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Botbul, Mordechai (Moti)

Botbul, Mordechai (Moti)


Son of Ellis and Salmon. He was born on the 27th of Shvat 5738 (1.2.1978) in Ma’alot. When he was born, he joined a loving and loving home with three sisters – Ricky, Sigal and Arna, two brothers – Eli and Yair, and a pair of loving and loving parents. Moti grew up and was educated in Ma’alot. He spent his childhood in the “Doron” Kindergarten, and after completing his school years, he moved to the Nativ Meir religious elementary school. At the end of his six years of elementary school, he enrolled at the “Ort Maalot” school where he studied in junior high and high school. During his high school years, as part of the personal commitment project, Moti invested his time and energy voluntarily in the Civil Guard and continued to do so at the end of the period of time required in the project. The close proximity of the Civil Guard house to the Magen David Adom house led Moti after volunteering at the Civil Guard to help MDA as well. In the course of his military service, following his volunteer work in MDA, he worked to obtain a driver’s license for a military ambulance. Moti also contributed to his settlement in the arts center of Maalot, where he helped maintain and cultivate the place. From his early childhood Moti developed love and passion for music and music, and his choice was in the art of drumming. As a child, he developed this talent in many hours of drumming on improvised utensils such as pots and utensils as a percussion instrument and in the absence of a professional drum set, he brought up additional creative ideas for elements that would serve as drums. Apart from his amazing talent for drumming, Mutti had an equally amazing talent for raising a low-pitched smile, thanks to his jocular nature and his smiling face. Optimism and joy of life were its main characteristics; Both together and individually were a tool in creating such a special and captivating personality. When asked about his condition, his health or any similar question, he answered naturally that after his fall he became the symbol of “everything is honey” or “licking honey” – answers that describe a perfect situation and that were given even when the situation was not quite that. Moti has been enjoying the joy of life and drumming in the “Do not Spit on the Floor” band. The band, which was formed as a private joke of its members, managed to bring a smile to the viewers’ faces during rehearsals or improvised performances by the three. As an adolescent, Moti showed great interest in the truck industry. This curiosity, which did not fade away, drove him, even when he was a high school student, to enroll in a pre-military course for obtaining a truck license, in order to ensure his future in this industry. He successfully completed the course and expected his recruitment, so he knew that he could make use of the knowledge and experience he had acquired. At the end of July 1996, after completing his studies, Moti enlisted in the IDF, after thirty days of basic training and training as a marine driver in the elite unit of the IDF – the Naval Commando (“Shayetet 13”). In his service in the “Shayetet”, Motti achieved everything he had set for his cause, and at the same time contributed to the system in an exceptional manner as a loyal and disciplined soldier who was fond of his commanders and comrades. Moti was given the opportunity to take part in an ambulance driver course and thus closed another circle in his short life, a circle that began when he volunteered in MDA, where he met many new members who accompanied him in reserve duty and even in his civilian life as members of the Haga “On May 21, 2003, Moti was Simcha and proud of his choice of Lev and his marriage, and soon after their marriage, the couple moved to the town of Shlomi in the Western Galilee. Moti’s happiness was inexhaustible, and his birth was a turning point in his life, and all of Meretz And resources now spent raising a newborn and nurturing. Motti made a living as a truck driver moving company “martyr leaders”, and immediately after birth of sonAnd was upgraded to the company’s dispatcher. This new professional aspect expanded his horizons and opened his curiosity for the first time to the field of computers and the Internet. With the development of new curiosity, Motti began to study computer and Internet theory independently. Within a short time, he mastered this field, and took advantage of the technological advantages inherent in it in everyday life. On August 2, 2006, Moti was drafted into the “Eight Commandment” for reserve duty following the Second Lebanon War. On the night of August 5, 2006, his unit was transferred from the headquarters to the northern border for the purpose of renewing supplies and equipment. When they arrived at the destination, Moti and his comrades searched for a shaded place to rest until the order to enter the depths of Lebanon with supplies and equipment was received. The members of the unit were found under a tree at the entrance to the cemetery on Kibbutz Kfar Giladi. Instead, on July 6, 2006, a Katyusha rocket found a direct violation of the tranquility, laughter, purity and strength that caused the death of twelve soldiers. Among them were: Major Eliahu Elkaref, Lieutenant Shmuel Halfon, Lieutenant Yossi Karkash, First Sergeant Shlomo (Shlomi) Buchris, First Sergeant Daniel Son of David, Sergeant Ziv Balali, Sergeant Marian Berkowitz, Sergeant Roy Ya’ish, First Sergeant Yehuda Baruch Greenfeld, First Sergeant Shay Shaul Mikhalevich and Sergeant Grigori Aharonov. Mutti was twenty-eight when he fell. He was laid to rest in the military section of the cemetery in Shlomi. Survived by wife, son, parents, two brothers and three sisters. After his fall he was promoted to the rank of sergeant. His words were engraved on his grave: “My father’s sons are our sons and our brothers and our loved ones. In memory of Moti, a website was created at www.www.motib.com. On the site, a photo album, memorial lists, video links according to an eulogy delivered by commanders, relatives, co-workers and friends, videos edited by him and his memory, links to articles published in the media and more. “If you only knew how much grief you have caused and how many hearts you have broken and burned since you left us, I promise you that we will always remember and love you forever and ever,” said his wife, Hefty. Will grow up with memories and stories that are more Yaffa than you, and I am sure that he was proud to have won, albeit very briefly, an amazing father like you, so I hope you are up there guarding us and us at every step, loving and missing more than you think. The parents wrote: “Moti, when they invented you, they created a work of art, warm, supportive, caring and loving. You are a great boy, you are a good boy, you are an angel, what is left is to meet up, a mother’s angel, and as soon as possible. ” Niki Ricki wrote: “Dear brother, modest and humble, loving people, motivated in everything he did, a devoted, loving and loyal family man who never acted for his own personal purposes, always with the good of his family and friends. ), A wide Lev that always embraces and kisses Moti, misses you, your emails that opened to me with a broad smile every morning (a smile that has since disappeared), your laughs, your Shabbat and holidays with you, and in general loves you very much. Nurse Sigal said goodbye to her brother Bashir: “Moti, dear brother, we lost an angel, we lost you and it hurts, and we wanted you to know that you will always stay with us. Special, loving, a person who easily fits into your Lev, with your sense of humor that comforts everyone with the time Moti, you tore our hearts out when we accompanied AronCovered in blue and white. It is very important to us that you know that your image will accompany us forever, at all times, in good and evil. “

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