Yitzhak, son of Mindel and Michael, was born in 1927 in Czechoslovakia, in the town of Brahovo (Bergas), in Transcarpathian Ukraine, where he studied in a room and elementary school, On the eve of the outbreak of World War II, Hungary, which was an ally of Germany, was given control over it, while the rest of Czechoslovakia-Bohemia and Moravia was handed over to Germany, and Slovakia was recognized as an independent entity under Nazi auspices. Were recruited to the Hungarian army’s Munkaszolgalat (Labor Service), and many others were among the first to arrive in the coming months Until the German occupation of Hungary in March 1944. Some of the Carpathian Jews managed to maintain a normal life, and even helped Jews who fled from Poland and Slovakia, after which most of them were deported to the death camps. Yitzhak’s family was deported to an extermination camp where his parents, brother and sister were murdered, and he survived the labor camp and arrived at the day of liberation. He spent a short time in the kibbutz, then moved to live near his relatives in Kfar Sava and worked as a laborer, and later moved to Jerusalem and began to study carpentry. Shortly after his arrival, Yitzhak joined the Haganah. At the outbreak of the War of Independence he enlisted in the Alexandroni Brigade, the 3rd Brigade in the Hagana, which was assigned to the defense of the Sharon region. He was stationed in Company B in Battalion 33, and since then he participated in the battalion’s battles during the war, mainly in the central region. In May 1948 Yitzhak participated in Operation Medina in Arab Kfar Saba. Arab Kfar Saba, east of the Hebrew village of Sava, as well as Biar Adas and Qalqilya, were an unending threat to the security of the Jewish settlements in the area from the beginning of the war. Arab villagers carrying weapons and reinforcements from the Iraqi “Rescue Army” of Kaukji would harass the workers in the fields and orchards bordering the lands of the Arab village, and harass them with blows to nearby towns. Over time, the aggression of the Arabs, who began to flee from their village, sometimes with the help of armored vehicles, destroyed the citrus groves, fired heavy fire at the Jewish settlement, and made repeated attempts to blow up the wells that supplied water to the fields, orchards and the settlement itself. On May 9, 1948, Kfar Sava was attacked with heavy fire, and under its auspices, three armored vehicles reached the central well of the settlement and blew it up. At that time, the headquarters of the Alexandroni Brigade decided to conquer Arab Kfar Saba. The date of the operation was set for May 13, the day before the declaration of the state, so Operation “Medina” was called. The operation was assigned to Battalion 33 of the Brigade, to which two companies of Battalion 32 were joined. One company was assigned to erect blockades to prevent the reinforcement of reinforcements from Qalqiliya. On May 13, 1948, soldiers from the Alexandroni Brigade attacked the entire area west of Qalqiliya. The battalion attacked Arab Kfar Saba in broad daylight, in an attack that began at around 12:00. After a fierce battle lasting about two hours the village was in the hands of the brigade, after the escape of its inhabitants. Large forces of the Jordanian Legion together with local armed men tried several times to return and conquer the village. The battles continued until dark, in which 29 Israeli fighters fell, but the village remained in the hands of the brigade. On May 13, the day of the battle in Arab Kfar Saba, Yitzhak was seriously injured. He was transferred to Beilinson Hospital where he died the next day, May 14, 1948, the day of the declaration of the State of Israel, at the age of twenty-one, when he was brought to eternal rest in the military cemetery in Petah Tikva, scionThe last survivors of the Holocaust were survivors of the Holocaust and / or in concentration and hiding camps and / or in hiding and hiding in territories occupied by the Nazis and / or fighting alongside Members of the underground movements or partisans in the Nazi-occupied territories who immigrated to Israel during or after World War II wore uniforms and fell in the Israeli army.