- Source: Pintele Yid
Pintele Yid, often translated as "Jewish spark", is a Yiddish phrase describing the notion that every Jewish person has an essential core of Jewishness within them, even if they are assimilated or are unaware of their Jewishness. Jewish converts may also be described as having a pintele Yid that led them to Judaism. The term is most commonly used by Ashkenazim and Orthodox Jews.
Etymology
Pintele is a diminutive Yiddish word for "little point" and Yid is a term for a Jewish person, so pintele Yid can be translated literally as "the little point of a Jew". The Hebrew language equivalent of the term is "Nitzotz HaYehudi".
See also
Crypto-Judaism
Jewish assimilation
Yiddishkeit
References
External links
Opinion - Ruthless Cosmopolitan: Farewell to a ‘pintele Yid’, Jewish Telegraphic Agency
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Tzav (parsyah)
- Pintele Yid
- Yiddishkeit
- Bessie Thomashefsky
- Scientific racism
- Avraham Fried
- Benny Friedman (singer)
- Racial conceptions of Jewish identity in Zionism
- Leo Fuld
- Moshe Yess
- Herman Wohl