Aminov, Abraham
Ben Yaffa and Netanel. Born in 1922 in Turkistan, brother of David, Peltiel, Tamara, Shoshana, Esther and Issachar, the family immigrated to Israel in 1934 and settled in Tel Aviv, Abraham grew up in a Zionist home and was educated to the values of Judaism, love of the homeland and the sanctity of the country. Who immigrated to Eretz Israel and fulfilled a two-thousand-year-old Jewish dream: Avraham attended the “Aliyah” elementary school, went on to the Montefiore Gymnasium and completed his professional studies at the Max Payne School in Tel Aviv. At the end of his studies, he worked as a metalworker in the “Ha’argaz” company, with gold hands and a gold heart, was blessed with life and was very sociable. And dancing in which the many members and friends participated, and Avraham expressed his devotion to his people and his country in the events of the “Black Sabbath” in June 1946 and was taken to the detention camp in Latrun, where he was beaten. “Beilinson,” underwent two head surgeries and lost sight of one of his eyes on 21 March 1949. He died at the age of twenty-seven and was brought to eternal rest in the Nahalat Yitzhak cemetery and was buried near the Tomb of the Patriarchs, Brothers of Haganah members. Survived by parents, two brothers and three sisters. Avraham was the second in the family after his brother, Issachar, a combat soldier in the Alexandroni Brigade, fell in the War of Independence in Iraq and was declared a missing man. But it was heavy on the house that had once been happy and cheerful. The father did not overcome the loss of his two sons and died five years later. Abraham’s estate still contains beautiful handicrafts that he created during his imprisonment in the British prison in Latrun.