Yiddishkeit

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English[edit]

English Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia

Alternative forms[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From Yiddish ייִדישקייט (yidishkeyt).

Noun[edit]

Yiddishkeit (uncountable)

  1. Jewishness; the Jewish way of life, particularly Ashkenazi and Yiddish culture.
    • 1892, Israel Zangwill, chapter 12, in The Grandchildren of the Ghetto[1], London: J.M. Dent, page 175:
      Wait! my Ezekiel will be Bar-mitzvah in a few years; then you shall see what I will do for that Shool. You shall see what an example of Yiddishkeit I will give to a link generation.
    • 1969, Chaim Potok, The Promise, New York: Anchor Books, 2005, Chapter Six,
      “In America, everything is called Yiddishkeit,” Rav Kalman said. “A Jew travels to synagogue on Shabbos in his car, that is called Yiddishkeit. A Jew eats ham but gives money to philanthropy, that is called Yiddishkeit. A Jew prays three times a year but is a member of a synagogue, that is called Yiddishkeit. Judaism”—he pronounced the word in English, contemptuously: Joo-dah-eeism—“everything in America calls itself Judaism.”
    • 2000, Curt Leviant (translator), “The Shochet’s Wife” in More Stories from My Father’s Court by Isaac Bashevis Singer (1956), New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, p. 17,[2]
      He wants a loose girl, a bareheaded piece who doesn’t keep Yiddishkeit.

Translations[edit]