Abir, Ariella
Daughter of Haim (Henrich) and Varda. She was born on May 13, 1936 in Krakow, Poland. Her father, a well-known writer and journalist, was an adviser to the State Attorney’s Office before the war. At the age of three she went through the horrors of the World War and together with her family she went to Germany as a sword. At the end of 1940, it made its way through Turkey to Palestine. After the establishment of the State of Israel, she went with her parents to the capital of Yugoslavia, where her father (former name: Ritterman) served as first secretary in the Israeli Legation in Belgrade. During her stay abroad, she studied Serbian and English, and when she returned to Israel, where she missed very much, she continued her studies at the Herzliya Hebrew Gymnasium and was abroad and did not influence her studies. . Because of the precision, concentration, dedication and meticulousness she found in this role, she was admired and admired by her superiors, who gave her the most responsible positions and predicted a bright future in the field of bacteriology. Was inclined to say literature and mastered several languages, was blessed with analytical and critical power, but it did not contradict her love for art – especially music, and through the piano she managed to shed her delicate and sensitive soul. During her work in the lab she became ill and malignant and on Wednesday, February 16, 1956, she died of her illness, and on the last day of her life she was raised to the rank of sergeant, brought to rest in the Nahalat Yitzhak Military Cemetery. Ariela Abir “in son of-Shemen, and the late President’s wife, Mrs. son of-Zvi, participated in ten trees in memory of the sergeant Ariela, who became a symbol for her friends in the IDF. Altogether, a thousand trees were planted in this grove.