This is true of nearly all translations of sacred texts made before the rise of linguistics in general and translation studies in particular, but even here, there are more extreme cases. One of those is šarḥ, the translation of sacred texts of Judaism into Judeo-Arabic. Ironically enough, the original meaning of the root šrḥ is "to explain, to interpret", but the šarḥ translations are anything but that. Quite the contrary - their language emulates the syntax of the original as closely as possible. In order to do so, the translators - šarḥanim - have gone so far as to introduce new grammatical features to their target language.
One example of such feature is the use of the preposition الي [ilā] to translate the Hebrew direct object marker את or the Aramaic direct object marker ית. Old Arabic (including Quranic Arabic and Classical Arabic) marks the direct object by means of the suffix -a, while Neo-Arabic (which includes the modern colloquial varieties, but also varieties employed by the Arabic-speaking Jewish population of Middle East and North Africa) normally marks the direct object by position. There are exceptions to this, such as Maltese, Cypriot Maronite Arabic and some Syro-Palestinian dialects [1], which use some variant of the preposition l-. In šarḥ Arabic, however, the direct object is marked using the preposition אלא [ilā], which is identical in function to Hebrew את or Aramaic ית. Consider the following example from the Targum to Canticles 3:5:
Targumic Aramaic:
כד שמעו שבעת עממיא דבני ישראל עתידין למחסן ית ארעהון קמו כחדא וקציצו ית אילניא וסתימו ית מבועי מיא וצדיאו קרויהון וערקו
English translation by Jay C. Treat:
When the seven nations heard that the Children of Israel were about to take possession of their land, they rose at once and cut the trees, stopped up the water springs, laid waste their towns and fled.
Judeo-Arabic translation (Iraq, 19th century):
לָמִּן סַמְעוּ סַבִע אֶל אוּמָם אַן בִנִין יִסְרָאִיל מִתְּוּובִדִין ליִוּורְתֹוֹן אֶלָא בִלַדְהוֹם קָאמוּ גִֹמִיעָא וּקַצוּ אֶלא אֶל סִגַֹר וּסַדּוּ אֶלָא מִנָאבִע אֶל מָאיי וכַֹרִבוּ אֶלָא קִרְיָיאתְּהוֹם ואִנְהַזְמוּ
Or to highlight the phrases in question:
Targumic Aramaic | Judeo-Arabic | English |
למחסן ית ארעהו | ליִוּורְתֹוֹן אֶלָא בִלַדְהוֹם | take possession of their land |
וקציצו ית אילניא | וּקַצוּ אֶלא אֶל סִגַֹר | cut the trees |
וסתימו ית מבועי מיא | וּסַדּוּ אֶלָא מִנָאבִע אֶל | stopped up the water springs |
וצדיאו קרויהון | וכַֹרִבוּ אֶלָא קִרְיָיאתְּהוֹם | laid waste their towns |
And so while in most varieties of colloquial Iraqi Arabic, one would normally render these structures - V + OBJ.M + N - as Verb + Noun, in šarḥ Arabic, the translator feels compelled to produce a verbatim translation and thus translates the semantically empty direct object marker by repurposing the directional preposition אֶלָא [elā].
There are many examples of this in translations from Hebrew and Aramaic, not only in Judeo-Arabic, but also in other Jewish languages, such as Jewish Neo-Aramaic, Judeo-Spanish [2] or Judeo-Persian:
Ruth 4:11 Hebrew:
... יתן יהוה את־האשה הבאה אל־ביתך כרחל ׀ וכלאה אשר בנו שתיהם את־בית ישראל ...
Ruth 4:11 English (NASB):
... May the LORD make the woman who is coming into your home like Rachel and Leah, both of whom built the house of Israel; ...
Ruth 4:11 Judeo-Persian [3]:
... בי דהד כודא מר אן זן אנקי אייא בכאנה תו קון רחל וקון לאה אנקי אודאן כרדנד הר דואן אישאן מר כאנדאן ישראל ...
But unlike in those languages, where the new direct object marker either expanded previous usage (as in Judeo-Spanish אה [a]) or redefined its role both historically and sociolinguistically (as in Judeo-Persian מר [mar] which is normally only found in classical Persian poetry), the Judeo-Arabic repurposing of אלא is a completely different game. Not only did the šarḥanim take a completely innocent preposition and turned it into something completely different, but consider the fourth example from Targum Canticles 3:5:
Targumic Aramaic | Judeo-Arabic | English |
וצדיאו קרויהון | וכַֹרִבוּ אֶלָא קִרְיָיאתְּהוֹם | laid waste their towns |
So while the Aramaic original does not require the direct object marker, its use has become obligatory in written Judeo-Arabic. As Benjamin Hary notes in his Translating Religion: "... šarḥ created its own Judeo-Arabic grammar and structure" [4].
And I'm thinking: isn't that true, at least in terms of syntax, for every Bible translation and, by extension, of all languages that have been fundamentally influenced by translations of sacred scriptures? How different, I wonder, were real spoken Syriac or Coptic from their varieties recorded in Christian translations and writings?
Notes:
[1] Borg 2004:46
[2] Hary 1991:605-606
[3] Mainz 1976:21
[4] Hary 2009:165
Bibliography:
BORG, Alexander: A Comparative Glossary of Cypriot Maronite Arabic (Arabic-English). With an Introductory Essay. - Ledein: Brill, 2004, xxviii + 486 p.
HARY, Benjamin: On the use of 'ila and li in Judeo-Arabic texts. Pages 595-608 in: KAYE, Alan S.: Semitic studies in honor of Wolf LESLAU on the ocassion of his 85th birthday, November 14th, 1991. Volume I. - Wiesbaden: Harrasowitz, 1991, lxviii + 889 p.
HARY, Benjamin: Translating Religion. Linguistic Analysis of Judeo-Arabic Sacred Texts from Egypt. - Leiden: Brill, 2009, 360 p.
MAINZ, Ernest: Ruth et le Cantique des Cantiques en judéo-persan. Journal Asiatique, 264/1-2, 1976, pp. 9-34
Sefer šir ha-širim ʿim targum ve-šarḥ arvi. Baġdād, 1936/37
14 comments:
It is undeniable that Biblical translations have had profound impact on the languages which they are being translated into. The English King James Bible and the German Luther Bible are two examples of this.
Interestingly somebody once pointed out to me that in Fijian, the standard reference grammars cite a VSO general word order, but apparently native speakers regard this as nonsense, and the only reason it is considered so is because the first Bible translation into Fijian, the first major document published in the language, slavishly imitated the Hebrew and Greek word order and the writers of grammars took this as a reflection of the language's actual syntax (I have no citations for this than the word, but I don't doubt it's true).
Gothic, don't forget Gothic. All the Gothic we have is essentially relexified Greek.
Thanks for your post and the previous comments. Another example is the way that the Aramaic Targums in general are translated from the Hebrew Tanakh. In general the syntax of the Aramaic Targums, but especially the Aramaic Peshitta Tanakh, follows the Hebrew very closely, in some cases copying unusual Hebrew words. Also, often the KJV copies the Hebrew and Greek very closely.
We have a German Bible the text of which "follows the historical version of 1912". That, in turn, is apparently one of Luther's versions in modern spelling. It's atrocious, with thoroughly bizarre genitive constructions like des Todes sterben "to die death's" that I can't imagine have ever existed in German. Some passages are unreadable.
There is one interesting book on this subject:
http://www.dingir.cz/tri_ceske_jubilejni_bible.shtml
Congratulations to the award!
Interesting blog! I´m Swedish myself but I run a Spanish podcast, don Gerardo de Suecia on this address:
http://turbeng.wordpress.com/ I have English and Swedish translations of many episodes.
Bienvenidos, Welcome, Välkommen!
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