Eliezer Yitzhak Perlman (later Eliezer Ben-Yehuda) was born in
Luzhki in the
Vilna Governorate of the
Russian Empire (now
Vitebsk Oblast,
Belarus) to Yehuda Leib and Tzipora Perlman, who were
Chabad hasidim. He attended a Jewish elementary school (a
cheder) where he studied
Hebrew and the
Hebrew Bible from the age of three, as was customary among the Jews of Eastern Europe. By the age of twelve, he had read large portions of the
Torah,
Mishna, and
Talmud. His mother and uncle hoped he would become a
rabbi, and sent him to a
yeshiva. There he was exposed to the
Hebrew of the
Jewish Enlightenment, which included some secular writings. Later, he learned French, German, and Russian, and was sent to
Dünaburg for further education. Reading the Hebrew-language newspaper
HaShahar, he became acquainted with the early movement of
Zionism. Upon graduation in 1877, Ben-Yehuda went to Paris for four years. While there, he studied various subjects at the
Sorbonne University—including the
history and politics of the
Middle East. It was in Paris that he met
a Jew from Jerusalem, who spoke Hebrew with him. It was this conversation that convinced him that the revival of Hebrew as the language of a nation was feasible.
Immigration to Ottoman Palestine In 1881 Ben-Yehuda joined the
First Aliyah and immigrated to the
Mutasarrifate of Jerusalem, then
ruled by the Ottoman Empire, and settled in
Jerusalem. He found a job teaching at the school of the
Alliance Israélite Universelle. Motivated by the surrounding ideals of renovation and rejection of the
diaspora lifestyle, Ben-Yehuda set out to develop a new language that could replace
Yiddish and other regional dialects as a means of everyday communication between Jews who moved to
Ottoman Palestine from various regions of the world. Ben-Yehuda regarded Hebrew and
Zionism as symbiotic, writing, "the
Hebrew language can live only if we revive the nation and return it to
the fatherland." ==Revival of the Hebrew language==