Yes!
I really believe in this great creative and constructive meme from Book of Book and all people that make identification of themselves as people of Abraahamic Civilization believe in this invariant conceptual meme.
Then they are ignorant or insane, to believe nonsensical things merely because they're in the Bible. You say yourself that you don't follow the instructions of Moses to kill non-Israelites. The god YHWH supposedly gave Moses these monstrous commands. Do you believe God instructed Moses to do the things described in Numbers 31:17,18? If you don't, why then do you believe in the nonsense about a snake talking Hebrew.
There were 2 little towns in Syria.
About 3000 citizens of them spoke on the Aramaic language – the language of Judea citizens – the language of Jesus and His Apostles.
Now radicals destroyed those towns and killed most of it’s citizens – the last native speakers of the language of Christ and His Apostles.
I think that every person of our Abraahamic Civilization responses for this vandal act.
Why billions of Christians did not teach their children the Language of Jesus!?
And now they loosed this great ability.
I believe that people of New Saturday will resurrect the Holy Language of Jesus as Zionists resurrected the Holy Language in the 20th centaury.
One source of knowledge of Aramaic is the Bible. These passages are in Aramaic.
Ezra 4:8–6:18 and 7:12–26, Daniel 2:4-7:28
Another source of knowledge of Aramaic is the
Talmud.
Of the two main components of the Babylonian Talmud, the Mishnah is written in Mishnaic Hebrew. Within the Gemara, the quotations from the Mishnah and the Baraitas and verses of Tanakh quoted and embedded in the Gemara are in Hebrew. The rest of the Gemara, including the discussions of the Amoraim and the overall framework, is in a characteristic dialect of Jewish Babylonian Aramaic. There are occasional quotations from older works in other dialects of Aramaic, such as Megillat Taanit. Overall, Hebrew constitutes somewhat less than half of the text of the Talmud.
The endangered dialect of Aramaic you refer to is probably this.
Very little remains of Western Aramaic. It is still spoken in the villages of Ma'loula, Bakh`a and Jubb`adin on Syria's side of the Anti-Lebanon mountains, as well as by some people who migrated from these villages, to Damascus and other larger towns of Syria. All these speakers of Modern Western Aramaic are fluent in Arabic, which has now become the main language in these villages.
However, other dialects are still in existence.
Over 400,000 people of various communities from across the Middle East, and recent emigrants who have moved out of these communities, speak one of several varieties of Modern Aramaic (also called Neo-Aramaic) natively, including Christians, Jews, Mandaeans and Muslims. Having lived in remote areas as insulated communities, the remaining modern speakers of Aramaic dialects escaped the linguistic pressures experienced by others during the large-scale language shifts that saw the proliferation of other tongues among those who previously did not speak them
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aramaic_language