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We Left Slowly

Israeli song From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

We Left Slowly
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"We Left Slowly" (Hebrew: יצאנו אט "Yatzanu at" or "Yatsanu at") is an Israeli song with verse of the poet and songwriter Haim Hefer (1946) and music by David Zehavi [he] (1947). It was first publicly performed by the Chizbatron band in 1948. Its title comes from the first line. The song is a sad and quiet melody telling about a young Palmach fighter who is leaving his partner and they do not know whether they will see each other again.[1] It has become popular in Israeli society and is customarily played on occasions of commemoration events related to the struggle for the establishment of the state of Israel.[2]:69–70

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Palmach Company C (Pluga Gimel), 1943

The song was published in the newspaper Bema'ala [he], where it was noticed by Zehavi.[3]

The song has been covered by many singers[4] including Shoshana Damari (1968[4]), Esther Ofarim (1961[4]), Yafa Yarkoni (1964[4]), Arik Einstein (1966, 1971[4] also on album Jasmine, 1972[5]), Shlomo Artzi, Yishai Levi, Eyal Golan, and Danny Maseng.

More information Hebrew, Transliteration ...

Jazz journalist Dan Bilawsky describes the song as "a chill-inducing, mournful Israeli-standard ballad".[7]

In 1974, a children's newspaper Talk to the Children (דבר לילדים, Devar Lebedim) published new lyrics to the song by a ten-and-a-half-year old boy Or Ezer (אור עזר), titled "Tear and Victory" (דמעה וניצחון, dim'a venitzchon) which starts with the words "Twenty-six years have passed".[1][4]

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