Hope you all enjoy this video and for anyone who is interested, I appeared on Roqe Media recently and had a wonderful interview regarding this channel, previous videos and potential future projects! Check out the full video here: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-POHWd1S-ZW0.html If you speak a language that has not been featured on our channel and would like to participate in a future video, and/or if you have any suggestions or feedback, please follow and contact us on Instagram: instagram.com/BahadorAlast
Too easy. Tajik, Dari and Farsi speakers can understand each other perfectly well. Bringing a Balochi, Gilaki or Mazandarani speaker will be more interesting. Maybe also Pashto or Pamiri, but those languages are more distant to Persian variants.
This video made me so happy as an Iranian Jew!! Thank you to all of you!! I love and adore the Persian language and Iranian culture 💕💕 Bukhori is so fascinating! It's like classical Persian with a mix of Hebrew, Russian and Uzbek. It was so cool to see way your guests could figure out everything! There is actually 1 Bukharian Jew left in Afghanistan! I would love to visit Bukhara and Samarkand, and also Iran, Afghanistan, and Tajikistan one day. Thankfully, I am allowed to visit all, except Iran unfortunately, since I'm not allowed now with my passport. Iran is always in my heart and I have learned basic Persian. I really look forward to the day I can visit the beautiful country my grandparents have many amazing memories from! Thank you all!! This was so pleasant and enjoyable!💝🤗
This is great. I am an American Jew of Ashkenazi descent who only grew up speaking English. Interestingly, I went to high school in Great Neck, NY in the 80s with many Jews from Iran, but never had any inkling then that I would later learn Persian. What happened is that I studied Russian at university during perestroika and glasnost and graduated just as the Soviet Union had ceased to exist. I wound up working twice in Kyrgyzstan in the 90s where my Russian became very good, and because I had started down the Central Asia path, I decided to start learning the local languages of the region. I studied Uzbek in grad school and some Turkish (all super rusty) and then worked in Tajikistan. In Tajikistan, I studied Iranian Persian (Farsi) and used it in the streets of Dushanbe. Farsi, Dari (Afghanistan) and Tajik speakers can all quite easily understand each other. I am now at about an intermediate speaking level of Persian. I visited the synagogue in Dushanbe during a service. I can read Hebrew alphabet, but can't speak, though I do know the prayers. I cam with one guy from Israel who is completely not religious, but because he knew Hebrew excellently, he was able to help the locals find the weekly reading portion (Haftarah) in the Torah. I have also visited the synagogue in Bukhara. There is a school affiliated with it and the students are primarily local Muslims because apparently the quality of education is very good. I am currently waiting out the pandemic at home in New York. If you come to my area of Manhattan, you will find that most of the barbers are Bukharan Jews (Bukharians). I am hoping to move to Uzbekistan later this year for work on some new projects, including a new university, and I plan to keep working on my Persian and then use my time in Uzbekistan to improve my Uzbek and possibly Turkish as well. I love following Bahador Alast's videos and the community! Best Wishes to all!
Yeah, for some reason Bukharians, along with Gorski/Kavkaz Jews, have been taking over the barber business in New York. Also a lot of shoe and leather repair businesses and keymaking. They are following the Greeks. One minor pedantic correction. The "haftara" is the reading from the Book of Prophets that immediately follows the weekly "parsha" or "sedrah, ("parsha" and "sedrah" is basically the same thing), which refers to the weekly portion of the Pentateuch that is chanted from the Torah scroll, which is handwritten by a scribe and has no vowelization. The haftara is chanted from the printed book, not the Torah scroll and has vowelization. It's all expansively included in "Torah," but when we say "weekly Torah portion" it is understood to mean the parsha from the Pentateuch (then you have the haftara after it).
@@user-bz8gg1io7j Dari is short for ”Darbari" which means of the/related to ”Darbar" or "Court/Palace". It comes from the fact that Persian was the lingua franca of the government in that part of the world for millennia. Although it was generally called "Farsi" by its native speakers, it was officially referred to as "Dari" starting from 1964 (in my opinion) to create an artificial differentiation between Iranian an Afghan speakers (just like what happened in Tajikistan at the hands of the Soviets, they named the language Tajiki) for political considerations.
@Kourosh587 I love going to Rego Park for Bukharian food. Do you think they’ll celebrate Nowruz there? It is a fairly religious Jewish neighbourhood and it is almost Passover so I’m not sure if Nowruz will be a thing there
@@fo6748 Bukharians consider themselves a separate community. They wouldn’t identify first as “Persian.” In Great Neck, Long Island there is a very large Jewish community who came from Iran after 1979 - they and their children and grandchildren do consider themselves “Persians”
One of the things I learned about Persians, which I respect a lot, is that they value their language and culture so much. Everything else is secondary. This video proves exactly that! Here you have a Jewish guy from Uzbekistan, a Sunni Muslim from Afghanistan, Bahador who is atheist from Iran, and I presume the two Iranian ladies are from a Shi'a Muslim background. Yet, none of them care about any of that. They share the same language and culture and that's what bonds them.
Yes and the same is true for Indians as well. You will find similar sentiments among Punjabi and Hindi speakers for example who are Muslims, Hindus, Christian, and Sikh. Even Malayalam and Tamil
@@joesmith4894 Yeah that is true as well. It's a complex situation. It really depends on the person/family too. Indian Muslims (mostly) and Christians and increasingly the Sikhs with their subsequent Abrahamisation see themselves as seperate and superior to their Dharmic brethren.
@@joesmith4894 they don't. The one chance they had was during Partition, and even that the majority of Muslims stayed in India anyway. The southern Indians especially saw no good reason to move north to an alien climate and culture. India is designed in such a way that gaining prominence in a state is as good as independence, so Muslims have quite a presence in India despite being a relatively small minority (a minority 100 million people large, mind you). The only Muslims who really want out of India are those in Kashmir, which joined India in very difficult circumstances that haven't been solved to this day. As for "segregation" you have to understand that Hindu and Muslim cultures are very different and co-existence is very difficult. In a place like India where literal millions of each can be side by side in one place, there has to be separation lest there be violence and misunderstandings (and boy have there been). They can get along in daily life of course like in education, employment, services, crime and sports etc but to actually live side by side in a politically charged India where the ruling coalition is usually pro-Hindu and anti-Muslim (or vice versa in certain places) is nearly impossible. So like any minority (think how New York was divided in the 1900s) they would stick to their own, just to be able to sleep at night. We haven't even touched on the other kind of discrimination in India, that of gender, economic class and caste, which adds an even more divisive layer to the topic. the one thing people can generally agree on in India (apart from cricket) is language. There have been several Indian languages featured on this channel, which is one of the rare places outside of a news studio or a non-Indian based panel show where one might find people from different faiths casually discussing something positive and agreeable.
Salam aka Umed mohon samarqandiho va bukhorogiho hamesha ba zaboni forsi gap zanem bisyortar yod girem va ba bachomon yod dihem ki in zabon gum nashavad.
@@tajiksamarkandian2473 khodaro shokr baradare aziz. Zabane shoma va Lahjeye shoma shirin va ghashangeh. Besyar az lahjeyetun khoshham miyad. Durood va salomat be shoma.
Dari,farsi and tajik are Persians But kurds,pashtos and blauches are defferent people They are all in the same language family group (iranian languages) It's like you're saying dutchs and germans are the same!! Educate yourself...
@@Jack97970 It is a western propaganda, Pashtuns,Balochs,Kurds,Tajiks are all Persian/Parsi aka Aryan people, it is like saying Kurmanjis and Soranis not Kurds because they speak different dialects, you are either ignorant or a turk trying to spread disunity among Aryans/Persians
Thanks Bro .. that's So Sweet ... We have Many Armenians In iran ... They are Great people . I'm pretty sure Armenians of Hayastan are Same ! Слава Хаястан 🇮🇷❤️♥️💗🇦🇲
The accent of Baukharae people are same like Tajiks of north Afghanistan specially Takhar and Badakhshan of Present Afghanistan Thanks for the great video love you all my persian speakers
Bale Baradar Panjsher Kapisa ham lahjash misli Samarqandi mebashad 😅. We say “parsal”, not sali guzashta, and we say “ha” yes, not “ho” or “bale”. Lahjai Balkh ham monandi Samarqandu Bukhara.
Afghans who've grown up in the West sometimes also speak like this because they can't pronounce the words like their parents... 😅 It's so funny, at first I thought he's an Afghan who's grown up abroad!
Тоҷикҳо ҳам "ҳа" мегуянд ҳам "ҳо" шимол ҷануб ва ҳам "соли гузашта"мегуянд ҳам "порсол"ҳамаи ин калимаҳо тоҷики ҳастанд на немиси ва барои ҳар як фарди тоҷик фаҳмо аст
Бухарские евреи всегда были и всегда останутся наши братьями и сестрами. Bukharian Jews have always been and will always remain our brothers and sisters. Love you from Dushanbe!
I am a Sudanese Arab, and although Arabic and Persian obviously aren't part of the same language family, I couldn't help but notice the many many Arabic loanwords in all of these persian dialects, it is cool that even from so far away we are so inter-related across language, cultural, and relgious lines. Sending much love to all my Persian-speaking brothers and sisters from all over the world.
did you notice the conversation between the mom & son about the father /dad? if the editor used English translation for international viewers then it would have been more good!
Truly fantastic. Thank you so much Bahador jan for organizing this video. I had never heard the Bokhari Jewish dialect before so it was really interesting. Tajik Persian in general sounds very nice to me and the Jewish version was also beautiful and easy to understand. Hope to see Bobby again in your channel in the future. Lots of love. Rahmat e kalaan 😊
This was such a fun video and I loved all your guests! 💖 I learned some new things as well 😊Bobby seems like such a fun guy to chat with btw! Love you all 💖 واقعا دستتون درد نکنه خیلی لذت بردم 💕💕
Thank you for this video! I spent several months in Samarkand and I'm learning Uzbek. But due to the fact that many words in Uzbek are loan words from Persian and because many Tajiks living in Samarkand, I learned some basic Tajik language and could understand more or less of Bukhori. I also visited the synagogues in Bukhara and Samarkand. Very interesting places.
0:25 i am a bukharian jew and im very thankful to see this video , very interesting about the parsian cultures thank you so much!!! I speak a little bukharian and little persian i use it to a famliy meetings
@@OhMaDayzz thanks for asking. well, we were unlucky because the area Tats live in are the territories surrounding Baku, and the Absheron peninsula itself used to be populated by Tats with overwhelming majority until the oil boom. After the Russians set up oil industry here, many people from turkic-speaking western provinces immigrated to Baku for work, and this lead to immense assimilation. After that, during Stalin's reign, Azerbaijani was made the only local language with official status alongside Russian, and any official usage of other languages such as Tat & Talysh was dismissed. Most parents stopped talking to their kids in Tati, as they feared it would be hard for them to get along at school and find jobs, therefore the majority of the members of our last two generations do not speak, or barely speak the Tati language. When it comes to connection with Iran, the views are very different. For example, when I first learned that our roots are from Iran, I was pretty surprised and I got obsessed with Iran and even learned some Farsi. That was when I was 13-14 years old. But I started to look at it more constructively later, for me, people living in modern-day RoA feel culturally closer than most Iranians. After all, most Tats also see it this way, we feel more Azərbaycanlı (a person from Azerbaijan) than anything else, even more Azeri than Tat. But I have to say there is a very small minority who talks about stuff like Eranshahr, and how Iran is the homeland of all of us. I hope I could answer your question :)
What a great guy Bobby! In Tajikistan we still remember the best singers and dancers who were Bukhara Jews. ❤️ You speak Tajik dialect as if though you have lived there 😁 Greetings from a Tajik Pamiri in Germany 🌈
Shalom, Sal'aam, Greetings, I'm from India. I speak Hindustani. When I listen to Farsi, Turkish, Pasto and other dialects, I'm amazed as to the number of words that I can actually understand. Not suprising given the 1000 odd years of close connection. Bahador, you are doing humanity a yeoman service by hosting this channel. To my friends from the land once called Pars. I had the privilege of visiting Iran a few years back and my head is fullof redolent memories. Peace and happiness be upon all of you. Amen, Ameen.
@@curiousmind8510 Sal'aam Rehmatullah Wa' Barakatu. Yes, you most certainly would, given the closeness between Uzbek and Persian. Like I was saying to Bahdur, the Turkic people for Central Asia had a lot of influence on the Indian Subcontinent- from the early Sultanate in Delhi, to Babur (who incidentally was a fellow country man,from Ferghana). 😀 What you call Hindi, is actually Hindustani, a patois spoken by the common folk, influenced by dialects from North India, Farsi, Arabic and Turkic even. Unfortunately, in a wierd way, in today's global age, we forget that we were Global, well sort of, even back then.
Such an interesting video, and really great guests. It reminded me as an Iranian American when I went to Russia for the world cup and met so many tajiki people who lived in Moscow and St. Petersburg, and their accents and particular sweet vocabulary. Bobby's Farsi and linguistic knowledge in general is very impressive!
Ey jaan e delam bobby! Cheghadr ke to ba hali ❤️ jeddan lezzat bordam, tashakkor🙏🏻 Agar aan turk e shirazi, be dast arad del e maa ra...Be xal henduash baxsham, samarghand o buxara ra!
Ба тамоми азизони Порсӣ забон Навруз ҳучаста бод, Яздони меҳрабон ҳамаи шумоёнро пируз созад ва дар паноҳаш нигаҳ дорад, Поянда бод Порсӣ ва Порсизабонони гетӣ, дуруд ва сипос аз Тоҷикистон. Happy Nowruz to all dear Persians, may the merciful God bless you all and keep you safe, Long live Persian and Persian-speaking world, greetings and thanks from Tajikistan. به تمام عزیزان پارسی زبان نوروز هچسته باد , یزدان میهربان همه شمایان را پروز سازد و در پناهش نگه دارد , پاینده باد پارسی و پارسزبانان گیتی , درود و سپاس از تاجیکستان . נאוורוז שמח לכל הפרסים היקרים, שאלוהים הרחמן יברך את כולכם וישמור עליכם, יחי עולם דובר פרסית ופרסית, ברכות ותודות מטג'יקיסטן.
I’m an Iranian Persian jew and I’m so happy we married into a Bokhari Persian Jewish family so our next generations will keep the Persian sugar surviving ❤️🙏🏼
@@fash6353 Ofcouse I’m happy about that too! But in addition to that, keeping Persian culture highly matters to me. Many Persian Jews refuse to marry out side of Persian Jewish community even to other Jews who aren’t Persian
@@Brandon12-M I listened to a Kurdish anthem and it was nice until it said we're not Turks, Arabs or Iranians. Well yes, Kurds are not Turks and Arabs, but Kurds are Iranic people and should join forces with other Iranic people.
One of the reasons I love this online format is the fact that we can see many languages that wouldn't be possible in the last format, it's truly amazing and I learn something new with every video
Thank you so much for this video. It left me with a great feeling. A feeling of hope for mankind. We have more things in common than we thought. Thanks again!
I would say it's Tajik and the dialect is more Northern (spoken in the Sughd region of Tajikistan). Bukhori is based on classical Persian and it's actually a Judeo-Tajik dialect. My grandparents were born and raised in Bukhara and I have a Bukharian accent when I speak Tajik. If we had a good Tajik speaker here, they could understand it 100%. Thank you so much for putting this together. It is SO important to know that we are all connected and the Persian world is way bigger than what people really think.
Thank you Bahador, it is one of your best videos. Dear Bobby, thank you and your family for keeping your roots alive even on another continent. Be proud, Be as you are.
Love your channel in general but this is by far my favorite video!! My entire family watched it and loved it- My dad who is half Bukharian, half Persian couldn't stop smiling throughout Amazing job Bobby representing the community!!
@@afghanzoroastrian7854 Zorastrian born ? Lol Maybe your parents converted? Or they just rejected Islam BC of being Communist ? Zorastrians do not exist in Afghanistan in the open, and if they do they exist only amongst the Persians/Tajiks, but hidden. Even some ancient Christians exist but also hidden.
I’m so curious about Bukhori since I have some Bukharian friends and neighbors, so thank you!! You always bless me up with the exact languages I’m interested in. Thank you!!
@Bahador Alast I love this video I’m also bukharian Jew and I’m very happy that you showed us the difference and the similarities between the dialects, when I listen to Farsi it sounds like a french to me, I can understand only a few words and sentences. For my opinion Bukharian/tajik Jews language sounds like old Persian and yes it also has a lot of Uzbek, Aramaic and old Hebrew words... Bahador I have a request for you... please make a video that shows the difference between the Bukharian Jews dialect and the Tajik dialect, I knew that a lot of people say and think that its the same language but when I was in Tajikistan and I spoke to Tajiks in my dialect I had to repeat a sentence several times to be understood...
@@mohammadpanjshiri694 To be honest with you in this video when Bobby speaks to the Persian speakers in Bukharian he tries to use the tajik accent and dialect to make them understand him better, for example when he talks to them he says the word “gap” : “gap zadan”, “gap bizanim”, this is the tajik dialect... in bukharian it is turns to “gav/gaw ” : “gav zadan” “gav mezanim” “gav zasode”. And the word “zabon” it’s turns to “zavon” = tong/language... For the record if this topic is interesting you you can watch this video it is about bukharian Jews language and you’ll understand what I mean.... ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-ThvF4ZyiISI.html
@marceliskhakov2 Нет, неправда. В бухаре гап заднем, Гап задашиштем. Забон по Бухари будет тоже забон или збон. Я сам Бухарский таджик, мне уже около 70 лет, и ты не знаешь тему, это просто предвзятость и не уважение к Бухарскому таджикскому языку с твоей стороны. 850
Thank you Bahador for putting these videos together! Aside from being interesting for any lover of languages, it shows our common humanity and similarities between peoples who often fail to be aware of their linguistic similarities among others!
Absolutely moving to see these meetings taking place! Thank you very very much for your videos, Bahador! They’re really inspiring and educational. That’s a wonderful work.
As an Urdu speaker, I find it fascinating that I can understand some of this! Just goes to show how much more similar different people are than what they might think
I speak Urdu too but I have studied Farsi and now I am concentrating on learning Dari. I can recommend learning Dari if you speak Urdu. You can thank me later :-) .
Wow! Just Wow! You Never Disappoint me. Every time I watch your videos it makes me happy. I am personally hearing the Bukhori dialect for the first time. Its soo beautiful. Its a perfect blend of Hebrew, Farsi and Turkish. I Loved the way Bobby narrated that Poem. It had every aspect of those three languages. It even had some similar word from Urdu like "Tez" meaning fast. And as he mentioned "Auqaat/Avqat" is used with a different meaning in many languages. Like in Urdu we use Auqaat for Status too. Anyone who watches your videos regularly will understand most if it. I myself was amazed that I understood some of it thanks to your videos. Keep Up The Amazing Work!
Tez is originally a Persian word to begin with. Also your right about the word "auqaat" having different meanings. I wonder why is that so. How can we end up with so many different meanings for the same word which originally has to do with TIME as in "waqt". Getting "capacity/ability" from "time" is hard enough but how does one get "food" from "time" lol
@@hussaindaud1260 Yes It is. Urdu is also a Branch of Farsi. But Tez is used very often in urdu as compared to farsi I guess. Especially where I live in Hyderabad, India. Yes I was amazed when he said food. I thought he would say Status.
As a farsi speaker first time i hear “Tez” but i have a guess about “avqat”; used in the past in iran. its maybe cognate with Arabic loan word "ghowah" قوّه (energy/battery) and in farsi its written like قوت
@@azamasim1206 Urdu is NOT a branch of Farsi and neither is it an Iranian language like Farsi, Kurdish, Balochi, Pashto etc. That is a common misconception, my friend. Urdu is classified as an Indo-Aryan language like Hindi, Punjabi, Sindhi etc although it is HIGHLY Persianized. It is the most Persianized language within the Indo-Aryan language family but that does not mean it is an Iranian language or "a branch of Farsi". Kind of like how English is a Germanic language but it is highly Latinized when compared to other Germanic languages like modern German, Dutch, Swedish, Danish etc. Urdu is an "Indic" language and a descendant of Sanskirit via "Khari Boli" via Shauraseni Prakrit. I hope this makes sense.
@@JavidShah246 Energy is 'Quwwat' in Urdu as well but we don't use it for battery. Its written same as Farsi قوت. But Auqaat is very commonly used for Status and Waqt is used for time.
There are also Iranian in the west coast of India but staying Gujrat for such a long time they accepted the Gujrati language and none them of speak Farsi.
@@theanti-imperialist1656 no! It's really not any globalist agenda. Actually it's very difficult for them to preserve their language after a long time being a minority which is scattered all over in the state of Gujarat and India. But they still preserved their religion and the major concern is their decreasing population.
I love the Persian language comparisons. Also really love seeing different Jewish languages on the channel. The comments at the end from all of your participants (and you, Bahador!) were so sweet and sincere. Great job to all involved!
This was so beautiful, Bahador. As an Arabic and Hindi/Urdu speaker, this was wonderful to watch 😊. It is amazing to see how a language variety can survive despite migration and diaspora to far away places and national borders Thanks
Great video! 🤍 Can you please do one with the Armenian dialects? Or perhaps Armenian vs Hindi, Armenian vs Assyrian, Armenian vs Albanian, Armenian vs Turkish :)
@Issa Ismayilzada greetings to you! I honestly would like to see Armenian vs Azerbaijani. Btw we use those words too but they’re not the formal Armenian words :)
I was surprised at how many words I understood from urdu and hindi. Love this particular presentation very well done! Your guests are very knowledgeable
I appreciate these videos of yours so much! One of the tragedies of our current cultural and political situation is that Jews and Muslims around the world are alienated from the fact that we have so much shared culture, history, values, and language, and this alienation has led to so much inter-communal violence. One thing that’s really heartbreaking about Israel’s violation of Gaza is that Muslim hospitality and tolerance in the Middle East and former Ottoman Empire has historically been such an important resource for Jews fleeing violence in Europe. The Old Yishuv, or pre-1870s community of Jews in Palestine partly existed because for most of history Palestinian gentiles welcomed Jewish immigrants when so many societies didn’t. Our histories are so closely tied to one another but so few people are willing to recognize and acknowledge how much we share. I’m glad you are one of those people❣️
She lives in Turkey and my dialect that I was speaking here is heavily influenced by Uzbek, another Turkic language. Uzbek and Turkish are very similar so she speaks Turkish as well and it would be easier for her to understand central Asian Persian
I love Bobby! Please have him back on, Bahador! His laugh is contagious! Can you also please ask him (hope he sees this) to make a real effort to save his endangered dialect? He can at least record it so future generations can piece it together to recreate it.
Bahador kheili mamnun az in videohat. bargharar kardane in ta‘amolat va ashna kardane farsi zabanha ba gooyeshhaye motefavetesh kheili mohemme va kam roosh kar shode 👏
I'm surprised he found a youngish person who speaks Bukhori so well. Most of the Bukhori Jews I know in New York under 40 speak just Russian and English, those who live in Israel in that age group that I know usually just speak Hebrew and Russian. 50+ people usually speak it, but even many of them do not. How well can Bukhori speakers communicate with the Mountain Jews from the Caucasus who speak a Jewish dialect of the Tat language, which is also an Iranic language? (Although I think there are even fewer Tat speakers.)
@@welive1099 I know a mixed couple half Bukhori / half Mountain Jewish and they speak to each other, just in Russian and English, not Juhori-Tat and Bukhori. And my ex-wife and I both spoke English but we stopped talking to each other!
Representatives of the largest Jewish diaspora living today on the territory of the Central Asian region belong to Bukharian Jews (Bukhori, Isroil, Yahudi) - one of the most ancient Jewish communities, formed more than two thousand years ago. Since ancient times, living among the Iranian-speaking peoples, the Bukharian Jews joined the Farsi language. The Jews adopted the Persian language, and since in Central Asia they spoke the Tajik language, not much different from Persian, they kept it. Even when in many places the Turkic language supplanted Persian, the Jews continued to speak Farsi, thus becoming carriers of the Iranian-language culture. Over time, this language turned into a dialect, and began to be called Bukharian. The Bukharian language differs from Tajik by pronunciation and the presence of many words from Hebrew. The beginning of the Bukhara language can be identified in the 10th and 11th centuries (the era of the Tajik Samanid dynasty).
I am tajik and in Malaysia which I'm learning Bahasa melayu. There r so many similarities but mostly malays think those persian words come from arabic.
Love love love! You know, a student/listener in a Yiddish linguist's, Max Weinreich's, lecture once said to him: "a language is a dialect with an army and a navy". A language is a dialect that ends up getting formal, conventional, political patronage, but the dialects that formally remain at a dialect level also have so much character, personality and traces of history. This video, to me, was a classic example of that. A special shoutout to Azarakhsh, one of your youngest participants apart from Serena, I imagine! :)
What a beautiful video! It was interesting and all the people were so sympathetic and nice. Is the young guy next to you interacting in some other videos? He seemed to be very much into the languages, even though he mostly spoke in the beginning of this clip. Tashakkor mikonam!
That was an amazing dialogue between people from one civilization - Arian - Iranian civilization. Dear Bahador, I thank You for Your incredible idea. And I am proud of You👏🙏 From Germany❤🇩🇪 ❤🇦🇫❤🇮🇷❤🇹🇯❤🇺🇿❤🇮🇳❤🇵🇰
عالی بود و دست گل شما درد نکنه، همه کلیمیان های بسیار عزیز اولش با هم به ابری سلام و احوال پرسی می کنند ولی بعد از مدت کوتاهی همه شون اون هایی که فارسی بلدند، به فارسی صحبت می کنند در لندن. فارسی هنر است. به امید روزهای بهتری که همگی با هم مهربان تر باشیم.