A Walk to Caesarea

A Walk to Caesarea 
by Hannah Szenes
Original title הליכה לקיסריה
Written 1942
Language Hebrew

"A Walk to Caesarea" (Hebrew: הליכה לקיסריה, Halika LeKaysarya), also commonly known by the opening words Eli, Eli (Hebrew: אֵלִי, אֵלִי, "My God, My God") in the song version, is a poem in Hebrew written in 1942 by Hungarian Jewish WWII resistance fighter Hannah Szenes,[1] which Israeli composer David Zehavi set to music in 1945.[2] Szenes wrote the poem while residing in kibbutz Sdot Yam which is located a short distance along the Mediterranean coast from the ancient port town of Caesarea.

The song is considered one of Israel's unofficial anthems,[2] and is the most-commonly played song on Yom HaShoah (the Holocaust Memorial Day) in Israel.[3]

The following is an English translation of the song version:

My God, my God,
may it never end –
the sand and the sea,
the rustle of the water,
the brilliance of the sky,
the prayer of man.

References

  1. "My God, May This Wonder Never End - Poem of The Week". Haaretz. 24 February 2015.
  2. 1 2 "Fire In My Heart: About the Exhibition". Museum of Jewish Heritage.
  3. The most played song on Yom HaShoah
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.