoken language and included Nabataean (extinct, spoken in parts of Arabia), Palmyrenean (extinct, spoken in Palmyra, Syria and adjoining regions), and Palestinian-Christian and Judeo-Aramean. A Western Aramaic dialect was the spoken language in Roman Judea in Jesus's time, as quotes given in the Greek Gospels show[2] (http://www.aramaicnt.org/index.php?PAGE ... reekscript).
Example: Matthew 27:46 - ηλι ηλι λαμα σαβαχθανι (/eli eli lama sabachthani/, later Aramaic "E-lee e-lee l-maa saa-baach-taa-nee?")
(The famous last words of Jesus in his native tongue, Aramaic. The above translation is standard, but disputed by people like Aramaic scholars Rocco Errico and the late George Lamsa, who claim that the word "lama" is a mistake in transcription, that the actual word is "lamana," giving: an alternate translation: "My God, My God, for such a purpose have you kept me!" (Errico notes that the difference between the two statements is substantial, and casts a very different light on the last words of Jesus.)
A few religious groups such as the monks of Mar Sarkis and some isolated followers of the Assyrian Church still use languages of this group for liturgical purposes. Rev. William Fulco reconstructed the Aramaic of Jesus for the film script of The Passion of the Christ (2004).
Eastern - this group includes Syriac, Mandaic, and Neo-Assyrian (not Akkadian Assyrian) dialects/languages. Some of these are still spoken in a few villages in Syria, notably Ma'loula, Iraq, Iran, Turkey, Georgia and Armenia. Some Jewish speakers of Aramaic have immigrated to Israel and Los Angeles. The Jews are most likely of Assyrian heritage, but adopted the Jewish faith. There is an annual convention of native Aramaic speakers in Los Angeles. The Aramaic version of the Christian Bible is in the Syriac dialect, and a sample can be found in the article on the Lord's Prayer.
Many linguists are currently working on modern spoken Aramaic, such as Geoffrey Khan, Yona Sabar, and Otto Jastrow. A professor at the University of California, Los Angeles is currently working on a dictionary of modern spoken Aramaic
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aramaic_language