Gideon
The Story of His Life
Son of Isaiah and Judith. Children of the land; Both are founders of the "immigrant camps." Born on the 28th of Tevet 1918 (11.1.1937) in Haifa. When he was 11 years old, you gave his father, who was killed at the entrance to Acre while fulfilling his role. After graduating from an elementary school in his hometown, he studied at the vocational high school near the Hebrew Technion. Being honest and believing in the ideology of the movement, he was very disappointed during the crisis and the disbandment of his kibbutz, and then, when the kibbutz disbanded, he returned home and worked to save money for his next studies. The Hebrew University of Jerusalem. It was his humanitarian personality that guided his thought and way of life and led him to take advantage of his electronic training in the field of medicine to bring help to people who needed it. Consideration for others and willingness to help. Lust for knowledge and thorough understanding of any matter. He could not come to terms with conventions but his humility and thoroughness did not allow him to say anything unfounded. Wadim enjoyed it when Gideon served them to them. He did not demand special attention and was content with little. Recently he has started reading a series of lectures in his profession. And one of the listeners said that his lectures were based on knowledge and accuracy and even a special feature mentioned him as a lecturer - his consideration for his listeners because all his eyes were on the fact that the listeners would benefit from his lectures. Loved listening to music and tended to photography and photo development. He also often travelled around the country to get to know her. Enlisted in the IDF in December 1954 and served in the Nahal. Was an outstanding trainee in a Rangers course. At the outbreak of the Six-Day War, he was in the reserve and this time also volunteered for the patrol, on the first day of the battles, he was 26 Iyar 5767 (5.6.1967), while his brigade was clearing the Arab Legion outpost ("Bell Outpost") fell in battle. He was laid to rest in the military cemetery on Mount Herzl in Jerusalem. His name was immortalized in the memoirs of the Jerusalem Patrol during the Six-Day War, "Jerusalem of Gold." Several pages in the Book of Remembrance were also dedicated to the memory of the people of Kiryat Haim - "the trees that were cut down". Moshe Natan was also mentioned in the book "The War on Jerusalem". In the book "Nizkor" published by the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and its student union, edited by Yehuda the Citizen, several pages were devoted to it.
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