Eliezer Ben-Yehuda

Eliezer Ben-Yehuda

:" For the street named for Eliezer Ben Yehuda in Jerusalem, Israel, see Ben Yehuda Street.Infobox Person
name = Eliezer Ben-Yehuda


caption =
birth_date = January 7, 1858
birth_place = Luzhky, Russian Empire
death_date = December 16, 1922 (Age 64)
death_place = Jerusalem, British Mandate of Palestine
other_names =
known_for = Revival of spoken Hebrew
occupation =

Eliezer Ben‑Yehuda ( _he. אֱלִיעֶזֶר בֶּן־יְהוּדָה‎‎, 7 January 1858–16 December 1922) was a key figure in the revival of Hebrew as a spoken language.

Biography

Eliezer Ben-Yehuda was born "Eliezer Yitzhak Perlman", in Luzhky, Vilna Governorate of the Russian Empire (now Vitsebsk Voblast, Belarus). He attended heder where he studied Hebrew and the Bible from the age of three, as was customary among the Jews of Eastern Europe. By the age of twelve he had been studying in Hebrew for nine years and had read large portions of the Torah, Mishna, and Talmud. His parents hoped he would become a rabbi, and sent him to a yeshiva. There, he continued to study ancient Hebrew and was also exposed to the Hebrew of the enlightenment, including secular writings. Later, he learned French, German, and Russian, and was sent to Dünaburg for more education. Reading the Hebrew language newspaper "HaShahar", he became acquainted with Zionism and concluded that the revival of Hebrew language in the Land of Israel could unite all Jews worldwide.

Ben Yehuda was married twice, to two sisters. His first wife, Devora (nee Jonas), died in 1891 of tuberculosis, leaving him with five small children. Soon after his wife's death, three of his children died of diphtheria within a period of 10 days. Six months later he married Devora's younger sister, Paula Beila,cite web|url=http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1019876.html|title=Flesh-and-Blood Prophet|publisher=Haaretz|author=Naor, Mordechai|accessdate=2008-10-01] who took the Hebrew name "Hemda". [ [http://www.jafi.org.il/education/100/people/bios/beliezer.html Eliezer Ben-Yehuda (1858-1922) ] ] He had written love letters to Paula in Russia while his wife lay dying, after falling in love with her several years earlier.

tudy in Paris

Upon graduation he went to Paris to study at the Sorbonne University. Among the subjects he studied there were history and politics of the Middle East, but the one that had the most lasting effect was Hebrew - specifically, his advanced Hebrew classes taught in Hebrew. It was this use of Hebrew in a spoken form that convinced him fully that the revival of Hebrew as the language of a nation was practical. Ben-Yehuda spent four years in Paris.

Move to Jerusalem

In 1881 Ben-Yehuda traveled to Palestine, then a province of the Ottoman Empire. Motivated by the surrounding ideals of renovation and rejection of the diaspora lifestyle, Ben‑Yehuda set out to develop a new language that could replace Yiddish and other regional dialects as a means of everyday communication between Jews who made aliyah from various regions of the world.

Ben‑Yehuda raised his son, Ben‑Zion Ben‑Yehuda (the first name meaning "son of Zion"), entirely through Hebrew. He refused to let his son be exposed to other languages during childhood. It is said he once reprimanded his wife, after he caught her singing a Russian lullaby to the child. His son was the first native speaker of modern Hebrew; his autobiography, written under the pen name Itamar Ben‑Avi (איתמר בן אב"י, "Itamar, son of Avi", Avi is an abbreviation created from the three first letters of the name Eliezer Ben Yehuda), is still widely read in Israel.

Journalistic career

Ben-Yehuda was the editor of several Hebrew-language newspapers: HaZvi, Hashkafa and HaOr. HaZvi was closed down for a year in the wake of opposition from Jerusalem's ultra-Orthodox community, which fiercely objected to the use of Hebrew, the holy tongue, for everyday conversation.

Lexicography

Ben-Yehuda was the driving spirit behind the establishment of the Committee of the Hebrew Language, later the Academy of the Hebrew Language, an organization that still exists today. He was the author of the first modern Hebrew dictionary and became known as the "reviver" of the Hebrew language, despite fierce opposition to the many words he coined.

By the beginning of the 20th century, Hebrew was well on its way to becoming the main language of the Jewish population of Palestine, and later, the State of Israel.

Death

In December 1922, Ben Yehuda, 64, died of tuberculosis, from which he suffered most of his life. He was buried on the Mount of Olives in Jerusalem. [ [http://www.trekker.co.il/english/mount-of-olives.htm Mount of Olives - Jerusalem ] ]

ee also

* Netiva Ben-Yehuda
* Revival of Hebrew language

References

Bibliography

*Fellman, Jack (1973). "The revival of a classical tongue: Eliezer Ben Yehuda and the modern Hebrew language". The Hague, Netherlands: Mouton ISBN 90-279-2495-3
*Robert St. John. "Tongue of the Prophets", Doubleday & Company, Inc. Garden City, New York, 1952. ISBN 0-8371-2631-2
*Yosef Lang. "The Life of Eliezer Ben Yehuda". Yad Yitzhak Ben Zvi, 2 volumes, (Hebrew)


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