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'Ludvic Lazarus' ('Ludwik Lejzer', 'Ludwik Łazarz') 'Zamenhof' (
December 15,
1859 –
April 14,
1917) was an
eye doctor,
philologist, and the virtual inventor of
Esperanto, the most widely spoken and successful
constructed languages designed for international communication among speakers of all languages. According to biographers A. Zakrzewski and E. Wiesenfeld, his native languages were
Polish, from the neighborhood where he was raised, and his parents' languages
Russian and
Yiddish, but his father was a
German teacher, and he also spoke that fluently. Later he learned
French,
Latin,
Greek,
Hebrew and
English, and he also had an interest in
Italian,
Spanish and
Lithuanian. Per Elwood, as of 1975, Esperanto was taught in 600 schools to 20,000 students per year; and there were about 100 journals and 7500 books written in Esperanto, including translations from 65 languages. In addition, it had by that time been used in more than 700 international conferences. As of 2000, per Cambridge Encyclopedia, it had somewhere between 1 and 15 million speakers, according to sources referenced.
Life
Zamenhof was born on
December 15,
1859 in the town of
Białystok (in
Poland, then under
Russian rule) to parents of
Lithuanian Jewish descent. The town's population was made up of three major ethnic groups:
Poles,
Belarusians, and a large group of
Yiddish-speaking Jews. Zamenhof was saddened and frustrated by the many quarrels between these groups. He supposed that the main reason for the hate and prejudice lay in mutual misunderstanding, caused by the lack of one common
language that would play the role of a neutral communication tool between people of different ethnic and linguistic backgrounds.
As a student at secondary school in
Warsaw, Zamenhof made attempts to create some kind of international language with a grammar that was very rich, but also very complex. When he later studied English, he decided that the international language must have a simpler grammar.
By
1878, his project ''Lingwe uniwersala'' was almost finished. However Zamenhof was too young then to publish his work. Soon after graduation from school he began to study
medicine, first in
Moscow, and later in Warsaw. In
1885, Zamenhof graduated from a
university and began his practice as an
ophthalmologist. While healing people he continued to work on his project of the international language.
In 1879, Zamenhof wrote the first grammar of the
Yiddish language, which he published in part years later in the Yiddish magazine "Lebn un visnshaft" (''Life and Science'',
Vilna, 1909; see Esperanto translation as «Pri jida gramatiko kaj reformo en la jida» in «Hebreo el la geto: de cionismo al hilelismo», Eldonejo Ludovikito, vol. 5, 1976). Complete original
Russian text of this manuscript with parallel Esperanto translation was only published in 1982 (translated by Adolf Holzhaus in «L. Zamennhof, provo de gramatiko de novjuda lingvo», Helsinki, p. 9-36). In this work, not only does he provide a review of the Yiddish grammar, but also proposes its transition to the Latin script and other orthographic innovations. In the same period, Zamenhof wrote some other works in Yiddish, including perhaps the first survey of the Yiddish poetics (see p. 50 in the above-cited book).
For two years he tried to raise funds to publish a booklet describing the language until he received the financial help from his future wife's father. In
1887, the book titled as ''"Lingvo internacia. Antaŭparolo kaj plena lernolibro"'' (International Language. Foreword And Complete Textbook) was published under the
pseudonym ''"Doktoro Esperanto"'' (Doctor Hopeful), from which the name of the language derives. For Zamenhof this language wasn't merely a communication tool, but a means of spreading his ideas on the peaceful coexistence of different peoples and cultures. Among the many works he translated into Esperanto is the
Hebrew Bible or Old Testament.
Zamenhof and his wife Klara raised three children: a son, Adam, and two daughters, Sofia and Lidia. All three perished in
the Holocaust.
Lidia Zamenhof in particular took a keen interest in Esperanto, and as an adult became a teacher of the language, traveling through Europe and to America to teach classes in it. Through her friendship with
Martha Root, Lidia accepted
Bahá’u’lláh and became a member of the
Bahá’í faith. As one of its social principles, the Bahá’í faith teaches that an auxiliary world language should be selected by the representatives of all the world's nations.
In
1910, Zamenhof was nominated for the
Nobel Peace Prize, by four British
Members of Parliament (including
James O'Grady,
Philip Snowden) and Professor Stanley Lane Poole.
[1] The Prize was awarded to the
International Peace Bureau.
Zamenhof died in Warsaw on
April 14,
1917, and is buried in the
Okopowa Street Jewish Cemetery in that city.
''Homaranismo''
Main articles: Homaranismo
Outside his linguistic work, Zamenhof published a religious philosophy he called ''Homaranismo'' (loosely translated as
humanitarianism), based on the principles and teachings of
Hillel the Elder.

A stamp celebrating the 120th year of Esperanto, the portrait of Zamenhof was created using the text from the biography as appeared in the Esperanto Wikipedia. Israel 2007
Name discrepancy
Zamenhof's parents gave him the Hebrew name ''Eliezer'', which appeared on his birth certificate in its Yiddish form ''Leyzer''. In his adolescence he used both Leyzer and the Russian equivalent ''Lazar'' (the form ''Lazarus'' is often used in English texts). In some Russian documents Lazar was followed by the
patronymic ''Markovich''.
While at university, Zamenhof began using the
gentile Russian name ''Lyudovik'' (often transcribed ''Ludovic''; Polish ''Ludwik''; in English the form ''Ludwig'' is also used) in place of Lazar. When his brother Leon became a doctor and started signing his name "Dr L. Zamenhof", Lyudovik reclaimed his birth name Lazar and from 1901 signed his name "Dr L. L. Zamenhof". The two L's do not seem to have specifically represented either name, and the order ''Ludovic Lazarus'' is a modern convention.
Zamenhof may have chosen the name Lyudovik in honor of
Francis Lodwick (or Lodowyck), who in
1652 had published an early
conlang proposal.
[2]
His family name was written ''Samenhof'' in German orthography; ''Zamenhof'' is an Esperantized spelling.
Namesakes
The
minor planet (1462) Zamenhof is named in his honor. It was discovered on
February 6,
1938 by
Yrjö Väisälä.
Hundreds of city streets, parks, and bridges worldwide have been named after Zamenhof. In
Lithuania, the best-known Zamenhof Street is in
Kaunas, where he lived and owned a house for some time. There are others in
France,
Poland,
Czech Republic,
Spain (mostly in
Catalonia),
Israel, and
Brazil. There are Zamenhof Hills in Hungary and Brazil, and a Zamenhof Island in the
Danube River.
[1]
In some Israeli cities, street signs identify Esperanto's creator and give his birth and death dates, but refer to him solely by his Jewish name Eliezer (the origin of Lazarus).
A genus of
lichen has been named ''
Zamenhofia'' in honour of Zamenhof.
[2]
He is honored as a deity by the Japanese religion
Oomoto.
Notes
1. Nobel Prize nomnination database
2. The Search for the Perfect Language, , , Umberto Eco & James Fentress, Blackwell Publishing, , ISBN 0-631-17465-6
References
★ Elwood, Ann ''Toward a Universal Language'', The Peoples Almanac. Garden City NY: Doubleday and Company, 1975. ISBN 0-385-04060-1.
★ Le Petit Robert: 'Zamenhof'. Paris; Montréal: Dictionnaires Le Robert, 1990. ISBN 2-85036-074-0.
★ Schmadel, Lutz D. ''Dictionary of Minor Planet Names'' (2nd ed.). Berlin; New York: Springer-Verlag, 1993. ISBN 3-540-66292-8.
External links
★
XXXI High School of L. Zamenhof, Lodz, Poland (in English)
★ (In Esperanto)
★
ZAMENHOF, LAZARUS LUDWIG by Joseph Jacobs, Isidore Harris.
Jewish Encyclopedia, 1906 ed.