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Alush, Shimon (“Simon”)

Alush, Shimon (“Simon”)


Son of Peretz and Aviva. He was born on December 16, 1952 in Siliana, Tunisia. When he was five years old, he immigrated to Israel with his family, who settled in Be’er Sheva, where he studied at the Rambam religious elementary school and excelled in his studies, diligence, precision, and teachers, who gave him a few times the certificate of ” He continued to study at the comprehensive religious high school in Be’er Sheva, but after a year decided to get closer to the source of holiness and knowledge and then to study at the Bnei Akiva Yeshiva in the city, where he was also one of the best students and excelled in his studies and behavior and his teachers praised him. He was a member of the “Bnei Akiva” movement, and his educators, who over the years discovered his talents and talents They knew how important it was for him to do in a spiritual center, such as a high yeshiva, in which his soul and holiness would develop, and Shimon went out to study Torah in a high yeshiva, not only in his spirit but also in his body. With military service during the Hesder Yeshiva, Shimon joined the IDF in late July 1971 and was assigned to the Armored Corps. In the meantime, he continued his studies at the “Kerem B’Yavneh” yeshiva. In the yeshiva he advanced and developed, wrote Torah novellae, notes and notes to the articles of Torah sages, edited the newspaper of the graduates of Yeshivat Bnei Akiva and wrote Likutei Torah in the newsletter of the Kerem B’Yavneh Yeshiva and its soldiers scattered throughout the IDF. On his last visit to the military cemetery in Be’er Sheva, his commander wrote: “Shimon z” l saw volunteering for service in the IDF as a goal and acceptance of the spiritual life in which he was immersed until his service – To the generation that lives in Israel and the generations that follow it – – the desire to succeed in all that it has done is a faithful expression of the character and willpower that were inherent in it. “In the booklet” Rainbow, (18), “Hatzofe” newspaper and “Le-Derekh Be-Derech” magazine, leaflets to a soldier on behalf of the “Kerem B’Yavneh” Yeshiva, printed in his memory.

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