isr ISO 639

Israeli Sign Language

  • Geography

    IL Scattered.
  • Language Cloud

A language of Israel

isr
ISL
10,000 (Meir et al 2010). Approximately 0.1% of the total population.
Scattered.
Sign Languages of Asia
5 (Developing).
Sign language, Deaf community sign language
Some regional lexical variation: Tel-Aviv, Haifa, Be’er-Sheva, Jerusalem (Lanesman and Meir 2012). Early influence from German Sign Language [gsg] but incorporating signs from many other sources due to immigration of Jewish deaf, especially from Europe, North Africa and the Middle East (Meir 2012). Existence of a sign language in Palestine in the late 19th century is documented, but the extent of its influence on ISL is unknown (Meir and Sandler 2008). Several small communities with endogamous marriage patterns also have high incidence of deafness and their own distinct sign languages, including Al-Sayyid [syy] and Kufr Qassem [sqx], as well as others without ISO 639-3 codes: Abu Kaf, Arab al-Na’im, and Ein Mahel (2021 University of Haifa Sign Language Research Lab). Immigrants from Algeria used Algerian Jewish Sign Language (Lanesman and Meir 2012, Lanesman 2016), although most have transitioned to using ISL.
One-handed fingerspelling system for Hebrew script with some similarities to that used with French Sign Language [fsl], but with several handshapes based on Hebrew letter shapes.
Vigorous. Interpreters provided in courts, and free for up to 45 hours per year. Some interpretation for college students. ISL instruction for deaf immigrants, parents of deaf children, other hearing people. Organization for sign language teachers. Used by all. Also use Hebrew [heb] (Meir and Sandler 2008). Used as L2 by Algerian Jewish Sign Language [ajs], Al-Sayyid Bedouin Sign Language [syy], Kufr Qassem Sign Language [sqx], Russian Sign Language [rsl].
TV. Videos. Dictionary. Bible portions: 2020. Agency: The Institute for the Advancement of Deaf Persons in Israel.
First deaf school established in Jerusalem in 1932. Deaf community began to coalesce in the late 1930s in Tel Aviv. Deaf association established 1944 (Meir and Sandler 2008). 120 working sign language interpreters (2019 EUD). Jewish.