The Language of the Hutterites

What do Hutterites speak? The Anabaptist cousins of the Amish communicate in a German dialect, but it differs from what you hear from the Amish. Manitoba Hutterite Linda Maendel explains her native tongue in today’s post.

Hutterisch – the Mother Tongue of the Hutterites

Hutterisch, as Hutterites fondly call their language, is the Carinthian German dialect spoken by all Hutterites in Canada and the United States and some of the older generation of the Prairieleit (Prairie People). Hutterites live in colonies and the Prairieleit are a group of people that chose not to live communally upon arrival in North America in the late 1800’s. They now live in many different parts of the world.

Carinthia, nestled in the Eastern Alps, where Hutterisch originates from, is a province in southern Austria. There the people, like the Hutterites, speak this unique dialect that is recognized by its ‘Carinthian vowel stretching’. Very often where the High German word has a short vowel, the same word in Hutterisch has a long one.

carinthia-state-map
Carinthia in modern-day Austria

Something else that’s noteworthy is the fact that there are dialect shifts and various lilts and other interesting nuances from colony to colony. It’s common to recognize what colony people come from, even though you’d never met them, just by the way they speak.

Since Hutterites lived in various European countries, they naturally picked up words that have somehow managed to stay in their day-to-day language. A few such examples are: Swat, which comes from Poland and interestingly there is no English word for. When a couple marries, the father of the bride becomes the Swat of the father of the groom. Tscheiker is the Russian word for killdeer. And Habtschinka is the thanksgiving celebration, also from Russia.

Today, unfortunately we have more and more English creeping into our language. This is understandable, because we do live in an English speaking country. In some cases, we have no Hutterisch words.

For example, farm machinery such as swatter, air seeder. These naturally are bought from a dealer and when they’re brought home the English name comes with it, along with the various parts needed for it. The same can be said for ingredients in the kitchen: Because we always use English cookbooks we constantly use words like vanilla, oregano and many others. That will most likely never change.

colony-hutterite-spring

Sadly though, there are areas where we could stick to Hutterisch more and not use so many English phrases. Like Helga Lorenz, an Austrian professor who speaks our dialect says, “You just have to learn to speak Hutterisch more consciously.” Phrases like: ‘I don’t know.’ and ‘Who knows?’ are prime examples where we have no excuse for not saying them in Hutterisch.

Thus Hutterisch is generously sprinkled with English words, phrases and even complete sentences, influenced by the fact that we live in a predominantly English speaking nation. Which begs the question, how long can this continue for us not to lose our mother tongue completely?

For local color, and because I love our language, I’ve included some Hutterisch words in my upcoming book, Hutterite Diaries.


Linda Maendel is a church member and schoolteacher in a Mannitoba Hutterite colony, and author of Hutterite Diaries: Wisdom From My Prairie Community (May 2015).

Image credit: Hutterite colony- presley_perswain/flickr

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11 Comments

  1. Terry Berger

    Just wondering

    I’m wondering if the word Swat is similar to the Pennsylvlania German word Swar as in Swarbruder which translates into Brother in law, the familial connection would be similar in that they become father in laws. Just curious,

    Terry

    1. Our word for brother-in-law is Schwoger. And sister-in-law, Schwagerin.

      1. Linda Too

        Hutterisch and Pennsylvania Dutch

        Is Hutterisch a written language? What language is your Bible?

        For me, it seems easier to say “I see,” rather than the Pennsylvania Dutch “Ich sehn.”

        Growing up in the Midwest, I was not familiar with a Pennsylvania Dutch word for father-in-law. I have heard that Horse-and-Buggy Mennonites from Pennsylvania, and Amish from Geauga County, Ohio, do have a word. From the Pennsylvania German Dictionary, a brother-in-law is a “Schweeger” or “Schwoger.” and a father-in-law is a “Schwardaadi” or “Schwerdaadi.”

        1. Hutterisch is not an official written language, but some try to write it from time to time, using their own spelling variations. We read the Bible in German and English.

    2. useful comment

      your comment is useful,
      same as the next comment.

      “Schwoger” is already a diclect, and “Swar” even more.
      But if one has imagination, so the German root of the word can still be recognized.

      “Schwager-”
      “Schwieger-”

      Even in some dialects here in Germany itself, we have some different words to express
      “…-in-law”

    3. Ruth Keener

      Hutterite word Swat

      I have been raised in Germany and we have a word “Schwager” that means brother-in-law, maybe it is related to that.

  2. Mary Miller

    In speaking our “Pennsylvania Dutch”, we also have a tendency to use English words rather than the “older” dutch word for it. The younger generation of Amish don’t even know the original words for many items. I was told I was old-fashioned when I used some of the older words. And, I’m not even Amish!

  3. Terry Berger

    A few more thoughts

    Linda, the word you’re using is High German Schwager. I’m familiar with the word from my German friends who giggle when I use our word for it. In the Pennsylvania Dutch I grew up with from Northampton County in Pennsylvania Schwarbruder is brother in law and Schwarschwester is sister in law.

    1. I know it is, as are most of our words variations of High German. It is a German dialect after all.

  4. Stacy

    Thank you for sharing!

    It is very gratifying to discover and learn about cultures that our history books often overlook. I very much appreciate the avenue to a different perspective on history!

    1. history

      Stacy,
      I share your esteem of looking on history in more diverse ways.

      Nevertheless, history is so complex, it simply embaraces all and everything; the whole culture.

      So, one can only try to come closer to a more appropriate understanding of history, but to have it in its completeness would be a ddsperate undertaking.

      Oliver from Berlin, Germany.

      “machs gut”