2020Released
2:45

Did You Know?

Interesting facts and trivia about Hatikvah - The Hope (National Anthem of Israel) [Opening]. By Songfacts®.

"Hatikvah" is the Israeli National Anthem, although it predates the founding of the Zionist state by some 70 years. The title translates as "The Hope," meaning the hope of an establishment of a national homeland for the Jews. According to the Encyclopedia Judaica, it started life as a poem by Naphtali Herz Imber, and was first published as Tikvatenu (meaning Our Hope) in the 1886 anthology Barkai.

"Hatikvah" began as a nine-stanza poem by a Jewish poet named Naftali Herz Imber, a native of Galicia in the Austro-Hungarian Empire (modern day Ukraine). In 1882, he immigrated to Palestine and traveled throughout different communities reciting his poems to day laborers. One in particular, "Tikvateinu" - "The Hope" - caught on and it was included in his first book of poetry, Barkai, in 1886. Two years later, Samuel Cohen, a Romanian winemaker, adapted part of the poem into a song using the melody from the Moldavian-Romanian folk song "Ca-rul Cu Boi." or "Cart with Oxen." The resulting anthem became popular among Zionists who yearned for the day Jews would return to the historic Land of Israel and reclaim it as a sovereign state. When the State of Israel was established in 1948, the song was chosen to represent the new nation in an unofficial capacity; it didn't become the official anthem until 2004.

The song gained global prominence in 1903 when representatives at the sixth Zionist Congress in Basel, Switzerland, protested the Uganda Proposal – a vote to establish a temporary Jewish state in East Africa – by singing the anthem, as settling anywhere other than the Land of Israel was betraying their cause (Zionists in favor of the proposal argued it would ensure their safety until they met their ultimate goal). "This move wasn't joyful or triumphant. It was a reprimand," Zev Levi explains on the Israel Story podcast. "They sang Ha'tikvah to remind their peers of one of its lines, 'ayin letziyon tzofia' – 'the eye looks towards Zion.' And by doing so, a Hebrew poem, penned by a misfit and stuck to a random Romanian tune, became the unlikely political anthem of a country that didn't yet exist. Pretty quickly, 'Ha'tikvah' transformed from a Zionist anthem into a global Jewish one. Synagogues printed it in collections of piyutim and read it during services. Publishing houses included it in Passover hagadot, right along with the local national anthem."

Song Analysis

Key, BPM (tempo) and time signature of Hatikvah - The Hope (National Anthem of Israel) [Opening].
A♯Key
MinorMode
4/4Time Signature
70BPM

Album

The album Hatikvah - The Hope (National Anthem of Israel) [Opening] is released on.

Released By

The record label that has released Hatikvah - The Hope (National Anthem of Israel) [Opening].
Matthesmusic - Verlag, Vertrieb & Gemafreie Musik
2020 Matthesmusic - Verlag, Vertrieb & Gemafreie Musik (Inh. Ronny Matthes)
2020 Matthesmusic - Verlag, Vertrieb & Gemafreie Musik (Inh. Ronny Matthes)

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