Eurovision Song Contest 1979

Eurovision Song Contest 1979
Date and venue
Final
  • 31 March 1979
VenueInternational Convention Center
Jerusalem, Israel
Organisation
OrganiserEuropean Broadcasting Union (EBU)
ScrutineerFrank Naef
Production
Host broadcasterIsrael Broadcasting Authority (IBA)
DirectorYossi Zemach
Executive producerAlex Gilady
Musical directorIzhak Graziani
Presenters
Participants
Number of entries19
Non-returning countries Turkey
Participation map
  •      Competing countries     Countries that participated in the past but not in 1979
Vote
Voting systemEach country awarded 12, 10, 8–1 point(s) to their 10 favourite songs
Winning song Israel
"Hallelujah"

The Eurovision Song Contest 1979 was the 24th edition of the Eurovision Song Contest, held on 31 March 1979 at the Menachem Ussishkin auditorium of the International Convention Centre in Jerusalem, Israel, and presented by Daniel Pe'er and Yardena Arazi. It was organised by the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) and host broadcaster the Israel Broadcasting Authority (IBA), who staged the event after winning the 1978 contest for Israel with the song "A-Ba-Ni-Bi" by Izhar Cohen and the Alphabeta. This was the first time that the Eurovision Song Contest was held outside Europe.

Broadcasters from nineteen countries participated in the contest, with Turkey deciding not to participate after Arab countries had pressured it into not participating in a contest held in Israel. Yugoslavia, which had missed the 1977 and 1978 contests, also did not take part in or broadcast the contest this year for political reasons, despite an earlier public poll in which almost 100,000 people supported a Yugoslav return to the contest.

The winner was Israel, with the song "Hallelujah", composed by Kobi Oshrat, written by Shimrit Orr, and performed by the group Milk and Honey featuring Gali Atari. It was the second victory for Israel and the third time any country had won the contest two consecutive time; Spain did so in 1969 (in the infamous four-way tie) and Luxembourg did so in 1973. Spain, France, Germany and Ireland rounded out the top five.