Goodbye Odessa - Yiddish Song
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 3 พ.ค. 2020
- Vocal: Olga Avigail Mieleszczuk, violin: Daniel Hoffman, clarinet: Ittai Binnun, accordion: Ofer Malchin, contrabass: Yehonatan Levi
record and sound: Ittai Binnun / Lars Sergel, mastering: Marek Walaszek
Oh Odessa, goodbye Odessa,
I will miss you so much,
I will never forget you,
Farewell my friends,
Let's shout together:
Odessa Mama, I love you so much!
This Yiddish-Ukrainian song "Proshchai Odessa" was sung by Pesakh Burstein. I've combined it with a Ukrayinish Kek-Vok (Ukrainian Cakewalk) collected by Yale Strom. - เพลง
My life began in Odessa, but I did not see her, my mother Nadia was prégnant of me, we were in a camp of refugees in 1945 and she left Odessa with my father Joseph just before my birth, so that my little ears have heard the street music of Odessa. So I never have seen Odessa but I heard her! I was born in West Europe, became doctor, and with my father, we played music at home.
. My son is a musician too.
I love the movie "Cuirassé Potemkine" of Sergueï Eisenstein.
I am now a grandma musician and I play Klezmer and Russian music. 🎶🎶🎶💝
God Bless
God bless !
@@giuseppeettoremantovani2465 💕
You are right:we have to be FREE. But you are wrong when you say we are so different. Nada/Nadia, it's not opposite. And everybody moves on. Even physiologically, isn'it? 😊
Beautiful story !
Toda ! ❤
My grandfather founded the first Odessa's yiddish daily newspaper back in the 1890's
Shalom Jean-Charles! Dites, comment il s'appelait ce journal en Yiddish? En avez-vous hérité des exemplaires?
@@fennecabumukallalabdulmasi3867 c'est très loin, mais je peux citer 2 canards parisiens en yiddish pour lesquels écrivait mon paternel
Chances are members of my ancestry read your grandfathers Yiddish Odessa newspaper.
@@ThunderAppeal so they were probably enlightened liberal zionist Jews
@@jeancharles9610 They didnt have 'liberals' or 'conservatives' in Odessa.
A Jew was a Jew.
They were religious, and likely pro-Israel so Zionist probably.
Yidish songs have the unique combination of sadness and joy for life at the same time
Good point! Inever heard that before, but it's true. It's a GOOD cry if it makes me cry. Strong feeings. Pintele yid. I love being Jewish.
You got it!
@@raanangeberer1903 As if I hear my mother speak. Pintele, means a little bit in Jiddisch. We red this book together, we did that often, buy the same books, or one of us got it in the library and if the book was good, we urged the other to read it. So we did read a book written by a Dutch writer, Albert Mol. He was not Jewish, but grew up in the red light district in Amsterdam, nearby the Jewish neighbourhood so he knew a lot of Jewish families and had Jewish friends. Anyway, the book was called Mengele broek en Pintje Billen, what means as much as: "A lot of trouser and a little bit of bum" sorry, can't translate it better. Have a nice life, and thanks for reminding me of good memories.
As any art that reflects the culture should. The minor keys reminds one of the past, whilst the fast tempo and arpeggios reflect the vitality and energy of the present (l'chaim!).
@@raanangeberer1903 👍Greetings from Poland!
I met a friend 50 years ago who walked from Poland at the end of 1939 to Odessa ,his parents murdered by the nazis.At 16 years old he arrived in Egypt and joined the British army saying he was 18!
He fought the germans and obtained the british nationality. Rest in pace Alex!
Brave jewish man! My grandfather survived in Slovakia just because he burried his papers and he changed his name 😂😂
@wolfs hordes why? It is your opinion but why you thinknit is sad? If you want to survive you will do what you can...
What a Internet address
@@benjaminsroka6133 This man, Jewish or Polish? Or 2 in 1?
@@swetoniuszkorda5737 The fact his parents were murdered by Nazis makes him Jewish in the first place. And in Poland lots of Jews were murdered too, even when the war was over and they returned to their homes which were occupied by Polish people, so they were killed because the new "owners" of the houses were afraid those Jews wanted their houses back. So why would he wanted to be Polish. Be aware that I am not saying anything bad about the many Polish people that risked their lives by saving a lot of Jewish people. And I know a lot of Jewish children were in hiding at the homes of normal 'every day" Polish people..
I hope to one day visit Odessa, the home of my mothers and fathers. They left after the pogrom of 1871, and eventually made their way to the mountains of eastern Norway. We've lived in Norway ever since, but stories of Odessa are still told in my family, over a hundred years later.
th-cam.com/video/Wc6_gsWCQfw/w-d-xo.html&start_radio=1&rv=Wc6_gsWCQfw&t=178
This is a better intro to Babel's Odessa:th-cam.com/video/UMP2xGQY-bw/w-d-xo.html
:- (
Missing Odessa for the past 45 years. Wanted to visit now, but ...God Bless my lovely city and Ukraine. We will see you soon
I'm afraid you should have thought of doing it earlier. Let's hope Odessa will still be there in the future for you to visit.
Я киянка..мені 79 років я українка. Але коли я слухаю єврейські пісні....не знаючи ні ідиш...ні іврит...Як же мені робиться на душі просто Прекрасно!!!Якось затишно...миролюбно.Я дуже хочу щоб настав Мир і спокій в наших Державах.СЛАВА. ЗСУ!!! СЛАВА ППО!!!! Як бачите я вже старенька.ЩИРО дякую за сьогоднішній спокій.Хай щастить мої дорогі захисники
Это Россия дура без мозговая
My heart goes out to you and everyone in Ukraine. I am a descendant of Ukrainian Jews from Odessa in America. My relatives came in the late 1800s-early 1900s. My father brought over family members in the 1980s during the Gorbachev thaw. I would love to explore my heritage and see where I came from when god willing the war is over and Ukraine is victorious.
Frieden für alle!
This is yiddish from ukrainia.. Difficult to understand for me. Am used to germanic yiddidish from austria switz germany dutch.
They were good times when every country had its own ways and all generations mixed together to have fun.
I'm from Odessa, Shalom Aleichem, Moldovanka. And my grandparents spoke Yiddish to me, even thou I don't know Yiddish, this song makes me cry. I miss Odessa
Tres belle musique merci.de France,Bretagne❤
I am originally from Odessa , former Soviet Union . I remember my bubale singing this when I was a child . She always talked to me in Yiddish . I still can speak Yiddish . Thanks from the bottom of my heart for posting this video . SPASIBO VAM.
как говориn мой знакомец - Никогда не прощу евреям, за тио что они уехали из Одессы.
And right now Russia is bombing Odessa.
@@katerynarusakova6176 Россия не бомбит Одессу, а громит бандеровские склады, с натовской техникой!ясно, не путай и не слушай укрСМИ!ОНИ ВРУТ!!!
@@ivankoval3540Да, евреи уехали из Одессы и она потеряла свой неповторимый колорит. Я русская из Одессы, выросла в советское время. Наши родные песни - 7:40, Хава - Нагила звучали во дворах. Мы на них выросли. И знаменитый одесский юмор тоже был от еврейского населения. С отъездом евреев город изменился не в лучшую сторону.
@@user-vw7ri9bn8k евреи как приехали в Одессу, так и уехали. Никогда об этом не задумывались? Первые евреи начали уезжать из Одессы ещё в19 веке.
I'm Armenian but nothing can make you cry like Yiddish music - bravo.
Armenians and Jews have so much in common culturally. I love Armenian food
although Dudk does a good job, and also the old Armenian stuff with the "Persian" instruments, like Tar and Kementcha spike fiddle...
My mom is Greek and my dad Russian Jew but I love Armenian culture also
fuck you you bastard I was *not* crying until you suggested it!!!
I have Jewish roots but i love Armenia more than my country, love to Հայաստան from Spain 🇪🇦❤️🇦🇲🇦🇲🇦🇲
I'm not Jewish but I was married to a Jewish man for 25 years. His family in Russia was able to send 2 of the boys, ages 12 and 19, to America and they immediately went to work in the garment industry in NY City. I am still fascinated by the Yiddish culture and language which one naturally is exposed to by being a sort of Honorary Member of the Fold!😊🤭🧕 🤵♀
Odessa it's Ukraine
Odessa is Ukraine.before it was Turkish fort Hadjybai then its was ukranian and Russia impair okupated ukrean meadle aisia then another country
@@eugen6314 like Golan hils.
@@eugen6314 Odessa jest autonomią
żadna ua.
@@eugen6314 was greek to
Odesa has a beautiful opera house. I hope it remains standing.
And EVGENY MOGILEVSKY, marvellous 1st prize in the Queen Elisabeth Competition piano 1964, comes from Odessa. He played Rach 3 at the Finals.
My grandmother left Bialystock in 1908 for NYC.I am here now typing this because of her courage.Love you forever Ida Shatz.
Yeah, way better decision honestly
I have no Jewish ancestry, nor do I understand Yiddish, and I love this💖
SAME!
the music in this clip is yiddish, but not the language. it's a slavic language.
Stefan Doepner it’s actually partially in Ukrainian and partially in Yiddish
@@TheNomadKat thanks Yana for the clarification!
was listening again, now more careful, and got it.
Шалом с Израиля
! Отец моей бабушки Пейсах Рабкин был раввином в Белорусь.А мой дедушка с Донецка, Украина знал иврит, идыш и писал в газете статьи на этих языках.
Увидела самого Михоэлса. Спасибо, потрясающие кадры.
Только Донецк - это Россия.
Где в Белорусии? в Витебске он не был равином.
@@ivydark9741 безмозглый, унылый, троллевой гавноед, пишущий под ником " Ivy Dark", кому здесь интересен ваш бред??..поговорите сами с собой.. Донецк, это Украина
@@ivydark9741дядя/тьотю, ви что-то путаете
Жить и радоваться!!!
Разве не так?
Как прекрасны все люди, когда такие счастливые!
А саме зараз, cyчa роZzziя знищує Одесу та одеситів!!
PERCHÉ GUERRA IN RUSSIA! DONNE BELLISSIME FINISSIME ED INTELLIGENTISSIME! VI AMO TUTTE VI AMO TUTTE! LUCE PER I MIEI OCCHI! UNICHE AL MONDO! AMORE AMORE MA PIÙ GUERRA!
I'm a Sikh from India and dont have a single clue what language or culture its related to but the rhythms got me hooked. Well thats the beauty of music, thnks for showing this side of utube
Music tends to be rather evocative. This is somewhat Galician.
Eastern Europe Jewish-Yddish music
I'm from the culture that this music comes from and I love Indian music and dance.
It's a mixture of Yiddish and Russian languages.
There are roughly the same population of Sikhs and Jews in the UK and always good relations between both communities. So, Shalom Aleichem, my friend!
So many of us, me included, have our heritage in the Pogrom era: For me, my great-grandfather arrived in the 1870's, alone at six, with nothing. He worked all his life as a fruit-seller, and bought but one big beauty: A piano my grandmother still has to this day.
Early 1800's for me, they came at a time when the army here accepted anyone, notably jews and "turks" (meaning anyone from the south or east of Greece), along with the more traditional German, Flemish, Walloon and native soldiery. After a time in uniform, they opened a grocer that stayed in the family until my grandfather died. None of my family speaks yiddish today or is particularly jewish, its a bit sad. I try to learn some, but its kind of hard when there's no one to speak it to.
@@zefft.f4010 Duolingo has now Yiddish from English, I feel it's worth paying for it, however using a computer instead of the smartphone app you get unlimited use even without spending any money, they have events like virtual meetings for different languages, if there are not for Yiddish yet, you could start them.
@@zefft.f4010 Why is it "sad"? We all go through changes. Just like your grandparents did themselves.
@@NYCBG Because its a fascinating language and culture that is nearly extinct in Europe, but still has an official minority language status in my country. Even though nearly no one speaks it.
@@zefft.f4010 Ladino is even more fascinating and I doubt that anyone speaks it anymore. Both the language and the people have been “deleted “ for good.
I understand why you wrote “sad”; however, that’s the way of history. Sad or not.
My grandfather in 1914 was in Odessa. My grandfather Pole
Отец моего деда родом из Одессы, он тоже был еврейского происхождения. Он покинул Украину в 1917-1918 годах и изменил свое имя, когда переехал в другую страну (сначала в Польшу, а затем во Францию). Я не знаю, как восстановить настоящую фамилию...
я надеюсь, что когда-нибудь смогу побывать на месте и найти ответы...
Из Франции я ничего не могу найти.
Всем пока 👋
(Извините за ошибки, я плохо говорю по-русски...)
Hast du noch Unterlagen mit deinem/eurem ehemaligen Familiennamen? Hier in Deutschland würde ich damit zum Amt gehen und eine Namensänderung beantragen. Vielleicht beim Standesamt, vielleicht beim Bürgeramt. Fragen...!!! 😊 Viel Glück. 🙏🏻🍀
🇺🇦❤️🇩🇪May the peace return beloved friends🕊️ Farewell most charming Odessa, I pray for you and for the whole Ukraine
@@artemiosruthenia7291 EN BELGIQUE , café Chat Noir ? à moins que vous
ne préférassiez JACKMÔTTE ? Chez Colruith ?
Sinon ?battard ou Broutteux ?
Pour les pralines ?leonidas ;
I pray by Sardinia for ucraina people
As in our souls !
@@martinacasu7173" from sardinia " not by sardinia.. with that grammar i can see your comprehension of the war...
@@nokaut456 all right. EScuse me. I'm not often speak and write english. 😭
I am from Odesa. This song catches the spirit of the city so charmingly. I love it. Thank you :)
It's not the city is charming, but the people of Odessa. Actually city is shithole and absolutely not for civilize living.
Їбать прекрасна пісня, я в захваті
@@P2E-Money no, "Odesa" is correct transliteration from ukrainian.
@@P2E-Money the guy you responded to is literally from Odesa and he wrote the name of the city with one S
@@P2E-Money how did you came to this conclusion
Much love from Istanbul to the world of Jewry and respect to the Hasidics all around the world
🇹🇷 ♥️ 🫡 ✡️
Бывал в Одессе в 1981, 1982 и 1991 годах. Невероятно дружелюбный город с непередаваемым колоритом
My grandfather grew up in a village off in Eastern Europe. They weren’t Yiddish, but all of their folk music was from the Yiddish people. This is how important and influential Yiddish music was in that part of the world.
really? i didnt know other cultures listened to yiddish music as well
@@sab5686 In the late 19th/early 20th century Jewish culture and entertainment was main thing many poor Jews did when they migrated to big cities(singer,actor stuff like that),in fact cities like Kishinev,Lodz,Vilna,Odessa,Minsk,Jews were about half of all the population and there cases(in Belarus I know for sure)of non Jewish people speaking basic Yiddish as kind of second language.
Majority of Jewish people in Eastern Europe spoke Slavic dialects since 1500, nobody spoke Yiddish to my knowledge. But if your village listened to Jewish jiddish music they were Jews for sure. No Slavic village would listen to Yiddish Jewish songs
I pray for Odessa and all Ukrainia 💙💛 Courage dear friends ☮ Love this music ! 👏
Can you understand that old man from Russia thinkin offensif of "Odessa" , it is insane thinking . Thanks that hearing
Pray for all peoples in world who ocupated from Nato ,like Afrika and children in Afrika
@@rajanajovovic6184 I don’t differentiate between occupations, but this is not about NATO ...
@@rajanajovovic6184 And I pray for who I want, not under orders
@@rajanajovovic6184 Think about the fact that ALL ex east countries wanted to join NATO (and now even Sweden and Finland)
Sadness and joy both mixed.
Hey from France!
As one of the continuously shrinking Yiddish speaking community, I can't believe how many old Yiddish songs there are!
Odessa - eine wunderschöne Stadt am Meer. Voller Geschichte und alter Lieder. Hoffentlich wird sie nicht von diesen Barbaren zerstört......
NIEMALS❤❤❤ Unsere Opas haben es nicht gekonnt und der 💩putin schon gar nicht😄😄
🇷🇺💪🏼
@@-JohnWick- 😂😂😂🙃🙃🙃🙃🙃🙃🙃🙃🙃🙃🤣🤣🤣 russentroll,
geh scheissen💩💩💩💩💩💩💩und such dir ein sicheres Asyl.
@@-JohnWick- Auf der Flucht? 😝😝😝
Эти "варвары" этот Город и основали...🇷🇺
My great grandfather was a baker from Odessa. He came to Philadelphia but all the other brother's and sister's went to Buenos Aires. When he was in his 80s he flew down there and visited them for the first time since he was little. I believe that they started the matzah factory in Buenos Aires. My great grandfather lived to 92 and outlived 3 wives. Shalom!!!
Bleah, fucking gross
I am glad he got to see his brothers and sisters again and that he lived to such a ripe old age.
I live in BsAs, maybe I saw that factory !!
My family was from Odessa and came to Buenos Aires! Around the 1900s Want to talk?
@@juduchovny Ok. I live in NY. My name is Brad Zarlin. You can invite me on Linkedin or FB. Shalom
As a German who's parents were born in the Soviet union i kind of like it a lot. It's a fusion between cultures. The melody sounds like an old Russian or ukranian song . And then there is the Yiddish. Wich is similar to a southern German dialect except for the Hebrew words in it. Never heard something like this before 👍
So if you speak German you understand perfectly Yiddish?
@@FoundSheep-AN sadly not, Yiddish is a mix of Hebrew and old German. I can only understand the German words.
@@robertlichtner4214 And some slavicismes, mostly Polish.
My father is from Odessa and his grandma spoke Yiddish as her first language, it
was such a beautiful language for a horrible time.
My grandmother spoke Yiddish. Her childhood sweetheart was Jewish and taught my grandmother a little. She said that they were very kind and nice people. When Russia promotes the narrative that Ukrainians are nazis, my heart bleeds.
@@romantkachenko3188 My family is from Ukraine 🇺🇦, my father from Odessa and my mother from Kyiv. I agree that a lot of Ukrainians aren’t anti-Semitic, but some are, like for instance my mother, when she went to school, some Ukrainian women spat at her and called her “gidofka” (dirty Jewish woman/girl) among other incidents.
@@davidgrossman4670 Oh, I think thats because of fear or jealous, or stupidity. Many reasons but nothing justifies such actions. Some people just don't understand what humanity is.
When did they come to Odessa? Maybe more recently then the other Ashkenazi Jewish who already lived in the area but did not spoke Yiddish anymore since centuries (ca 1500)? To my knowledge a lot of Jewish Ashkenazi who lived there since 1500 spoke a sort of Ukrainian dialect and also translated some Yiddish words to this dialect…
@@romantkachenko3188sadly there is a propaganda movement in Ukraine today that is indeed nazist. Also Ukrainian soldiers have nazist tattoo
Of course not all Ukrainians are nazist! But the propaganda in the last 30 years sadly has been there
The singer has a lovely voice.
The Irish and Hama's want to destroy this!
@@jimreid6370 the irish?
@@jimreid6370 The Irish? The hell would they do that for?
@@dragonace119 Yes we will destroy the west
@@AltaTheRaccoon Lol.
Olga has such a gorgeous voice, and her musical collaborators are so skilled too. She sings these old songs but it does not sound like a museum piece or reenactment, it's completely alive and beautiful and fresh. God bless you Olga!
🎉
А. Что. Вы. Скажите. О Петре. Лещенко одессите. Или он. Не. Еврей или как ?
А что вы хотите услышать? Лещенко,- гений из Одессы.
My sister lived the jewish part of zürich, you still hear yiddish spoken there, visiting other towns across europe just always makes me so sad, with all the which was lost being so obvious if you're from a place where it's like nothing happened
Cette musique du cœur et de l'âme me sera toujours chagrin et nostalgie elle m'évoque un être très cher dans l'arrière grand-père était rabbin à Cracovie ayant fui jusqu'en Turquie à la fin du 18e et début du 19e puis ses enfants et descendants en Allemagne en France puis aux États-Unis que de chemin que de périple et que de déchirement des adieux au lieu d'origine qui les a vu naître heureux et errant à travers le monde emportant avec eux la mémoire de temps de vie et et de temps hostile hélas il n'y aura plus jamais de la joie en Europe après cela
I was an Au Pair for a Jewish family in Zurich in 1963. They only spoke Yiddish when O'ma and O'pa came visiting.
Beutifull Music
Peace for the Whole world 🌿🌻
🍃🌾🌷🇱🇷🇬🇷
The joy and sadness of this song moves me to tears.
I’m not Jewish but the title and the song is heartwrenching yet disturbing, as there are no Jews left in Odessa after the war.
My adopted Great-Grandfather was from Odessa. He brought everyone from his village to Ellis Island.
Merveilleux violon et belle voix d' un merveilleux PEUPLE .
Agreed
Здррово!
Но так быстро мелькают кадры,
А хотелось бы порасматривать людей и ьо время. Сколько радости, аж дух захватывает!
Как умели жить так просто? Радость со всех щелей ьак сказать. Богатые, бедные, здоровые, инвалиды, дети, старики.
Женщины с улыбками это саиое лучшее в жизни.
Радуйте женщин.!!!
"Немецкий - это тот же идиш, только без юмора". Поезд жизни.
HEARING THESE MELODIES AND SONGS GIVE ME PEACE AND LOVE OF MY PARENTS AND MY CHILDHOOD. AMEN
It's funny I found this, my great grandfather was a jew from odessa who moved to the US, I've never heard this song before, but I feel like I've always known it. awesome song. It's also cool I have a connection to a lot of the other people here in the comments.
Same, except my mother was a jew from odessa who moved to Israel, and my great grandfather from her side of the family fought in WW2 for the Soviets. I'm an half Ukrainian and half Egyptian jew.
@@Judean386 Wow it's really cool how people in this comment section are coming together and finding eachother. it's also interesting that I also have a grandpa who was in WW2, but he was on the american side.
Been awake watching music videos all night, just to get a break from the horrors happening in Ukraine, and now thanks to the TH-cam algorithms I find myself listening to this. TH-cam really is a great place to discover different and beautiful music. From classic rock, to swing jazz, to psychobilly, to South African EDM, to this.
Literally when I heard Yiddish I started tearing up.
1:43 "in die Gassen tanz man" (=dancing in the streets), 2:57 "die Liebe is a Fraid" (=Love is Great Joy) - that is what I understand... 🙂and something more! Bravo Odessa!!
Odessa in the early 20th century was so fascinating! Jews, Russians, Greeks etc... what an interesting mosaic!
ναι ρε φίλε αλλα οι φασίστες του αζόφ και η κυβέρνιση τους τους οδηγούν σε ένα ατέρμονο πόλεμο
And Italians that found it
nice picture :D
Some Italians too 🙂
how about Ukrainians, buddy?
One of my the best songs ever. Very beautiful. Love it.
It is as if I look back to a past that I once belonged to.
My mother's mother(Bobee Esther)Her family and her were originally from a village close to Odessa.In the hard times for Jewish people to live there ( Pogroms)they took a ship ... to South America ....Great stories of her childhood , the music , songs and food were part of me too groing close to my sweet Bobee Beautiful memories.!!!!
My grandmother was from Kiev...
My grandfather came from Proskorov known for Pograms and my Grandmother came from Cherney-Ostrov which was even smaller than Proskorov.My father although not very religious made sure his children knew where they came from and we thank him to this day.
Mine also left to south america (Gregor Gendelman)
Спасибо / Thank you
shedding quiet tears for Ukraine tonight . . .
😂
@@pepinillosazucarados6743 Why are you laughing fool? Try to laugh if you are a Ukrainian refugee. Or still in Ukraine hiding in a bunker knowing full well there is no home to go back to.
What rub tickling fun. Or perhaps not.
Niech żyje Odessa!
Slava svobidnoj Ukrajině!
Спасибо!!Прекрасная песня и память о старой красавице Одессе!!!🎤🎼🎶👏👏👏❤️❤️❤️
а освобождать её от современных нацистов не будете?
@@alexmorozov4273 лучше переждать пока старые нацики передохнут от старости, чем помогать им вербовать новых.
@@Anna_M_numbers
Здраствуйте, пжта обратите внимание как комментатор Soc Ivancovsky (naverhu) пишет слово 'погром' с буквой р после п. (pRogrom).. Я ему сообщила что он неправильно написал, но знаю из моего опыта - многие злились когда я указывала им на это ошибку. Может быть кто-то из русскоговорящих меня поддержит ? Я вообще-то не люблю исправлять ошибки комментаторов, но это слово теряет весь смысл, когда пишут пРогром. Он не один такой, в последнее время очень многие иностранцы пишут это слово с буквой р после п
I can't to use a cyrillic to write, but I can read cyrillic and understand a little bit. It is very very good that someone can understand that beautiful music and write it in cyrillic. God bless You!
@@alexmorozov4273 шо..Ви говорите..?😅,паслухайте сюдой,ловите ушами моих слов...,щаз розтолкую даже не умный поймет..., лейхам Одессе маме..,на усе года..и все скажут, Слава Украине..таки да..,тук.. вокруг не мерено продажных сук, шыпят когда плюю на них,как ошпариный утюг..,и подальше от выгребной ямы,под названием скрепы Либерия ру,и от ее убогого крепостного халуйского отродия..,мое почтение читающие и поннемающие граждане.!👌
My maternal grandfather and his family were from Odessa came to Massachusetts in 1902
Одесса уже нета
Marvellous !!!! thank you so much...
Shalom Odessa
שלום עלכם ☺️❤️
Ish Bosheth was Saul' son.
Merveilleux !!! Merci mille fois!
Beautiful song beautiful voice.
Oh what a lovely song!!!
absolutely love this! ❤
Both my paternal Grandparents came to the US from Odessa
Who cares!
@@anastasiadegaule9472 you care enough to comment. Also enough to seek out Yiddish music.
David Cohen 😀😀👍👍
My grandma too! came to Israel though
@@anastasiadegaule9472 I think it's fun to hear people's real and personal stories.
Beautiful ❤️
Beautiful song ❤
Time and again this touches us so much!
Beautiful song! I love it.
Love it!!! Thanks ❤
please more of this ♥♥♥♥
Très beau ! Merci 🌺
A very lively song! Enjoyed it.
Thank you for this wonderful video!
Una reliquia!!!
Great! I really loved The Voice and music!
Incredible!
תודה
Fantastic music
The music, lyrics work for me, my soul recognizes... thank you for enriching me.
What a magical voice
Wie unfassbar schön!
Fabulous.
Fantastic, speaks to the heart!
The music is great and the video content priceless. Beautifully done - Olga is a treasure of scholarship and talent not to mention beauty.
This made me soooooo happy Thank You!
Wszystkie filmy Pani Olu wspaniałe
very beautiful voice and song old is gold than thanks for posting
Beautiful song she has a majestic voice
Bellissimo!
Grazie mille mi ha pieciiuto molto il video, la musica
Beautiful voice. Thank you for sharing.
One day I hope to visit ! Shalom shalom
Such sad lyrics for such a jaunty tune. Thanks for sharing. God bless
A very beautiful song.
J'adore les musiques Yiddish !!!
Praying for all of Ukraine and the many refugees.
Merci, c'est magnifique💞
Шикарно !!!
Music beautifully played and sung.
Bellissima!
Heavenly music. Love it.
Beautiful melange of musical styles and cultures.
A very good song !!
Thank you very much for sharing this good music !!