They didn't say it was a Hossid dance but a Jewish dance and the melody is Hossid. The Jews were in Hungary before the Magyars even got there. Both groups influenced each other in food, music, dance etc.
@@Lagolop the hassidim yehudim had not "melody"!! the name is it aspecialy "Hassidic Nigunim"!! any great rebbi hassidic had her aspecialy disciples and nigunim also! today we haredi jew's we know's more of 100 different nigun!
@@einarfenrirson The people in Hungary (as in most European countries) have mixed. I once listened to a musician say that it's hard to say what is Jewish and what is Magyar in terms of music traditions. They influenced each other. And that was long before Hassisim began. Remember, not all Jews are Hassidic; most are not. Hassidism is a relatively new phenomenon in the Jewish community. It began in the 1700s in Europe. Gut Shabbos .... and speaking of Shabbos why are you on a computer if you are a Hassid?
Check out Hungarian dances from Szatmár, very similar. Dont forget this is a coreography, not an actual villager dance. It is nice!
Nagyon szép! Fantasztikus!
Respekt from Switzerland. Köszönöm
Bleib Gesund! Mazzel und Broche!!!
Beautiful!
Bravo, Bravo ez igen, nagyon vidam, nagyon klasz
My people 👍❤️
Gyönyörű ❣️
jews in satmar dacin' not in yiddiser melodie?? why?
Hungarian jews integrated at a very high rate, but 05:08 resembles the hatikvah
❤✡️🇭🇺❤
is not hassid dance because the hasid jew dance separed the woman and man!! never together!!
Asher bar lev ur right brother. They dance together only in private
@@mickaelcohen6152 of cours have right! i'm a haredi jew to
They didn't say it was a Hossid dance but a Jewish dance and the melody is Hossid. The Jews were in Hungary before the Magyars even got there. Both groups influenced each other in food, music, dance etc.
@@Lagolop the hassidim yehudim had not "melody"!! the name is it aspecialy "Hassidic Nigunim"!! any great rebbi hassidic had her aspecialy disciples and nigunim also! today we haredi jew's we know's more of 100 different nigun!
@@einarfenrirson The people in Hungary (as in most European countries) have mixed. I once listened to a musician say that it's hard to say what is Jewish and what is Magyar in terms of music traditions. They influenced each other. And that was long before Hassisim began. Remember, not all Jews are Hassidic; most are not. Hassidism is a relatively new phenomenon in the Jewish community. It began in the 1700s in Europe. Gut Shabbos .... and speaking of Shabbos why are you on a computer if you are a Hassid?