Dzhankoy pronounced Jokoi (Canköy in Turkish is a Crimean Tatar town in the steppes of Crimea, Ukraine. Few of my cousins live there and I have visited once at the fall Soviet Union. Dzhan or Jon means life or dear depending on how it's used in a sentence and Koi or Koy means village in Turkic or straight up Turkish. It is not a Yiddish or Jewish word but Karaits or Karaims may have lived there alongside Tatars.
@ДанилДанилович-с2н
Жыл бұрын
Еще дополню, единственное еврейское поселение в Джанкое было в селе Кадым, сейчас именуется Дымовка А Джанкой да, Джан - милая (уютная ) Кой -- деревня, милая деревня
@lukaskamin755
Ай бұрын
it's not pronounced the way, you write, maybe in Turkish, but there are no Turks there for centuries, it's pronounced as Jan-koy
@первыйкругвторой
14 күн бұрын
Да и давно это Россия 🇷🇺 Привет из Джанкоя , милого и уютного места.
@solidarukraine8297
Жыл бұрын
💓Pete Seger: a great singer of workers' international solidarity
@rebeccaross2314
7 жыл бұрын
My mom would sing this to us.
@valsolo5085
2 жыл бұрын
The magic of Pete Seeger!
@marklivshitz5178
8 жыл бұрын
МОЯ МАМА З"Л ПЕЛА ЭТУ ПЕСНЮ, А ДЕД ВТОРИЛ ЕЙ!
@juliannafarkas7785
2 жыл бұрын
Браво 💐 Спасибо Болшое эа ето красивий муэику 👏
@245chani
Жыл бұрын
פיט סיגר שר באידיש! מדהים!
@Ника-ы9д
Жыл бұрын
Джанкой- это в Крыму! ❤
@pashiko
2 жыл бұрын
(Yiddish transliterated) As men fort kine Sevastopol Iz nit veit fun Simferopol Dortin iz a stantzie faran Ver darf zuchen niye glikken S'iz a stanziye an antikel In Dzhankoye, Dzhan, Dzhan, Dzhan (Chorus) Hey Dzhan, hey Dzhankoye Hey Dzhanvili, hey Dzhankoye Hey Dzhankoye, Dzhan, Dzhan, Dzhan Hey Dzhan, hey Dzhankoye Hey Dzhanvili, hey Dzhankoye Hey Dzhankoye, Dzhan, Dzhan, Dzhan Enfert yidden af mine kashe Vi'z mine brider, v'iz Abrashe? S'gayt ba im der traktor vi a bahn Di mime Layre ba der kosilke Bayle ba der molotilke In Dzhankoye, Dzhan, Dzhan, Dzhan (Chorus) Ver zogt az yidden kene nit handlen Essen fette yoich mit mandlen Nor nit zine kine arbitsman? Doss kenen zogen nor di sonim Yidden shpite zay on in ponim Tit a kik af Dzhan, Dzhan, Dzhan (Chorus)
@iskandermakhmudov
2 жыл бұрын
Great help!
@pashiko
2 жыл бұрын
@@iskandermakhmudov my pleasure!
@viktorsmirnov8282
2 жыл бұрын
Два. места на Джанкой. Victor Smirnoff.( Крымский).
@mostlynew
2 жыл бұрын
While the song is unfamiliar to me, I have the sense that Pete Seeger’s simple rendition has captured its essence. I was referred, btw, by its mention as “Soviet-era song praising the life of Jews on collective farms in Crimea” in the Wikipedia page about this geographically important city.
@triffh5956
3 жыл бұрын
Love if there was a lyric video to learn the words.
@briankaneb4279
3 жыл бұрын
Here are the lyrics! :) www.achanceforlandandfreshair.com/blog/2018/7/16/hey-zhankoye
@liedens82
6 жыл бұрын
Hey dzhan, hey Dzhankoe,Shteyt a yid un trent a goyeIn Dzhankoe, dzhan, dzhan, dzhan
בס"ד תודה רבה על המילים! אמנם איני יודעת איך לבטא אותן בדיוק וגם איני מבינה כמעט (אשמח לקבל את התרגום לעברית) אבל מאוד מודה. פיט סיגר כל כך מלבב ומלא חן!
@lordXAVIJAANBJERGNOG
9 жыл бұрын
:)
@mattadler1496
8 жыл бұрын
anyone know who this singer is?
@Eydale
8 жыл бұрын
His name is Pete Seeger (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pete_Seeger)
@mattadler1496
8 жыл бұрын
+Eydale thank you! :)
@peterwhistler8415
7 жыл бұрын
from the '70's group, Peter, Paul and Mary.
@kubanpanzer
6 жыл бұрын
Peter Whistler not quite the same peter, but in the same vein.
@OtisFan1
6 жыл бұрын
Pete Seeger's musical career predated the group Peter, Paul and Mary by about 20 years, his starting in the early 1940's, theirs in the early 60's. He was very important in the rise of folk music in the US as a singer, song-writer and as a member of the folk group the Weavers. Overlap with Peter, Paul and Mary: they got a big hit in '62 with a song he wrote, "If I Had a Hammer."
@psiakosc1672
5 жыл бұрын
''Dzhankoy'' iis a Polish word for Thank you - Dziękuję
@Eydale
5 жыл бұрын
Dzhankoy (Crimean Tatar: Canköy) is a town of regional significance in the north of the Crimea. Population: 38,622 (2014 Census).[2] Dzhankoy is the subject of a popular Yiddish song "Hey! Djankoye," as popularized by Pete Seeger, and by Theodore Bikel, a Soviet-era song praising the life of Jews on collective farms in Crimea
@psiakosc1672
5 жыл бұрын
@@Eydale Are you deaf or something? Listen how "dziękuję" is pronounced. Jews from the Pale of Settlements brought the name with them.
@ЛораГеоргиади
4 жыл бұрын
No, you"re wrong. Its a name of the town.
@valmakar
4 жыл бұрын
I speak Polish and know some basics of different Turkic languages and can say that it's just coincidence. Caña köy in Noghay (which is now a dialect of Crimean Tatar) means "new village". It's quite a popular name for a village or town. In Turkish "new village" would be Yeni köy, and you may find many places named Yeniköy in Turkey.
@terranikon7327
3 жыл бұрын
No! This is a city in Crimea Dzhankoy!
@marklivshitz5178
8 жыл бұрын
МОЯ МАМА З"Л ПЕЛА ЭТУ ПЕСНЮ, А ДЕД ВТОРИЛ ЕЙ!
@Eydale
8 жыл бұрын
+Mark Livshitz Это эпизод из серии программ Пита Сигера "Rainbow Quest" -"Встреча с Ruth Rubin". Ruth Rubin - известный собиратель идишистской песни. Жила в Канаде.
@Каа-п4ъ
6 жыл бұрын
Марик ви таки не и зная идиша понимаете шо в песне половина из Джанкоя джан Джан джан..и таки джан это не идиш а среднеазиатское обрашение к человеку.. я таки немного аид одесский но не иудей а атеист..
@terranikon7327
3 жыл бұрын
@@Каа-п4ъ Таки, Джанкой, город в Крыму. Когда-то привезли еврейских поселенцев осваивать крымские степи. kzitem.info/news/bejne/lqmXk52cfWuTaoo
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