Ben-Ayoun, Amram (Ami)

Ben-Ayoun, Amram (Ami)


Ben Miriam and Rafael. Was born on February 10, 1972 in Ashkelon, as the youngest son of a family of eleven. He studied at the Neve Tzion elementary school and continued at ORT Israel High School and at the Ronson High School in Ashkelon, which he graduated with honors. Ami was a beautiful, blue-eyed, very handsome boy, a child of “flowers,” quiet, introverted and shy. He had a special feeling for literature and art. He kept a diary and wrote poetry. He had to read his poems to understand his soul. When he was seven, his father died. The death of the father had a great influence on him, but he did a good job of deepening the literature in which he found his world. He was a diligent student, always among the best in most subjects. The homework always went on into the night. During these hours, he separated his feelings and feelings in writing, which was later revealed, because he concealed his inspiration and inspiration. He painted and photographed and even worked on developing the images, in a home lab. Ami taught at a computer camp at the age of fourteen, and did so with great success. He was especially aware of the plight of boys and girls and expressed this in his writing and even helped them. Ami was a member of the “maybe” nucleus, with whom he was supposed to go to the Nahal Brigade. On the eve of the Gulf War, he fell in the line of duty and was laid to rest in the military cemetery in Ashkelon, leaving behind a mother, three sisters and five brothers – Etti, Yehuda, Shlomo, Chaim, Rachel, Bezalel, Malki and Mazal In a letter of condolences to the bereaved family, the unit commander wrote: “Ami was a disciplined soldier, quiet, smart and intelligent. With a high personal ability. “His sister writes:” The more days pass, the more painful we become. The splendor of your beauty is reflected in every room. You are the youngest, the youngest lamb in the herd, you were our crown, and you will always be in our hearts. “His family publishes his writings, in a pamphlet in his memory.

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