Yekke

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Template:Short description Template:Expand German Template:Use dmy dates A Yekke (also Jecke, JekkeTemplate:Efn) is a humorous, mildly derogatory<ref name=gold>Template:Cite journal</ref> reference to a Jew of German-speaking origin.<ref name=Haaretz>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }} - A review of the book The Ben Yehuda Strasse Dictionary by Devorah Haberfeld</ref> Its Central and Eastern European Jewish counterpart would be Ostjuden.

Etymology

There are several suggestions on the etymology of the word, all of them being inconclusive.<ref>Gideon Greif, "Die Jeckes", In: Hermann Zabel (ed.): Stimmen aus Jerusalem: zur deutschen Sprache und Literatur in Palästina – Israel, LIT-Verlag, Berlin. 2006, ISBN 3-8258-9749-4, pp. 59–83</ref><ref name=gold/> In the older Yiddish dictionaries the word was translated as "German", but this meaning was not preserved, neither in Yiddish, nor Hebrew.<ref name=gold/> The word is productive in Yiddish and when borrowed into Hebrew it had become productive there as well, accepting Hebrew patterns of word formation. For example, in Yiddish the feminine for is yekete, feminine plural: yeketes, while in Hebrew it is yekit and yekiot, respectively.<ref name=gold/>

Demography and history

The wave of immigration to British Mandatory Palestine in the 1930s and 1940s known as the Fifth Aliyah had a large proportion of Yekkes, around 25% (55,000 immigrants). Many of them settled in the vicinity of Ben Yehuda Street in Tel Aviv, leading to the nickname "Ben Yehuda Strasse". Their struggle to master Hebrew produced a dialect known as "Yekkish" (Template:Langx, 'yekish'). The Ben Yehuda Strasse Dictionary: A Dictionary of Spoken Yekkish in the Land of Israel, published in 2012, documents this language.<ref name=Haaretz/>

A significant community escaped Frankfurt after Kristallnacht, and relocated to the Washington Heights neighborhood of New York City, where they still have a synagogue, Khal Adath Jeshurun, which punctiliously adheres to the Yekkish liturgical text, rituals, and melodies.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Notes

Template:Notelist

References

Template:Reflist

Further reading

Template:Jews and Judaism