The Jewish Chronicle

No longer just for Bubbe and Zeyde: Duolingo offers Yiddish

- BY JENNI FRAZER

“AMOL IZ geven a mayse” — or once upon a time — there was a language learning app called Duolingo. And this week, Yiddish, the language of poets and dreamers and eastern European Jewish scholars, became the app’s 40th language and its 100th free course.

Duolingo’s much-anticipate­d addition, released on Tuesday, has been greeted with cries of joy by the dwindling numbers of fluent Yiddish speakers in the US. And the good news is that total beginners can soon start to get to grips with the language on the app.

In fact, as the company points out, English has incorporat­ed many Yiddish words into the language, from “bagel” to “nosh” to “lox” — you may see a pattern emerging here — or other familiar terms such as “mensch” or “oy vey”. So few people will be dealing with utterly alien terminolog­y.

Duolingo courses are created in partnershi­p with a team of dedicated volunteers. One — talking of alien terminolog­y — even created an entire fictional language, High Valyrian, spoken in the TV series Game of Thrones.

But for real-life Yiddish, breaking down the “mammaloshe­n” (mother tongue) was the task of several course creators in the US, representi­ng three different strands of dialects. One is a civil engineer who grew up speaking Yiddish in her Chasidic community; two others are 23-year-old twins who were raised in the Satmar community in Brooklyn, with a tradition of Hungariani­nfluenced Yiddish; and there was even a 15-yearold who began improving his conversati­onal Yiddish when his family moved from Williamsbu­rg, New York, to Georgia.

Isac and Israel Polasak grew up speaking Yiddish, but when they left their Yiddish-speaking school in Brooklyn for a public school, they found they needed to speak Spanish — and turned to Duolingo to catch up with their classmates. Though passionate about the Jewish language, the twins realised they had little idea about its grammar and structure — so put out messages on social media asking for help.

One of their respondent­s was Meena Viswanath, 32, who grew up in New Jersey in a modern Orthodox family with Yiddish as her first language. Now working as a civil engineer and raising her own children with the same mother tongue, she joined the Duolingo course creator team to offer help with spelling and grammar. Meena says: “It is the language of my family and I don’t want to lose that tradition.”

Libby Pollak, 32, is another native Yiddish speaker, raised in a Chasidic community in Williamsbu­rg, which she left almost 10 years ago when she discovered a secular Jewish world — but where people still spoke Yiddish. She began a Yiddish blog, has tested out Yiddish jokes to see if they are still as funny in English, and works as a Yiddish translator and transcribe­r. She said she hoped that the course would be “a good starting point for people to immerse themselves in the Yiddish culture and community.”

The course has been five years in the making and, according to Jordan Kutzik in The Forward, the New York Jewish newspaper that started life as the Yiddish daily Forverts, it “encompasse­s 70 sections called ‘skills,’ with each skill featuring five levels.

“The 350 levels have three to six lessons each. With every lesson requir

Breaking down the mammaloshe­n was the task of several course creators’

ing at least five to seven minutes, the roughly 1,300 lessons will take a minimum of 250 hours for the average student to complete.”

If this sounds daunting, it shouldn’t be. Colin Watkins, Duolingo’s UK manager, says one well-attested aspect of language learning is brain training — a paltry 15 minutes a day of concentrat­ing on absorbing a new skill could well stave off early aspects of dementia.

But he notes that courses offering mastery of a language in 30 days are

too good to be true. “You can’t really do that,” he said. “But what you can do is grasp the basics of a language, if you are motivated, and have fun.”

On the eve of Duolingo’s Yiddish launch, more than 9,500 students had already signed up.

Updates — perhaps from British Yiddish speakers — will be added along the way.

Meanwhile, Mr Watkins, who speaks no Yiddish, encourages everyone to take a look at the course.

“Zei gezunt! (Be healthy)”, he signs off — surely a vital phrase in these pandemic-ridden days.

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 ??  ?? Images from the Duolingo course
Images from the Duolingo course
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PHOTOS: DUOLINGO

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