Original | Hava Nagila
Idelsohn arranged the song for a mixed choir and performed it at a celebration in Jerusalem. It was an instant hit. Unlike older, more somber traditional music, "Hava Nagila" was fast, modern, and communal.
: It became synonymous with the Horah , a circle dance brought to Israel by Romanian settlers. Hava Nagila Original
In the early 20th century, , often called the "father of Jewish musicology," was living in Jerusalem. He was obsessed with preserving the musical heritage of the Jewish diaspora. Around 1915, he heard the Sadigurer Niggun and transcribed it, recognizing its infectious energy. The Turning Point: 1918 Idelsohn arranged the song for a mixed choir
: As Jewish communities migrated, they took the song with them. By the mid-20th century, it had evolved from a regional folk song into a global pop culture phenomenon, played at weddings and bar mitzvahs regardless of the family's background. : It became synonymous with the Horah ,
Today, the "original" spirit of the song remains a testament to resilience—taking a prayer from a small Ukrainian village and turning it into a universal call for joy.
The story of the original "Hava Nagila" is a journey from a wordless prayer in a Ukrainian village to the world's most famous Jewish anthem of joy. The Wordless Beginning
Idelsohn felt the wordless Niggun needed lyrics to match the celebratory mood. He selected a few lines from , emphasizing "rejoicing" and "gladness": Hava nagila (Let us rejoice) V’nism’cha (And be glad)