Revision as of 14:27, 12 June 2023 editKhatschaturjan (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users576 edits ←Created page with '{{Short description|Yiddish folk song}} {{Infobox song | name = Sha Shtil | language = Yiddish | writer = unknown }} "'''Sha, Shtil, Makht Nisht Keyn Gerider!'''" (''Shh, hush, don’t make any noise''; {{lang-yi|שאַ, שטיל, מאַכט נישט קײן גערידער}}) is a Yiddish folk song, written and composed by unknown authors. In World War II, the song was adapted and sung during the...' | Revision as of 15:50, 12 June 2023 edit undoKhatschaturjan (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users576 editsmNo edit summaryNext edit → | ||
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Un az der rebe zingt | Un az der rebe zingt | ||
Dem heylikn nign, | Dem heylikn nign, | ||
Blaybt der sotn a toyter lign. |
Blaybt der sotn a toyter lign.</poem> | ||
|<poem> | |<poem> |
Revision as of 15:50, 12 June 2023
Yiddish folk song"Sha Shtil" | |
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Song | |
Language | Yiddish |
Songwriter(s) | unknown |
"Sha, Shtil, Makht Nisht Keyn Gerider!" (Shh, hush, don’t make any noise; Template:Lang-yi) is a Yiddish folk song, written and composed by unknown authors. In World War II, the song was adapted and sung during the Holocaust.
Lyrics and translation
Yiddish | Transliteration | Translation |
---|---|---|
שאַ, שטיל, מאַכט נישט קײן גערידער |
Sha, shtil, makht nisht keyn gerider, |
Shh, hush, don’t make any noise. |
The song depicts the atmosphere in a hasidic community. The melody starts with an augmented second, which is typical of the so-called gypsy scale.
History
According to an eye-witness account, the words to the original melody were adapted during police actions in the Holocaust as follows: “Sha, shtil, makh nit keyn gerider,/ S’iz in lager a kontrol vider./ Sha, shtil, makh nit keyn gevald,/ Di kontrol kumt aher bald./ Un az di kontrol kumt iz dokh vey un vind, / Men darf in lager nit zen keyn kind.” (Shh, hush, don’t make any noise, the guard is coming again; shh, hush, don’t make a clamor, the guard is coming soon. And when the guard comes, it’s woe to us — no child in the camp should be seen.)
The Israeli Yiddish metal band Gevolt has recorded Sha, shtil on its album AlefBase.
References
External links
- Sha, Shtil, Makht Nisht Keyn Gerider! The Yosl and Chana Mlotek Ciddish Song Collection
- Beth's notes
- The Burning Bush