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Hugoye: Journal of Syriac Studies is an electronic journal dedicated to the study of the Syriac tradition, published semi-annually (in January and July) by Beth Mardutho: The Syriac Institute. Published since 1998, Hugoye seeks to offer the best scholarship available in the field of Syriac studies.
Dr. Yusuf Matto Ishaq, a Syriac scholar who published his works in Arabic and Swedish, passed away in Sweden at the age of ninety on July 5, 2021.
He was born in 1931 in Barṭella, a Christian town not far away from Mosul and from
the monastery of Mār Mattai. In Mosul, he studied theology, liturgy, and above all
Syriac language and literature at the Syriac Orthodox Seminary for ten years. He
moved to Lebanon where he obtained in 1973 his Master’s degree in Arabic and other
Semitic languages at the American University in Beirut. In 1979 he defended his
doctoral thesis at the same university. His dissertation was entitled The chronicle of Zuqnin attributed to Dionysius of
Tell-Mahre, where he analysed its contents in light of other Syriac
chronicles and Arabic medieval histories. He was the first modern scholar to
concentrate on this important chronicle in East and West, offering insights based on
especially comparative Arabic sources—the chronicle was written in 775/776, thus
during the first decades of the Abbasid period. Unfortunately, the author did not
publish his thesis, which is not easily accessible to scholars.
The attribution of the 8th century Chronicle
of Zuqnin to the 9th century Syrian Orthodox
patriarch Dionysius was not done by Dr. Ishaq but by Assemani, as early as the year
1717. Attributions do not die easily, and thus Tullberg and Chabot in his French
translation of part of the chronicle followed Assemani, but later on, Chabot
realized the error of this attribution when he published the Syriac text in CSCO.
After teaching Hebrew at the Institute of Biblical Studies in Beirut between 1979 and
1981, Dr. Ishaq left the Middle East for Sweden, as previously did the Christians of
Ṭūr-‘Abdīn of eastern Turkey. The Swedish government wanted these immigrants to be
taught their own language, along with Swedish, and thus Dr. Ishaq was the ideal
person to write several educational books on ṭūrōyō to be used in educational
schools. Between 1984 and 1992, he taught Arabic in various institutions, and at the
same time worked among the ṭūrōyē and other people who were interested in the Syriac
culture. He was the president and then vice-president of the Aramaic Cultural Centre
for many years, a society whose mission was to advance studies on Aramaic-speaking
people and their cultures. He at the same time published a magazine called the Echo of Knowledge, which contained article, some
of which contained unique pieces of information about a variety of topics. Later on
he published a selection of such articles in a book entitled al-manhal al-’adhb “the Sweet Source,” for the
benefit of readers of Arabic. Some of the articles which are drawn on popular and
written sources ought to be translated into English.
Besides translating books on Syriac into Arabic, including William Wright’s Short History of Syriac Literature, Dr. Ishaq
embarked on translating some chronicles from Syriac into Arabic. One of these
publications is the 6th century Edessan Chronicle, which he translated with lots
of annotations in 2003. He was right to publish the Syriac text along with the
translation, for the readership familiar with these two languages. His translation
is accurate, and the annotations are worthwhile. He often referred to the Chronicle
of Zuqnin, whose author used this Edessan Chronicle as a sources in his extensive
opus.
Not too many scholars who master Syriac and Arabic could offer such interesting articles and books for Arab readership, especially nowadays when Syriac chronicles and others sources attract the attention of wide range of scholars, students, and other kinds readers. Thus the death of Dr. Ishaq will leaves a gap in this king of publications.
May he rest in peace.