Avner (Rubinstein) and Shlomo
Son of Perl and Mordechai. He was born in 1910 in the town of Ozzec, near Warsaw, to a pious and poor family. The father of the family was a peddler who went around among the surrounding villages and Shlomo joined him when he was very young. The two returned home only when darkness fell and their livelihood was scarce. At the age of 13 Solomon rebelled against his family and left the town. He moved to Warsaw and joined “Hechalutz Hatzair”. In 1932 he went on a training course in the town of Plock, in a hostile and hostile environment. He established with love and dedication the vegetable garden of the hachshara, because he claimed that agricultural training was the actual training. From Plock he moved to Lodz, where he continued his public activities with the same enthusiasm: “Everyone has to be ready for all the jobs and positions he is required by the movement and the country,” he often said to his friends. When the events of 1936-1939 broke out in Israel, Shlomo made great efforts to immigrate to Israel so that he could stand with his defenders but was not allowed to fulfill his will. “May I also be privileged to be among the people of work and excavation in my hands and body to help day and night” – he used to say. Only in the spring of 1938 he finally arrived in Eretz Israel and joined the Kibbutz Hameuhad company in Nes Ziona, where he suffered the hardships of absorption and sought to work in the field, but accepted the group’s duties as a coachman and softened his disappointment. And cheerful: “And why should not I? “I was at home,” he said the day before his death, and was hoping to settle in the Galilee, in the mountains of Naphtali, only five months before he was able to live in the country he so longed for. From his work, and was laid to rest in the village of Aharon near Nes Tziona. Hakibbutz Hameuchad published a pamphlet in memory of Shlomo, containing the words of friends about his character. In Davar, dated November 1, 1938, his picture and the words of his friends were published in his memory.