Hulaulá
[también conocido como Judeo-Aramaic, Lishana Noshan, Lishana Axni]Clasificación: Afro-Asiatic
·con amenaza de extinción
Clasificación: Afro-Asiatic
·con amenaza de extinción
Judeo-Aramaic, Lishana Noshan, Lishana Axni, Jabali, Kurdit, Galiglu, 'Aramit, Hula Hula |
||
Afro-Asiatic, Semitic, Aramaic |
||
ISO 639-3 |
||
huy |
||
Como csv |
||
La información está incompleta “Ethnologue: Languages of the World, 16th Edition (2009)” . M. Paul Lewis · SIL International
10,000 in Israel (1999 H. Mutzafi). Population total all countries: 10,350.
La información está incompleta “The Jewish Neo-Aramaic Dialect of Sulemaniyya and Ḥalabja” . Geoffrey Khan (2004) Brill
3,500 from Sulemaniyya ca. 1950, and about 120 households from Halabja, ca. 1940
Kurdish
in Sulemaniyya; Modern Hebrew
The towns of Sulemaniyya and Halabja, in eastern Iraqi Kurdistan in the foothills of the Hawraman Mountains
La información está incompleta “The Jewish Neo-Aramaic Dialect of Sanandaj” . Geoffrey Khan (2009) Gorgias Press
Kurdish and Farsi
The Jewish Sanandaj Neo-Aramaic dialect is extensively influenced by Kurdish and Persian (Farsi). Kurdish was spoken in and around the town of Sanandaj by the Muslim population. The Jews would have been exposed to Persian as an official language in schools and government administration.
In 1952 about 1,000 (of 4,000) Jews emigrated to the newly founded State of Israel. Over the subsequent two decades there was a gradual emigration of the Jews from the town [of Sanandaj] either to Tehran or abroad, mostly to Israel. After the Iranian Revolution in 1979 most of the remaining Jews left Sanandaj, the majority settling in Los Angeles in the USA and the remainder in Israel or Europe. Today only about half a dozen elderly Jews are reported to be still living in the town.
La información está incompleta “Personal Communication” . Charles Häberl (2013)