Haketia

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Haketia
Hakitia, Haquitía, Western Judeo-Spanish
An original letter in Solitreo script from Tangier, written in 1832.
Native toNorth Africa
RegionIsrael, Amazonas state in Brazil[1]
EthnicityNorth African Sephardic Jews
Native speakers
1000 (2023)
Early forms
Dialects
Originally, Hebrew, Solitreo; now, mostly Latin
Language codes
ISO 639-3
IETFlad-015
Historical Judeo-Spanish speech communities in the Mediterranean. Ringed circles represent modern speech communities. Haketia is spoken on the southwest Mediterranean.

Haketia (Hebrew: חַכִּיתִּיָה Ḥakkītīyā; Arabic: حاكيتية; Spanish: Haquetía) (also written as Hakitia or Haquitía) is an endangered Jewish Romance language also known as Djudeo Spañol, Ladino Occidental, or Western Judaeo-Spanish. It was historically spoken by the North African Sephardim[2] in the Moroccan cities of Tétouan, Tangier, Asilah, Larache, Chefchaouen, Ksar el-Kebir, and the Spanish towns of Ceuta and Melilla. Tetuani Ladino was also spoken in Oran, Algeria. One of the distinctions between Ladino and Haketia (Haquetia) is that the latter incorporates Arabic.

Etymology[edit]

The name "Haketia" derived from the Arabic حكى ḥaká, "tell",[3] and is therefore pronounced with IPA: [ħ], reflecting the Arabic ḥāʾ ح. In some places it is written "Jaquetía" with the same pronunciation.

Description[edit]

The well-known form of Judaeo-Spanish spoken by Jews living in the Balkans, Greece, Turkey and Jerusalem is Ladino Oriental (eastern Ladino). Haketia may be described by contrast as Ladino Occidental. The language is a variety of Spanish that borrows heavily from Judeo-Moroccan Arabic. It evidently also contains a number of words of Hebrew origin and was originally written using Hebrew letters. There is some cultural resemblance between the two Judaeo-Spanish dialect communities, including a rich shared stock of romanzas (ballads) from medieval Spain, though both words and music often differ in detail (as indeed they do between one Oriental-Sephardic community and another).

The Haketia lexicon is made up mostly of Spanish words but 34.5% of words are from Arabic and 18.5% are from Hebrew. It contains many calques of Hebrew phrases, such as hiĵas de Israel, a literal translation of the Hebrew phrase בנות ישראל, meaning "daughters of Israel".[4]

Other words have shifted in meaning. For example, שכן [ʃaˈχen], "neighbor", became sajén, which has taken on the meaning "Christian/Spanish".[4]

Spanish prefixes and suffixes are combined with Hebrew base words.[4]

Phonology[edit]

Consonant Phonemes[edit]

Bilabial Labio-

dental

Dental Alveolar Post-

alveolar

Palatal Velar Uvular Pharyngeal Glottal
Nasal m n ɲ
Stop p b t d k g q ʔ
Affricate t͡ʃ
Fricative f s z ʃ ʒ ʝ x ɣ ħ ʕ h
Trill r
Tap ɾ
Lateral l

Vowel Phonemes[edit]

Front Central Back
Close i u
Mid e (ø) o
Open a

Notes:

  • Only certain speakers produce /ø/.

Morphology[edit]

  • Native words form the plural by suffixing the morpheme |-s| (which corresponds to /-s/ in words ending with unstressed vowels and /-es/ otherwise). Masculine nouns loaned from Hebrew typically form the plural by suffixing the morpheme |-ˈim|, though some use |-ˈot| instead. For instance, the plural of masculine sefer 'book' is safarim, whereas the plural of masculine mazón 'victual' is mezonot. Feminine nouns loaned from Hebrew usually form the plural with |-ot|, though some use |-im| instead.
  • The dual number only appears in nouns loaned from Hebrew in certain verses, such as "Mosé subió a los ʃamaim" ("Moses rose to the two heavens"). These nouns form the dual number by suffixing the morpheme |-ˈaim|.

Verb Conjugation[edit]

Regular conjugations:

-ar verbs -er verbs -ir verbs
Infinitive -ar -er -ir
Gerund -ando -iendo
Participle -ado -ido
Present Indicative: Singular
-ar verbs -er verbs -ir verbs
First Person -oi
Second Person -as -es
Third Person -a -e
Present Indicative: Plural
-ar verbs -er verbs -ir verbs
First Person -amos -emos -imos
Second Person -áis -ís
Third Person -an -en
Imperfect Indicative: Singular
-ar verbs -er verbs -ir verbs
First Person -aba -ía
Second Person -abas -ías
Third Person -aba -ía
Imperfect Indicative: Plural
-ar verbs -er verbs -ir verbs
First Person -abamós -íamos
Second Person -abais -íais
Third Person -aban -ían
Preterite Indicative: Singular
-ar verbs -er verbs -ir verbs
First Person
Second Person -ates -ites
Third Person -ió
Preterite Indicative: Plural
-ar verbs -er verbs -ir verbs
First Person -imos
Second Person -atis -itis
Third Person -aron -ieron
Future Indicative: Singular
-ar verbs -er verbs -ir verbs
First Person -aré -eré -iré
Second Person -arás -erás -irás
Third Person -ará -erá -irá
Future Indicative: Plural
-ar verbs -er verbs -ir verbs
First Person -aremos -eremos -iremos
Second Person -arís -erís -irís
Third Person -arán -erán -irán
Singular Conditional
-ar verbs -er verbs -ir verbs
First Person -aría -ería -iría
Second Person -arías -erías -irías
Third Person -aría -ería -iría
Plural Conditional
-ar verbs -er verbs -ir verbs
First Person -aríamos -eríamos -iríamos
Second Person -aríais -eríais -iríais
Third Person -arían -erían -irían
Imperative
-ar verbs -er verbs -ir verbs
Singular -a -e
Plural -ái
Present Subjunctive: Singular
-ar verbs -er verbs -ir verbs
First Person -e -a
Second Person -es -as
Third Person -e -a
Present Subjunctive: Plural
-ar verbs -er verbs -ir verbs
First Person -emos -amos
Second Person -ís -áis
Third Person -en -an
Imperfect Subjunctive: Singular
-ar verbs -er verbs -ir verbs
First Person -ara -iera
Second Person -aras -ieras
Third Person -ara -iera
Imperfect Subjunctive: Plural
-ar verbs -er verbs -ir verbs
First Person -aramós -ieramós
Second Person -arais -ierais
Third Person -aran -ieran
Future Subjunctive: Singular
-ar verbs -er verbs -ir verbs
First Person -are -iere
Second Person -ares -ieres
Third Person -are -iere
Future Subjunctive: Plural
-ar verbs -er verbs -ir verbs
First Person -aremós -ieremós
Second Person -areis -iereis/-ieris
Third Person -aren -ieren

Modern use[edit]

Haketia, unlike other varieties of Judaeo-Spanish, did not develop a literary tradition, so the language remained as a colloquial form of communication and was not used as a vehicle for formal education since in Spanish Morocco, Spanish was used, along with French, at the Alliance Israélite Universelle schools. Due to the influence of the Spanish and French conquests and the large number of Jews from northern Morocco who emigrated to Venezuela, Spain and later Argentina, the language was levelled with modern Spanish, which has contributed greatly to its extinction. Nevertheless, there has been a slow renaissance of the language, helped by musicians such as Doris Benmaman [lad], Mor Karbasi and Kol Oud Tof Trio [lad], among others. Jose Benoliel [lad] and Alegría Bendayán de Bendelac have both compiled Spanish-Haketía[5] dictionaries, published in 1977 and 1995, respectively. The Caracas Center of Sephardic Studies [lad] regularly publishes articles in Haketia in its magazine Maguen-Escudo.[6] The language is also spoken in some communities in the Amazon areas of Brazil.[7]

Scholarship[edit]

Joseph Benoliel collected oral tradition, grammar, and a lexicon. Alegria Bendelac conducted fieldwork.[8] Nina Pinto-Abecasis collected folklore.[9]

Status[edit]

Decline began as early as 1860 during the Spanish occupation of Tetuan and accelerated as a increasing share of Haketia speakers adopted Modern Spanish. Today Haketia is a declining language with only 1000 speakers remaining, down from 30,000 in 1900.[4]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Cunha (2009), p. 11.
  2. ^ Sisso Raz, Alicia. "La Haketía". Voces de Haketia (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 2017-09-21. Retrieved 2012-08-30.
  3. ^ Benoliel, José (1977). Dialecto Judeo-hispano-marroquí o Hakitía (in Spanish). Madrid. OCLC 5982985.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  4. ^ a b c d "Haketia". Jewish Languages. Retrieved 2024-02-08.
  5. ^ "Haketía: El Djudeo-Espagnol de la Afrika del Nord". Anajnu.cl. Archived from the original on 2020-01-07.
  6. ^ Moreno, Aviad (14 October 2016). "Maguén-Escudo". Encyclopedia of Jews in the Islamic World. Archived from the original on 10 November 2023. Retrieved 26 August 2020.
  7. ^ Cunha, Álvaro (2012). Hakitia: o judeu-árabe na Amazônia. São Paulo: Sapientia.
  8. ^ "Haketia". Encyclopedia.com. Archived from the original on 2023-03-30. Retrieved 2023-03-30.
  9. ^ Pinto-Abecasis, Nina (2011). "Towards the Inclusion of Nicknames in the Genres of Folklore: The Case of the Former Jewish Community of Tetuan, Morocco". Folklore. 122 (2): 135–154. doi:10.1080/0015587X.2011.570520. ISSN 0015-587X. JSTOR 41306583. S2CID 147182606. Archived from the original on 2023-03-27. Retrieved 2023-03-30.

Bibliography[edit]

External links[edit]