hen her ground, other chapter mem- mother bers put their names on a died 10 waiting list. Each time the years ago, list grew, another Yiddish Emily club was added. Now there Arnold was are a total of five, made up afraid she exclusively of Morgenthau would never members (except for the find someone newest, a couples group). else with "Besides enjoying and lov- whom she could speak Yid- ing Yiddish, our goal is to per- dish. petuate it," Ms. Arnold said. But because the language "Women today have not was so important to her, she taught it to their children, decided to start a search for and that includes my own other Yiddish speakers. Ms. children. We are concerned Arnold, of West Bloomfield, our children will not speak it wanted to start an informal because it's not spoken in the Yiddish club. home." What began with six or Gertrude Gordon of South- seven women meeting to ex- field shares their concerns. change jokes and speak in She grew up speaking Eng- Yiddish evolved into a formal lish and Yiddish, she raised club of about 30 women over her own children speaking the age of 60. They call them- only English. Now, Ms. Gor- selves fraylicha friendt, hap- don regrets it. py friends. "Parents should speak Yid- Although Yiddish words dish to their children," she and expressions have made said. "I didn't teach it to my their way into the main- children because it was easi- stream, many Jews see it as er to talk in English." a dead language. The num- Chances are their children ber of native Yiddish speak- know Yiddish words like oy ers is dwindling, yet there is vey, kvetsh, chutzpah or a resurgence in the language meshuga because these words in university and academic are spoken and understood as settings, and it is still spoken if they are part of the English on a daily basis among some language. members of the Orthodox Outside the homes of local community. residents, Yiddish is also Ms. Arnold's club was so making a comeback in the successful that she became courtrooms across the coun- the inspiration for another try. A Yale Law Journal ar- club, started by Sema Shaw- ticle concludes that Yiddish Yarost of West Bloomfield for may be replacing Latin members of Morgenthau, a phrases in America's courts. local B'nai Brith Women's Authors Alex Kozinski, a chapter. federal appeals court judge in Once the club was off the California, and Eugene Unrnonth2ll members redst Yiddish (speak Yiddish). Ha pp eni ng Volokh, a clerk for Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, counted Yiddish words in court decisions. Chutzpah was the most pop- ular word, appearing in 123 opinions. Yiddish, a language com- posed of German, He- brew, Aramaic and to a lesser extent Greek and Latin, has been spoken by Ashkenazi Jews for more than 1,000 years. Although the number of Yid- dish speakers at any given time in history has been difficult to calculate, the Holo- caust drastically re- duced those numbers. Yiddish scholars maintain the lan- guage is alive in acad- emia because students see it as es- sential to studying history that was only recorded in Yiddish. Aliza Shevrin of Ann Arbor is a native Yiddish speaker and translator of the works of Sholom Ale- ichem. She is one of only a handful of Yid- dish translators in the country. "You really have to know the language in your gut, that's the best way to translate it," she said. When Ms. Shevrin con- verts a book from Yiddish to English, it's like solving a puzzle, she said. "It's difficult to find an English translation that's not too dated or con- temporary. All these things have to be thought about so the reader doesn't know it was translated." Ms. Shevrin agrees the lan- guage is not dying, but she is skeptical about the future of Yiddish literature because there are no present-day renowned Yiddish writers. "People have been lament- ing the death of Yiddish for 100 years," said Anita Norich, an associate professor of Eng- lish and Yiddish at the Uni- versity of Michigan. "I don't think it will ever again be the One of those Yiddish stu- dents, 24-year-old Daniella HarPaz, a Huntington Woods native, studied with Dr. Nor- rich. Last year she received her master's degree in Near Eastern studies and modern Hebrew at the University of Michigan. Now she teaches the same Yiddish class she took as a U-M student. "I had a very strong Jewish up- bringing," Ms. HarPaz said. "It wasn't until college when I began study- ing Yiddish that I realized there was this whole culture I had access to. When I went to Hillel Day School, I read some of the Yiddish sto- ries that were trans- lated into Hebrew. But it wasn't until I actually read them in Yiddish that they took on a whole new life." While Yiddish is alive on college cam- puses, it has only a faint heart beat in local religious day JENNIFER FINER JEWISH NEWS INTERN schools. The Lubavitch Education Center in Farmington Hills is central spoken language of the only school locally to use Jewish people. Instead, its fu- Yiddish as a language of in- ture is more in the universi- struction. Rabbi Yitschak Ka- ties than on the streets. gan, associate director of the "Yiddish looks a lot better Lubavitch Foundation, said than the rumors make it out the school teaches in Yiddish to be. It's like when Mark because "it's the language of Twain said, 'The rumors of choice for conveying Jewish my death have been greatly tradition and living." exaggerated.' The same holds This school year is the first true for Yiddish." time ninth-grade students at Dr. Norrich, who has been the Sally Allan Alexander teaching at U-M for a decade, Beth Jacob School for Girls said only recently have Yid- are required to take a Yiddish dish language classes fulfilled course. the university's language re- "We're trying it out to see quirement. how it goes," said Florene The number of speakers is declining and the language has been eulogized for years, but many claim it's still very much alive. To . Viticlisb? E/