Chloe, Moshe

Chloe, Moshe


Son of Shmuel and Atuel. He was born in Rehovot on May 31, 1952. He completed his studies at the “Geulim” elementary school and continued to study at the ORT vocational high school (electronic track), where he completed his studies and received the certificate of an electronics expert. In the time that remained until he was drafted, he passed the matriculation exams and was an active member of the Scouts movement in Ramat Gan, where he was a high-school runner and was a high school runner. : “- – – he knew very well that we were holding his fingers and did the maximum for his class to roast Moshe participated in the three days march in 1971, in which all his good qualities were observed: cheerfulness, joy, help to connect in distress and adherence to the effort to reach the goal. Although he studied in a real class in the electronic track, he stood out mainly in the humanities. His favorite subjects were history, literature, and Bible, and he devoted time to reading history books, and he liked to read newspapers and was updated about the news in Israel and around the world, and was a pleasant, cheerful, sociable, lively, He was the center of his company and a meeting place was established for his friends, which became a youth club of the Reform movement in Ramat Gan, where he had maturity, logic and discretion, and the family always turned to him for advice, even though he was a son Even before he was drafted, he was an adult and self-confident, equipped with knowledge and a cool spirit Moshe was drafted into the IDF in early November 1970 and volunteered to serve in the navy. He went to the army with enthusiasm and joy, and the service had an experience from which he enjoyed every moment, as he said to his friend: “Even the difficult moments add up to the sum of all the experiences of life.” But he did not prolong his service. He was brought to rest in the military cemetery in Kiryat Shaul and wrote: “Moshe, who came to us after he was trained for his job, A position entrusted to him diligently and devotedly, with extraordinary initiative and resourcefulness. Surprisingly was the speed with which he acclimated to his colleagues and the way he gained the trust and sympathy of all those around him. He had the kindness and desire to become familiar with the basic life and his functions, qualities through which many friends acquired in a short time. Always eager to help all his friends, to change them on guard duty or at work – all in modesty and quiet, without noise and without publicity. In his capacity as a technician, he was responsible for varied and expensive equipment, which he took care of and dealt with not only out of duty but many times out of initiative and a sense of responsibility. I was often surprised to see him take care of the equipment with care and dedication without being asked to do so at all. On his own, he built an auxiliary device to test certain equipment that helped to maintain the equipment. Even in difficult conditions and under fatigue he fulfilled exemplary roles, without complaining and indignation, out of quietness and quiet, without experience of standing out and always in a good and friendly spirit, with a healthy sense of humor and a smile. The “ORT” school in Ramat Gan published a pamphlet in his memory, and his parents donated a Torah scroll in his name to the synagogue where the father prays, the unit where he served, established And named an electronics lab after him.

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