Bouzior, Jacob
Son of Simcha was born in 1927 to an affluent family in Bessarabia, which was then found in Romania. With the outbreak of the Second World War, he was uprooted from his breeding and education as a youth, but he grew up and became a man during this turbulent period, joining the ranks of the Jewish partisans and fighting against the Nazi occupier. At the end of the war he found out that only he and his sister had survived from his entire extended family. His sister stayed in Russia and Yaakov immigrated to Israel. The British seized his ship and he was sent to a detention camp in Cyprus. When he arrived in Israel, he was accepted as a guard at Nesher near Haifa. Was in a state of shortage and hunger, and when he received this dangerous and dangerous job, he joked to himself: “At least I will be seven when I’m killed …” was a quiet and sympathetic fellow around him. He was a sports fan and was very interested in the operations of the “Hapoel” troop. During the War of Independence he was one of the first recruits, served in the Carmeli Brigade, was discovered as a courageous soldier and fought in the northern front. On the 22nd of Tishrei, 5709 (22.10.1948) he stormed with the soldiers of his platoon on a captured outpost by the enemy near Manara. He threw two grenades at the enemy in the short range, and a fragment of the second grenade struck his head and killed him on the spot. Jacob was laid to rest at the military cemetery in Rosh Pina