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Ebri

Judeo-Hamadani
Rego Park
Southern AsiaIran flagIranIsrael flagIsraelJewish
Census
Community Profile: A wide range of New Yorkers across the metropolitan area speak some form of Persian, including Bukhori (Uzbekistan), Dari (Afghanistan), Tajik (Tajikistan), and Hazara (Afghanistan). The largest centralized Iranian community in the region may be the Iranian Jewish community in Brooklyn and Great Neck which formed after the 1979 Revolution, among whom there are several other Jewish languages spoken but standard Persian (based on the Teheran variety) is a lingua franca. Although Iranian Muslims, many of them middle-class professionals who came after 1979, are not concentrated in any particular neighborhood, there are hubs in eastern Queens (where the Imam Al-Khoei is one religious hub), Manhattan, and elsewhere.
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T

he Jewish community of Hamadan in Iran used a distinctive Central Plateau Iranian language substantially different from the standard Persian spoken in Iran. Even before the 1979 Revolution, many Jews from Hamadan had left for Teheran, and now most are in Israel, Los Angeles, or (to a lesser extent) Queens and Great Neck. Few now speak it on a daily basis, but some remember and can understand the language.

Note that the language above may be used throughout the New York area — this is just one significant site.
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Ebri

Judeo-Hamadani

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