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Yiddish in Sydney
Plus61JMedia and the Jewish Museum of Australia
2 episodes
1 month ago
In our second and final part, we meet Sydney’s last remaining formalised Yiddish group – the Sunday group – who meet once a month for a schmooze and bagel. Numbering around 30, these babyboomer women (and a small number of men) are passionate about the language’s survival. For them, Yiddish evokes childhood memories; speaking it is a tribute parent’s generation and a commitment to keep their memory alive. But when they too pass on, who will be left to foster Yiddish? Do streaming services, l...
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All content for Yiddish in Sydney is the property of Plus61JMedia and the Jewish Museum of Australia and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
In our second and final part, we meet Sydney’s last remaining formalised Yiddish group – the Sunday group – who meet once a month for a schmooze and bagel. Numbering around 30, these babyboomer women (and a small number of men) are passionate about the language’s survival. For them, Yiddish evokes childhood memories; speaking it is a tribute parent’s generation and a commitment to keep their memory alive. But when they too pass on, who will be left to foster Yiddish? Do streaming services, l...
Show more...
Arts
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Part 2: 2020 and beyond
Yiddish in Sydney
24 minutes
5 years ago
Part 2: 2020 and beyond
In our second and final part, we meet Sydney’s last remaining formalised Yiddish group – the Sunday group – who meet once a month for a schmooze and bagel. Numbering around 30, these babyboomer women (and a small number of men) are passionate about the language’s survival. For them, Yiddish evokes childhood memories; speaking it is a tribute parent’s generation and a commitment to keep their memory alive. But when they too pass on, who will be left to foster Yiddish? Do streaming services, l...
Yiddish in Sydney
In our second and final part, we meet Sydney’s last remaining formalised Yiddish group – the Sunday group – who meet once a month for a schmooze and bagel. Numbering around 30, these babyboomer women (and a small number of men) are passionate about the language’s survival. For them, Yiddish evokes childhood memories; speaking it is a tribute parent’s generation and a commitment to keep their memory alive. But when they too pass on, who will be left to foster Yiddish? Do streaming services, l...