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By

Darren Cohen

Opinion

Defending the neighbourhood bully

November 22, 2012 10:38
4 min read

In 1983, Bob Dylan, formerly Robert Allan Zimmerman, released the album Infidels. One of its outstanding tracks was the song Neighborhood Bully which many supporters of both Dylan and Israel alike saw as a brilliant justification of Israel and her right to self-defence.

Given Dylan's genius as a lyricist, the man who was once declared the voice of a generation yet again provided meaning and struck an accord, this time with those who sympathise with Israel and her never ending predicament of maintaining a moral code while unwaveringly trying to protect her citizens.

Among many of the song's salient points, the following words stand out and are as pertinent today, if not more than ever before:

He's criticized and condemned for being alive.