Israel in the Eurovision Song Contest 1978


Israel was represented at the Eurovision Song Contest 1978 with the song "A-Ba-Ni-Bi", composed by Nurit Hirsh, with lyrics by Ehud Manor, and performed by Izhar Cohen and the Alphabeta. The Israeli participating broadcaster, the Israel Broadcasting Authority, selected its entry through a national final. The song went on to win the contest, bringing Israel its first Eurovision victory, and being the first victory for a country outside of continental Europe.

Before Eurovision

Israel Song Festival 1978

In 1978, the Israel Broadcasting Authority held for the first time a proper national final to select its entry in the Eurovision Song Contest. IBA had internally selected every entry between in and, but following public consternation regarding Ilanit being chosen to represent Israel a second time, the broadcaster decided to reformat the annual Israel Song Festival to be a Eurovision selection show.
The Israeli national final was held on 11 February 1978 at the Jerusalem Theatre, hosted by Rivka Michaeli. Izhak Graziani served as the musical director. Twelve songs were in the running to represent Israel, and the performers included Gidi Gov and Gali Atari. Regional juries determined the winner, and at the end of the voting two songs were tied for first: Izhar Cohen and the Alphabeta's "A-Ba-Ni-Bi" and Chedva Amrani and Pilpel Lavan's "Belev echad." A re-count of the votes of the individual jury members broke the tie, and Cohen won the ticket to Paris.
DrawArtistSongPointsPlace
1Josie Katz"Kmo pa'am"239
2Gidi Gov"Shalosh balayla ba'ir"1412
3Chedva Amrani and Pilpel Lavan"Belev echad"662
4Nava Bruchin"Bikashti"2010
5Chani Elyakim, Motti Dichne, Dudu Zar and Dafna Armoni"Akuma na"2010
6Yehudit Ravitz"Mishehu"366
7Aliza Aviv"Ilani"318
8Gali Atari, Zvi Bums and Udi Spielman"Nesich ha'halomot"543
9Izhar Cohen and the Alphabeta"A-Ba-Ni-Bi"661
10Sherry"Lama lo"494
11Irit Dotan"Yom chadash"357
12Ariel Zilber and Lahakat Brosh"Ten li koach"465

At Eurovision

Hirsh and Manor had initially intended for "A-Ba-Ni-Bi" to compete in the IBA Children's Song Festival, but the duo realized that the song had potential for Eurovision success, leading them to submit it to the IBA's Eurovision selection committee and eventually win the pre-selection. Hirsh conducted the orchestra, making her one of only three female conductors in the contest's history, as well as choreographed the group's dance moves. On the night of the contest, Israel performed eighteenth, following and preceding. Israel wound up becoming runaway winners, scoring eight points or higher from eleven of the nineteen countries that had the ability to vote for them and six sets of the maximum twelve points. Only one country failed to award the Israeli entry any points at all. They finished thirty-two points clear of Belgium and ensured that the contest would be held in Israel for the first time the following year. It was succeeded both as winner and as the Israeli representative by Milk and Honey with "Hallelujah". Israel reciprocated the Netherlands' 12 points, awarding Harmony and "'t Is OK" their sole twelve points.

Controversy with North African and Arab broadcasters

The 1978 contest was transmitted by a number of broadcasters from countries that didn't acknowledge the State of Israel, including several Arab countries. Many chose to cut to a commercial during the Israeli performance, and when it became clear Israel was going to win, they ended their broadcasts early. Jordan Television closed the show by broadcasting photos of flowers, and later announced that runner-up Belgium were the winners instead. The story goes that since the Israeli broadcaster didn't buy enough airtime and those watching through neighboring broadcasters like JTV never saw the end of the voting, many Israelis had no idea they had won until the following morning.

Voting

ScoreCountry
12 points
10 points
8 points
7 points
6 points
5 points
4 points
3 points
2 points
1 point

ScoreCountry
12 points
10 points
8 points
7 points
6 points
5 points
4 points
3 points
2 points
1 point

After Eurovision

Izhar Cohen would go on to participate in the Israeli national final in 1982, 1985, 1987, and 1996. 1985 would prove successful, as he won the pre-selection and represented Israel with the song "Olé, Olé" and finished in fifth place.