On the topic of Yiddish. Yiddish is the language of Eastern European Jews. However, Sephardi and Mizrahi have their own language, it’s called Ladino it’s a mix of Spanish, Greek, Arabic and Turkish Israel is trying to homogenize their culture around the Hebrew language. So the older ethnic Jewish language are slowly dying. There’s a movement from Israel in the music scene to keep Ladino alive
My grandfather, who just passed away a week before Christmas, spoke Yiddish. Since he was non-practicing, he didn’t really have anyone around who would understand the vocabulary (after his parents died, at least)- but I think he spoke it to keep him grounded. Hearing him speak it always made me feel at home. It still does. My brother (who is converting to Judaism) has put a lot of effort into learning, and I’m trying to learn some too. I hope things turn around and our beautiful language survives.
29:09 answering this question as a NYer, a lot of people get annoyed that this community takes LOTS and LOTS of money from the NYC government in aid and subsidies and flagrantly neglect laws and customs that the rest of us have to follow. Their schools consistently fail to meet educational standards leaving generations of people woefully inept with respect to basic math and reading skills, they famously said "nah" during the pandemic and held enormous super-spreader events, and there is a lot of anti-vax sentiment, leading to outbreaks of diseases that have otherwise been eradicated (and on the other hand, there were clinics in the Hasid neighborhood that cut corners to get access to covid vaccines before other more vulnerable populations were able to access them in dire times of need). These are just a few examples, but there are other issues that are very real. For a small population that gets so much funding from taxpayer money, and as an extremely insular group, they are well-protected and enjoy a pretty reasonably peaceful existence without much interference from the rest of the city (all while wearing $8000 hats), so I think the rest of the New York would like equal signs of respect shown in return, thats all.
there's such sad stories of elderly Palestinians trying to communicate with IDF soldiers in Yiddish, because they learned some from living together with Jewish people in communities prior to the Nakba, but most IDF soldiers don't speak Yiddish (even if they did it might not have made a difference, but still). this shows the blended communities that existed before the Nakba, and also that Yiddish has less and less of a place in Israel
The cabbage roll is a classic dish in Poland, we call that 'gołąbki' (pigeons). Also the gnocchi like pasta thing is called 'kopytka' (hooves). Fun and interesting to see. But also realizing that basically every country has it's own cabbage roll.
The Russian name for cabbage roll is similar голубцы (goloobtsi) which my family has a lot because we’re central Asian Jews so my family’s home countries used to be part of Russia.
German here, while I know that döner wasnt invented in Germany, its always a good and easy way to make old people not constantly complain about döner shops being everywhere and "replacing" german culture 👌
@@kobinho1917 yes. Everything changes to thr local tastebuds, just like I would recognise anything Americans made, specifically those who had great-great-grandparents who lived in Scandinavia / Europe. All culture from us is lost by now, and immigrants as Hasan has said, tend to integrate fully by the second, but atleast mostly third generation!
I‘m from Germany and the Döner Culture is really big, there are People who explain Inflation on the prices for Döner because the got so expensive. Then i went to Seattle tried the “German Döner“ and it was the worst thing I will ever eat.
Did a grown man really just use the word "cancelled" to refer to a Hasidic woman being ousted and rejected from her very insular and conservative religious community due to transphobia 💀💀💀
The series unorthodox was really eye opening to me. Like how hasidic jews hate israel, what the women have to go through, how Israeli jews hate hasidic jews, and even the yiddish not being in Israel and similarity to German.
I don't think Yiddish is that similar to German, Dutch is more mutually intelligible with German than Yiddish is, so much of the grammar in Yiddish is Slavic, there are also dialects of German like Romanian-Yiddish, Lithuanian-Yiddish etc.
@@dochka i'm german and i can definitly understand most yiddish better than dutch 🤔 i guess the grammar thing doesn't really matter, when you understand the words and the way yiddish pronounces most words is more similar to german than dutch pronunciation is to german, i feel like. my understanding of yiddish and dutch might be more similar when reading it idk
@@raylue6273 i mean it depends but i did a big university project on comparing vocabulary and grammar concepts, and analysing other studies and experiments and german came back as much more intelligible with dutch. i was more involved on the historical side but my partners did a lot of research into the linguistics. there are some dialects of yiddish more intelligible with german though, but yiddish originating in poland or ukraine are much less. dutch and german also have a fair amount of variation so this could be a factor, but for example yiddish has the perfective/imperfective verbal aspects as a key component, just as in most slavic languages but to my knowledge isn't as strong of a feature in german
Chinese American food is probably one of the few popular cuisines that is kosher by accident. There's no dairy, and for some reason pork is usually substituted for chicken or beef. Actual Chinese food is out because it has a ton of pork and seafood but Americans aren't into it
What Hasan was saying about Yiddish is so important, I was taught that it comes from the Israeli gov's policy of creating a new, singular Israeli-Jewish nationality rather than acknowledging the immense diversity in Judaism. The Israeli government, in theory, could do a lot to revive and maintain Yiddish, which is not a dialect of German, and in fact has many of its own dialects like Polish-Yididsh, Romanian-Yiddish etc, but in fact they are actively killing the language. There is a language called Ladino, or Judeo-Spanish which has Spanish, Arabic, Hebrew, and Turkish elements as it came from the Jews expelled from Spain who fled with the Ottomans into North Africa and then to the Balkans. Almost all speakers were killed in the Holocaust, and the few remaining speakers have not received any help in maintaining the language. Israel is actively destroying Yiddish, and has contributed to the ongoing extinction of languages like Ladino
I used to live in bed-stuy and the shift when you walk over the Williamsburg border is crazy. I felt really weird running over there in shorts or even in jeans, but they seem communal in many good ways… although I’m sad at the lack of choices for women and people in general. It makes sense that they’re against Israel’s war efforts, I had no idea they were one of those anti-Zionist orthodox groups but that’s dope and I hope they continue to speak their truth on that. And admittedly the fur hats are fire
I saw one of his videos that he went to Mecca but he did not go Inside The mosque but he did actually have one of his friends live in Mecca to go in it to record what’s inside of the mosque, but he actually went into the town area and had a fun time
Just some more clarification Yiddish isn't an offshoot of German it's its own Language. it's germanic in the same way that Dutch is a germanic language. accent, sentence structure, grammar are all similar but distinct from German. they share a lot of words with each other but there is also a lot of deviation. Kind of in the way the Catalan and Spanish are similar but have key differences. Hebrew and Aramaic and Slavic languages are also big influences on Yiddish vocabulary and grammar.
yes, many important aspects of Yiddish grammar are Slavic too, Dutch is far more mutually intelligible with German than Yiddish is. also how can Yiddish even be thought of as a dialect of German when it has its own dialects, like Romanian-Yiddish, Lithuanian-Yiddish etc
Saying that's German is like saying that burrito is American. Tahini is also Turkish, I think more specifically Arab but it might be the same with the Ottoman stuff that kept in time, I'm Bulgarian and we know pretty well, probably as well as the Arabs which foods are Turkish. Тахан/Tahan/Tahini
I work in a hotel where we get a lot of Hasidic jews and I can tell you that the kosher internet is even weirder than it sounds, its like parental controls that they have to install on themselves... Also the thing about them talking rudely to "outsiders" is true, not all the time but ESPECIALLY if they ask for something and we don't have it/can't do it, I feel that they expect everyone in the world to be ready to be visited by people with such strict guidelines. They expect our public pool to be "reserved" for them so they can have an entire pool to themselves because no one is allowed to see them undressed except each other, things like that.
in all my years in New York not once has a hasidic person in front of me held the door open. they always let that shit slam in my face even if im carrying something heavy. its very anti-outsider, not even the smallest display of kindness.
I think Hasan wasnt clear enough that there IS yiddish in israel. You can hear it in more religious areas of Jerusalem and other places like Bnei Brak outside of Tel Aviv. But it's mostly kept within those communities because it's associated in broader society with all of those other negative things that hasan talked about as well as the history of repression of the language. Not as much to do with Germany.
14:56 This reminded me of that BBC video when the reported was scaring people from “the Islamization of the UK”, but had the same amazement as this guy has when she went to the Jewish sectors of the UK… Not holding it against the Jewish people, but more of showing the Hypocrisy of these people when they talk about Muslims and “Islamic culture” being scary, but respecting the culture of Jewish people.
So I have a queation. Is the 'giving up modern tech" a newly founded principle? I can only imagine what that would entale giving up if refering to the 'modern' tech of the time from the tora
Silly to hear this guy blame the Nazis for the death of Yiddish, when it was actually more like 1. Revival of Hebrew (thanks for covering that) and 2. In places like the US, cultural assimilation, eg American Jews speak English and they don't live in shtetls. Judeo Spanish is also dying out, similar story.
Yiddish is absolutely not dead and your second point is just describing how nzis contributed to the decrease of Yiddish speakers. I think perhaps the silly one here is you. And it’s called Ladino
@@ratking927 I heard of it for years as ladino. But I recently read that that term was reserved for Spanish translation of the Torah. I am kind of nerdy about linguistics and I've listened to many recordings of it, I can understand it, and find it fascinating. I'm also of partial ashkenazi heritage. My grandmother's family spoke Yiddish.
@@andrewsveikauskas I’ve heard Sephardim use Ladino so that’s what I’ve thought to be correct but you seem to know more. With all the work YIVO is doing and the existence of these communities in the US and Europe, I think we shouldn’t say Yiddish is dead. It almost was in my family because of the pogroms but half of us speak it now. There’s been a huge renaissance as of late and it never died in the first place.
Do we really think that one specific culture invented the concept of cooking meat on a big stick? The obsession with trying to attribute everything to a specific culture is boring, especially when we refer to them by reference to modern nation-states that didn’t even necessarily exist in the past.
About the shawarma bit. Israel even stole a dish from my home country Tunisia called Shakshuka and pretends it's an Israeli cuisine because a lot of Tunisian Jews migrated to Israel and took our cuisine there.
The story with the last two Afghan Jews is so interesting. During the first period the Taliban were in power they threw them in jail, after a while they threw them *out* of the jail because the guards could no longer stand their endless bickering.
So weird hearing people saying Donner without a strong english accent, AV A DONNA KEBAB ARKID. PS them German Kebab chains are really nice, but we all know your best option is like Kurdish or Levantine Shwarma place with a bit of Fatayah to and Falafel to top it off.
35:13 WTH BAR MITZVAH ISN'T CELEBRATING WHEN YOU CAN HIT THE BAR?? Edit: 55:15 if this leads to a new leftovers style collab istg I will break the internet and sacrifice my firstborn son for this 59:26 chatter going "forward is ha mas" insane
Israel-Palestine has beautiful beaches, and it's a pilrimage site for three great religions...it COULD be the world's most successful and peaceful tourist trap, if it were a unified democracy in which every single citizen has equal rights. Instead, some people insist on making it a fascist, settler colonialist, apartheid prison in a perpetual state of war. 😢
Judaism doesn’t believe in hell. Weird as it is to say, it’s way less urgent to convert people when you don’t think God plans on torturing nonbelievers forever.
No thats totally fair I shouldve specified but I also had no idea that they didn't believe in hell. I was told its kind of more like a club of people who believe they are the chosen ones which according to the first thing I said, makes more sense then other religions not having anything to say about the other 66% of the world that never got to learn about their religions.@@Rory-co4vm
This isn't the most closed off religious community. They still use modern tech. There are mennonite, Hutterite and Amish communities that are waaay more closed off.
There was a Turkish guy that invented a horizontal meat stick in Bursa in the 1800s and he supposedly called it a kebab. Shwarma is more of a Arab version of that apparently shwarma was already invented in the 1500s
So al pastor lol J/k there are a bunch of Lebanese in Guadalajara, you see tacos arabes over there. My homie is Lebanese and i am jew and our families are from Guadalajara
I'm an outsider to this, must be said, but I can imagine not having a strong sense of pride in your European heritage when that heritage essentially revolves around being second class citizens for centuries. Though, its probably quite complicated because I don't doubt there is pride for the ancestry for being able to weather it. Just maybe not national pride. Not saying I think the Zionist project of making extremely tenuous links to Palestine lands is just either, mind, I just think its worth thinking about.
I'd be all for it if we had an exclusively Jewish state......... and now we can begin having exclusively Christian countries, and exclusively Muslim ones... do we not see the issue here?
Yeah you’ll have your own ethno state build on the blood and remains of cultures that were there before just like christians and muslims, everything alright
This interpretation seems right. It also seems so narrow it'd almost never be contravened. What's the actual likelihood of a piece of beef and butter coming from a kid and its mother? Basically none. Beef and milk are taken from different breeds.
@@DignanDerkin arab isn't a real thing, it just means you got conquered by muhammads foot soldiers. Mizrahi resisted and kept judaism and it is offensive to call them arab jews
The modern Arab identity is not an ethnic one. Mezrahi and Sephardi Jews are Arabs, Persians, and North African. They spoke these languages and were part of these societies for centuries. Without the existence of Israel and without the antisemitic attacks against them through the last century, they would have been normal every day citizens of their respective countries.
@@TheIraqiMarxist it is an ethnicity but it does also go much deeper than that (culture, religion, language, shared history, geography, politics, etc.)
Hasan be dressed like a squid-game contender 😂
That squid game drip
He looks like one of Hawkeye's enemies, The Bros. 😅
This made me laugh out loud
On the topic of Yiddish. Yiddish is the language of Eastern European Jews. However, Sephardi and Mizrahi have their own language, it’s called Ladino it’s a mix of Spanish, Greek, Arabic and Turkish
Israel is trying to homogenize their culture around the Hebrew language. So the older ethnic Jewish language are slowly dying.
There’s a movement from Israel in the music scene to keep Ladino alive
My grandfather, who just passed away a week before Christmas, spoke Yiddish. Since he was non-practicing, he didn’t really have anyone around who would understand the vocabulary (after his parents died, at least)- but I think he spoke it to keep him grounded. Hearing him speak it always made me feel at home. It still does.
My brother (who is converting to Judaism) has put a lot of effort into learning, and I’m trying to learn some too. I hope things turn around and our beautiful language survives.
@@abit359yep. There's so much beauty in the world, in Israel and Palestine too, it's heartbreaking seeing so many lives wasted 💔
Also judeo arabic, mizrahis don't really speak ladino... source: I'm an Iraqi jew
...which sucks because I think it's a pretty cool thing that we brought Hebrew back
@@hillelkita2354 Mizrahim of North Africa do speak Ladino
It’s kind of crazy seeing American born people who’s parents were also probably American born speaking broken English
29:09 answering this question as a NYer, a lot of people get annoyed that this community takes LOTS and LOTS of money from the NYC government in aid and subsidies and flagrantly neglect laws and customs that the rest of us have to follow. Their schools consistently fail to meet educational standards leaving generations of people woefully inept with respect to basic math and reading skills, they famously said "nah" during the pandemic and held enormous super-spreader events, and there is a lot of anti-vax sentiment, leading to outbreaks of diseases that have otherwise been eradicated (and on the other hand, there were clinics in the Hasid neighborhood that cut corners to get access to covid vaccines before other more vulnerable populations were able to access them in dire times of need). These are just a few examples, but there are other issues that are very real. For a small population that gets so much funding from taxpayer money, and as an extremely insular group, they are well-protected and enjoy a pretty reasonably peaceful existence without much interference from the rest of the city (all while wearing $8000 hats), so I think the rest of the New York would like equal signs of respect shown in return, thats all.
NYC’s Hasid community when asked if they‘d lose to Covid:
„nah, I‘d win“
The fact Hasan doesn’t know this is kinda dumb lol
I heard things but I didn’t know that it was that bad lol
@@Dave102693there is a NYT story that covers the education issues "In Hasidic Enclaves, Failing Private Schools Flush With Public Money"
Don’t forget the babies herpes outbreak from oral suction circumcision done by Mohels 🤢
there's such sad stories of elderly Palestinians trying to communicate with IDF soldiers in Yiddish, because they learned some from living together with Jewish people in communities prior to the Nakba, but most IDF soldiers don't speak Yiddish (even if they did it might not have made a difference, but still). this shows the blended communities that existed before the Nakba, and also that Yiddish has less and less of a place in Israel
The cabbage roll is a classic dish in Poland, we call that 'gołąbki' (pigeons).
Also the gnocchi like pasta thing is called 'kopytka' (hooves).
Fun and interesting to see.
But also realizing that basically every country has it's own cabbage roll.
I love polish food so much
The Russian name for cabbage roll is similar голубцы (goloobtsi) which my family has a lot because we’re central Asian Jews so my family’s home countries used to be part of Russia.
someone said "no hamburger milkshakes :( " lmao
The part about yiddish hits me hard as a Cajun whos holding on to a dying language 😢
German here, while I know that döner wasnt invented in Germany, its always a good and easy way to make old people not constantly complain about döner shops being everywhere and "replacing" german culture 👌
German döner is different from Turkish right like the kebabs in England?
@@kobinho1917 inevitably, yeah. All region specific food changes with distance.
@@kobinho1917 yes. Everything changes to thr local tastebuds, just like I would recognise anything Americans made, specifically those who had great-great-grandparents who lived in Scandinavia / Europe.
All culture from us is lost by now, and immigrants as Hasan has said, tend to integrate fully by the second, but atleast mostly third generation!
As a German Turk i can say that Döner is german and I will die on that hill
@@Nicolas-ws5erhell nah dude. It was invented in the 1850s in Bursa by Iskender. You can still visit and eat at the dude’s restaurant.
A child a year?! That's so unhealthy...
I‘m from Germany and the Döner Culture is really big, there are People who explain Inflation on the prices for Döner because the got so expensive. Then i went to Seattle tried the “German Döner“ and it was the worst thing I will ever eat.
We use that in turkey too. Dönerflation is real.
2008 noch 2€ jetzt guck mal wo du einen Döner unter 5 Euro kriegst kekW
@@guccipucci3941Wohne am Arsch der Welt an der tschechischen Grenze und unser Döner kostet trotzdem 5,50€. gg
@@caraldinhobesser als 8€ in hamburg😭 mein veganer döner kostet auch schon 7€
Damals kleiner döner mit schülerrabatt 2,50 jetzt einfach 5,50
Did a grown man really just use the word "cancelled" to refer to a Hasidic woman being ousted and rejected from her very insular and conservative religious community due to transphobia 💀💀💀
The series unorthodox was really eye opening to me. Like how hasidic jews hate israel, what the women have to go through, how Israeli jews hate hasidic jews, and even the yiddish not being in Israel and similarity to German.
Yiddish is in Israel. The Hasidim speak it. You hear it a decent amount in Jerusalem.
I don't think Yiddish is that similar to German, Dutch is more mutually intelligible with German than Yiddish is, so much of the grammar in Yiddish is Slavic, there are also dialects of German like Romanian-Yiddish, Lithuanian-Yiddish etc.
@@dochka i'm german and i can definitly understand most yiddish better than dutch 🤔 i guess the grammar thing doesn't really matter, when you understand the words and the way yiddish pronounces most words is more similar to german than dutch pronunciation is to german, i feel like. my understanding of yiddish and dutch might be more similar when reading it idk
@@raylue6273 i mean it depends but i did a big university project on comparing vocabulary and grammar concepts, and analysing other studies and experiments and german came back as much more intelligible with dutch. i was more involved on the historical side but my partners did a lot of research into the linguistics. there are some dialects of yiddish more intelligible with german though, but yiddish originating in poland or ukraine are much less. dutch and german also have a fair amount of variation so this could be a factor, but for example yiddish has the perfective/imperfective verbal aspects as a key component, just as in most slavic languages but to my knowledge isn't as strong of a feature in german
The leather straps on the arm looks like post dangai Ichigo before the final getsuga tenshou
Nerd
They’re weebs smh
chicken tea-curr massallurr cracks me up every time
thank u for showing me this, i feel i really needed to see it in light of world events
Chinese American food is probably one of the few popular cuisines that is kosher by accident. There's no dairy, and for some reason pork is usually substituted for chicken or beef. Actual Chinese food is out because it has a ton of pork and seafood but Americans aren't into it
Lol I always heard chinese restaurants love the jewish community bc they’re the only people buying from them on christmas
What Hasan was saying about Yiddish is so important, I was taught that it comes from the Israeli gov's policy of creating a new, singular Israeli-Jewish nationality rather than acknowledging the immense diversity in Judaism. The Israeli government, in theory, could do a lot to revive and maintain Yiddish, which is not a dialect of German, and in fact has many of its own dialects like Polish-Yididsh, Romanian-Yiddish etc, but in fact they are actively killing the language. There is a language called Ladino, or Judeo-Spanish which has Spanish, Arabic, Hebrew, and Turkish elements as it came from the Jews expelled from Spain who fled with the Ottomans into North Africa and then to the Balkans. Almost all speakers were killed in the Holocaust, and the few remaining speakers have not received any help in maintaining the language. Israel is actively destroying Yiddish, and has contributed to the ongoing extinction of languages like Ladino
I used to live in bed-stuy and the shift when you walk over the Williamsburg border is crazy. I felt really weird running over there in shorts or even in jeans, but they seem communal in many good ways… although I’m sad at the lack of choices for women and people in general. It makes sense that they’re against Israel’s war efforts, I had no idea they were one of those anti-Zionist orthodox groups but that’s dope and I hope they continue to speak their truth on that. And admittedly the fur hats are fire
I saw one of his videos that he went to Mecca but he did not go Inside The mosque but he did actually have one of his friends live in Mecca to go in it to record what’s inside of the mosque, but he actually went into the town area and had a fun time
Just some more clarification Yiddish isn't an offshoot of German it's its own Language. it's germanic in the same way that Dutch is a germanic language. accent, sentence structure, grammar are all similar but distinct from German. they share a lot of words with each other but there is also a lot of deviation. Kind of in the way the Catalan and Spanish are similar but have key differences. Hebrew and Aramaic and Slavic languages are also big influences on Yiddish vocabulary and grammar.
yes, many important aspects of Yiddish grammar are Slavic too, Dutch is far more mutually intelligible with German than Yiddish is. also how can Yiddish even be thought of as a dialect of German when it has its own dialects, like Romanian-Yiddish, Lithuanian-Yiddish etc
Saying that's German is like saying that burrito is American. Tahini is also Turkish, I think more specifically Arab but it might be the same with the Ottoman stuff that kept in time, I'm Bulgarian and we know pretty well, probably as well as the Arabs which foods are Turkish. Тахан/Tahan/Tahini
ad break segue at 20:50 made me say "fuck u, 10/10, shut the hell up" 😂
I work in a hotel where we get a lot of Hasidic jews and I can tell you that the kosher internet is even weirder than it sounds, its like parental controls that they have to install on themselves... Also the thing about them talking rudely to "outsiders" is true, not all the time but ESPECIALLY if they ask for something and we don't have it/can't do it, I feel that they expect everyone in the world to be ready to be visited by people with such strict guidelines. They expect our public pool to be "reserved" for them so they can have an entire pool to themselves because no one is allowed to see them undressed except each other, things like that.
in all my years in New York not once has a hasidic person in front of me held the door open. they always let that shit slam in my face even if im carrying something heavy. its very anti-outsider, not even the smallest display of kindness.
I think Hasan wasnt clear enough that there IS yiddish in israel. You can hear it in more religious areas of Jerusalem and other places like Bnei Brak outside of Tel Aviv. But it's mostly kept within those communities because it's associated in broader society with all of those other negative things that hasan talked about as well as the history of repression of the language. Not as much to do with Germany.
As an Austrian, everything is f'ing closed around Christmas. That's why my family enjoys some nice kebab on Christmas day.
"all jews belong to israel" *lives in new york*
14:56 This reminded me of that BBC video when the reported was scaring people from “the Islamization of the UK”, but had the same amazement as this guy has when she went to the Jewish sectors of the UK… Not holding it against the Jewish people, but more of showing the Hypocrisy of these people when they talk about Muslims and “Islamic culture” being scary, but respecting the culture of Jewish people.
Actually it's called Shwarmeh and it was invented in Canada because it's quietly warm eh. I hate myself
Shfuckinfreezingoutbud
+10 faith lmfao
So I have a queation. Is the 'giving up modern tech" a newly founded principle? I can only imagine what that would entale giving up if refering to the 'modern' tech of the time from the tora
16:16 honestly if he moved to Israel than he is absolutely not sick or cool.
I must say the leather arm straps are sick asf looking
my bedstuy landlord be using an iphone
Silly to hear this guy blame the Nazis for the death of Yiddish, when it was actually more like 1. Revival of Hebrew (thanks for covering that) and 2. In places like the US, cultural assimilation, eg American Jews speak English and they don't live in shtetls.
Judeo Spanish is also dying out, similar story.
Yiddish is absolutely not dead and your second point is just describing how nzis contributed to the decrease of Yiddish speakers. I think perhaps the silly one here is you.
And it’s called Ladino
@@ratking927 I heard of it for years as ladino. But I recently read that that term was reserved for Spanish translation of the Torah. I am kind of nerdy about linguistics and I've listened to many recordings of it, I can understand it, and find it fascinating. I'm also of partial ashkenazi heritage. My grandmother's family spoke Yiddish.
@@andrewsveikauskas I’ve heard Sephardim use Ladino so that’s what I’ve thought to be correct but you seem to know more. With all the work YIVO is doing and the existence of these communities in the US and Europe, I think we shouldn’t say Yiddish is dead. It almost was in my family because of the pogroms but half of us speak it now. There’s been a huge renaissance as of late and it never died in the first place.
ayo just a suggestion. wanna timestamp the date the clips were used for the video in the description? so we can have a more accurate record
Do we really think that one specific culture invented the concept of cooking meat on a big stick? The obsession with trying to attribute everything to a specific culture is boring, especially when we refer to them by reference to modern nation-states that didn’t even necessarily exist in the past.
Reminds me of when people go, "In my culture, food is a big part of gatherings". And I'm like, what culture? Human?
It’s tribalism and nationalism. The conversations of ignorants
Tell that to anthropologist who study domestication & culture.
@@YamiHoOu Or "In my culture we value our children" as opposed to mine where we eat them?
About the shawarma bit. Israel even stole a dish from my home country Tunisia called Shakshuka and pretends it's an Israeli cuisine because a lot of Tunisian Jews migrated to Israel and took our cuisine there.
Im not a huge fan of when people say my workers. You don't own them, guy.... 4:28
3:03 can't believe there's a place in new york called golan heights Israeli grill lmao. shameless
Montreal bagels are the most OP Jewish culinary contribution
long ass food stunlock 😭
This would've been perfect for adam
The story with the last two Afghan Jews is so interesting. During the first period the Taliban were in power they threw them in jail, after a while they threw them *out* of the jail because the guards could no longer stand their endless bickering.
the gates of hell look like centralia
That's so funny cause we rarely have any dairy in Chinese cuisine
9:37 I've seen comments on Hasan videos that Americans invented pizza! Also, I've heard this IRL from Americans...
Invented good pizza (can I dig the grave deeper?)
@@scumbagscout1945 have you been to Napoli?
I like New York style and make it at home. But Naples is pretty next level (and affordable)
So weird hearing people saying Donner without a strong english accent, AV A DONNA KEBAB ARKID.
PS them German Kebab chains are really nice, but we all know your best option is like Kurdish or Levantine Shwarma place with a bit of Fatayah to and Falafel to top it off.
Drew Binsky ❤
35:13 WTH BAR MITZVAH ISN'T CELEBRATING WHEN YOU CAN HIT THE BAR??
Edit: 55:15 if this leads to a new leftovers style collab istg I will break the internet and sacrifice my firstborn son for this
59:26 chatter going "forward is ha mas" insane
… tenía q salir un Chileno ahí también. Ya, el también.
The fur hat is the weirdest religious garb
Shawarma stunlock
I hate it when u zoom on the face when he describe something, I CANT SEE SHIT
Chinese food on Christmas is 100% a yearly thing for me.
15:06 🤣🤣🤣
shawarma with eggplant??
they should not call that shawarma cono
that's a middle eastern dish which apparently Isreal is not a part of lmao
Israel-Palestine has beautiful beaches, and it's a pilrimage site for three great religions...it COULD be the world's most successful and peaceful tourist trap, if it were a unified democracy in which every single citizen has equal rights. Instead, some people insist on making it a fascist, settler colonialist, apartheid prison in a perpetual state of war. 😢
holy crap youre fast
Turkey and beef bacon exist lmfao
squid games drip
I want doner now but I'm forced to live in this god forsaken place where they have no good food.
And they're anti-Zionist!! Holla!
Why would God create a whole planet full of people and not let 90% of them even learn about the 1 "true religion"?
Judaism doesn’t believe in hell. Weird as it is to say, it’s way less urgent to convert people when you don’t think God plans on torturing nonbelievers forever.
That actually makes sense but my statement wasn't just about Judaism. It was including all the other religions as well.@@Rory-co4vm
@@jodrizzly1766 hey sorry for assuming. Video was about Jews and you weren’t specific, assumed you were talking about Judaism.
No thats totally fair I shouldve specified but I also had no idea that they didn't believe in hell. I was told its kind of more like a club of people who believe they are the chosen ones which according to the first thing I said, makes more sense then other religions not having anything to say about the other 66% of the world that never got to learn about their religions.@@Rory-co4vm
@@jodrizzly1766 no problem at all, just a mutual misunderstanding. I hope you have a nice day.
This isn't the most closed off religious community. They still use modern tech. There are mennonite, Hutterite and Amish communities that are waaay more closed off.
Drew is married so it's not stolen valor
Chawarma, like Everything else, Is Turkish bro
There was a Turkish guy that invented a horizontal meat stick in Bursa in the 1800s and he supposedly called it a kebab. Shwarma is more of a Arab version of that apparently shwarma was already invented in the 1500s
Shawarma is Syrian & iraqi & lebanani but syrian is ASLI = authentic in Arabic
So al pastor lol J/k there are a bunch of Lebanese in Guadalajara, you see tacos arabes over there. My homie is Lebanese and i am jew and our families are from Guadalajara
all religion is cringe i feel bad for them
I'm sorry but that's not an Amish community. So its definitely not the most religious nutter space in America
Not using internet, so theyre like Urban Amish
I'm an outsider to this, must be said, but I can imagine not having a strong sense of pride in your European heritage when that heritage essentially revolves around being second class citizens for centuries. Though, its probably quite complicated because I don't doubt there is pride for the ancestry for being able to weather it. Just maybe not national pride.
Not saying I think the Zionist project of making extremely tenuous links to Palestine lands is just either, mind, I just think its worth thinking about.
free palestine
So brave
@@thebeast5215 omg did i just get israel’d 🔥(find your own land)
Making this comment on a video about Hasidic Jews is a bit weird
I'd be all for it if we had an exclusively Jewish state......... and now we can begin having exclusively Christian countries, and exclusively Muslim ones... do we not see the issue here?
Yeah you’ll have your own ethno state build on the blood and remains of cultures that were there before just like christians and muslims, everything alright
You can mix dairy and meat. They just can’t be from the same animal. So cheeseburger is on the table.
Still dumb rules
@@adventurefaps9571 it’s actually my least favorite kosher law cause it’s kind of wasteful. Some laws really did start out with good purpose though
This interpretation seems right. It also seems so narrow it'd almost never be contravened. What's the actual likelihood of a piece of beef and butter coming from a kid and its mother? Basically none. Beef and milk are taken from different breeds.
Ancient logic (G_D) says don't eat the milk cow!
Beef and milk comes from cows...
So these kids aren't really being prepared for the world/
Matthew 27:25
Nope
They sound like awful people
They are so weird 😕
BRO THE FOOD ISNT THEIRS, WENT FROM PRO PALESTINE TO PRO ISRAEL CAUSE OF SHAWRMA
They do horrible things to their kids
Ngl calling Mizrahi Jews “Arab Jews” is actually disrespectful as they resisted arabization and existed before that was even an ethnic category.
we are literally arab jews, genetics don’t lie lmao
israel made up the word “mizrahim” to strip us of our culture and history
@@DignanDerkin arab isn't a real thing, it just means you got conquered by muhammads foot soldiers. Mizrahi resisted and kept judaism and it is offensive to call them arab jews
It’s frustrating people can’t admit to just being ignorant about the subject instead of insisting on stuff like this
The modern Arab identity is not an ethnic one. Mezrahi and Sephardi Jews are Arabs, Persians, and North African. They spoke these languages and were part of these societies for centuries. Without the existence of Israel and without the antisemitic attacks against them through the last century, they would have been normal every day citizens of their respective countries.
@@TheIraqiMarxist it is an ethnicity but it does also go much deeper than that (culture, religion, language, shared history, geography, politics, etc.)
just disgusting
free israel
From what lmao?!?
@@MildlyPerturbed from hamas obvs
go back to germany 🔥
@@Special_Agent_NSB Israel created Hamas and funded it for years!
@@Special_Agent_NSBIsrael is not the one being occupied
Hasan turkish food is tamil, you should ask ArunAnnow🫣🫣
Bold and bootiful turkish food please marry me