Blau, Sagi
Son of Sarah and Yigal HaKohen. He was born on August 15, 1969, in Kibbutz Heftziba, at the foot of the Gilboa, where Sagi was one year old when his family moved to Moshav Nahalal, where he lived in Ramat Yishai. The elementary school in Nahalal, and later at the Arazim School in Ramat Yishai, where Sagi made high school in the Ort Greenberg school in Tivon, where he was a sensitive and sensitive child who became a very discriminating boy. , And he played the piano, Sagi was very attached to his father, created a good and satisfying relationship with his friends and acquaintances and was a favorite of all. Ink has been active in the community center in Ramat Yishai and served him as a youth counselor. Sagi had a well-developed technical sense that helped him in his activities for the lonely elderly when he renovated their homes. He was drafted into the IDF in November 1987. Sagi was assigned to the infantry brigade and served in the Northern Command as a brigade commander. In the army, he grew up at once, and with a sense of great privilege he assumed the burden of responsibility and enjoyed his position and independence. On August 19, 1988, Sagi was killed in a battle in Lebanon, killed by hostile terrorist activity, and a car bomb planted by terrorists inside an IDF jeep convoy that returned soldiers from the security zone in Lebanon exploded and Shagai was seriously injured . He was hospitalized at the Rambam Hospital and died of his injuries, when Sagi was laid to rest in the military section of the Ramat Yishai cemetery, leaving behind his parents, sister and brother. Important and vital part of the northern border. He volunteered for every mission, assumed responsibility and performed his role in the best possible way, while giving a personal example to his friends. “Defense Minister Yitzhak Rabin wrote to the grieving family:” He continued his volunteer service in Lebanon, was pleasant and glad to help. Smiling, modest and quiet. The memory of Corporal Sagi Blau is sacred and we are deeply rooted in our hearts. “