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Bromberg, Moshe

Bromberg, Moshe


He was born in the city of Ostrow-Mazowieck in Poland in January 1918. After graduating from elementary school, he went to Warsaw and studied there until the outbreak of World War II and the siege and bombing of Warsaw. After the German occupation, he and his family moved to the Soviet-occupied area of ​​Slonim, where he and his family moved to the Soviet-occupied city of Slonim, and when he began a lightning attack on the Soviet Union he was far from his family and was unable to return to Slonim, which was already surrounded by Nazi soldiers. After the war he returned to Poland, where he learned that his father, mother, brother and sister had been lost On December 30, 1946, after spending six months in the barbed wire fence on the island of deportation, he returned to Eretz Israel and was placed in the detention camp at Atlit, from where he was transferred to the camp Kiryat Shmuel and was released on March 15, 1947. In Israel he found his relatives, who received him with open arms, and Moshe was accepted to work in the Electric Company and was Simcha with his work. (17.1.1948) was called to guard in the Shapira neighborhood and was ordered to report on every British military vehicle approaching the site. In the middle of the day, at noon, a bullet from a sniper’s rifle hit him and pierced his chest. Moshe was brought to rest in the cemetery in Nahalat Yitzhak.

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