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Living the Euro's vision of Utopia

May 12, 2016 12:02
Milk and Honey won for Israel in 1979 with Hallelujah
2 min read

The first time I watched Eurovision, I was five years old. My parents had gone out and we had a babysitter. They left the television on so they could record the show (Israel were favourites) and that decision changed my life.

It was 1985 and Israel's entrant was Itzar Cohen, the man who delivered their first victory in 1978. However, Norway won with a duo called Bobbysocks and their song La Det Swinge is still one of my all-time favourites (In 2008, I met Bobbysocks at an event in Sweden and despite my first words to them being "you women ruined my life", they've been friends ever since).

Back in the 1980s, as a young Jewish child, getting the chance to cheer on Israel alongside countries I only knew from football tournaments was something special. This was a time before Facebook, when there weren't many opportunities to jump on a plane and soak up the sun in Tel Aviv for a couple of weeks. I thought Israel was a special far-away land that we were supposed to defend on the news and pray for in shul, not somewhere we could cheer on through music.

I was a Hallelujah baby, born in 1979 just after Israel won Eurovision for the second year running. To this day, it still makes me proud that a show like Eurovision could create such a national sense of pride in a country like Israel.