Bublil, Uri
Son of Haim and Klima. He was born on January 4, 1951, in the “Yad HaMa’avir” transit camp in Tel Aviv to a family from Tripoli, Libya. When the family was in exile, the atmosphere of the house was steeped in Zionism and love of Zion. Every Friday night the family would turn to the table and sing songs from Zion. Finally, the family decided to abandon their welfare and immigrate to Israel. They arrived in Israel naked and in short supply, and initially lived in a tent in the Beer Yaakov transit camp. After that, they moved to Yad HaMa’avir, where Uri, the sixth son of the family, was born. Uri was considered a source of pride and joy for the whole family and his arrival in the world symbolized a new era, a period of hope and transition from a life of idleness and irritation to regular work and livelihood. Therefore he was given a Hebrew name, which expressed the family’s desire to light up and rise again. Uri grew up and was educated in the Bnei Yehuda neighborhood of Bnei Brak, where he made his way from the kindergarten to his army service, where he studied at the Sha’ar Yashuv Elementary School in Bnei Brak and excelled in quick understanding, diligence and diligence. “His teacher wrote:” He never said that he was sorry for the place and did not complain to his teachers and friends. He did not complain at all and did not resent anyone or anyone. Likewise, his teachers or friends had never had any resentment about him, for there was always a relationship of respect and trust. Since the graduation ceremony, “the educator wrote,” I have not stopped following Ori’s development and progress. “Uri loved life and took advantage of every moment of his short life, as if his Lev had told him that his life would be short. One in the Amal vocational high school in Petah Tikva and the second in the evening, Uri was a footballer and from the age of 14-15 he appeared every week with the neighborhood team at the stadium in Ramat Gan and was outstanding in his game and dedication to his team. Tel Aviv, and thanks to his brilliant game he joined the team of the senior team, which made it to the national league A. His coach wrote about him: “As someone who was his coach and knew from close up, especially in football, I can say that Uri was an athlete in Lev and soul.” Despite his achievements and his pride in the family, he remained a modest man in all his ways. Nevertheless, he always attracted attention. His friends followed him as a leader and his home was always full of friends and friends. Uri was conscripted into the IDF in February 1969 and assigned to the Armored Corps On August 23, 1969, after six months of service and something, he fell in battle with the Egyptians in the southern Suez Canal. He was laid to rest in the military cemetery in Kiryat Shaul. Uri’s name was immortalized by the introduction of a Torah scroll to the Sukkat Shalom Synagogue in Bnei Brak, where the family is praying; In the weekly “Face to Face” his memory was mentioned in a editorial. A youth soccer team was also established, bearing the name “Betar Uri”.