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Dr. Dagesh, Maher

Dr. Dagesh, Maher


Ben is singing and Magid. He was born on September 16, 1970 in the village of Majar. Even when he was young, it was apparent that Maher was unusually smart and intelligent. He began his studies at the Majar B Elementary School and graduated with honors. From there he went on to the junior high school in his village. A friendly boy, always in the center of things, initiating games and running the other children. Maher loved to ask questions, was interested in human nature and its surroundings. Sometimes he would use words that even the adults did not know what they meant, and his teachers would admire the knowledge he showed, which was not clear where he acquired it. He graduated from high school in Majar. Each year he received certificates of excellence for his achievements in all subjects, and his matriculation certificate was also excellent. Maher was a great man. He has read extensively on various subjects and acquired knowledge in the fields of humanities, art and literature, as well as science and computer science. His friends called him a “walking encyclopedia,” for he displayed great knowledge in every field. After completing his studies, he took the psychometric exams and was accepted to study medicine at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. In October 1988, Maher was drafted into the IDF and during his studies he completed an officer’s course, where he completed his medical studies at the Hadassah Ein Kerem University Hospital in Jerusalem and began working as an intern at Rambam Hospital in Haifa. In every department he worked in, he immediately became fond of the medical staff as well as the patients, and showed a high level of professionalism. When he finished his internship, he began his army service as a doctor, serving as a doctor in the IDF’s infantry battalion and serving as a doctor and a brilliant officer. He received a medal of excellence from the chief of staff. Maher liked to help anyone, regardless of religion, race, or gender. His teachings were simple and decisive: “We are all sons of one father and mother.” He showed understanding, originality and initiative in adapting the combat doctrine to the changes that took place in the battalion. During his service in Lebanon, he joined operational activities accompanied by top-quality units. In the course of operational activity in the Occupied Territories, Maher treated the victims of road accidents in the area and responded to the arrests and operations that the battalion took part in. He was later chosen to serve as a doctor and embarked on an advanced course. He continued to expand his education and completed another academic degree in philosophy, and a month before his fall, he married Samira, the choice of his heart, to the woman. After an emphasis was placed on the strength of the naval commandos for operational activity in Lebanon Where the force encountered a terrorist ambush, and a number of explosive charges exploded near the force, and then developed into a battle with the terrorist forces. Maj. Gen. Yohanan Hilberg, Sergeant-First Guy Golan, Sergeant-Major Gal Rudovsky, Sergeant Major-General Tzvi Grossman, And Sergeant First Sergeant Yaniv Shmuel, Sergeant Major Itamar Ilya, one of the force fighters, was declared missing on that night and in June 1998 he was laid to rest in Israel. Dr. Maher Deghash was twenty-seven years old when he fell. He was brought to eternal rest in the cemetery in his village of Majar in the Galilee. Survived by a wife, parents and six brothers and sisters: Taghrid, Jumana, Raoua, Tair, Talia, and Mutia. After his death he was promoted to DerGat is a captain. In his estate is a book that Maher Shaked wrote shortly before his fall, which deals with the field of traditional medicine. Maher managed to give it to the press, and it has not yet been published. The commander of the Golan Bloc wrote to his family: “Maher’s path is continuous in terms of excellence, he excelled in medical studies, in his position in the army, and was chosen to be the outstanding officer of the Golan Bloc. His excellence was accompanied by a deep and genuine appreciation of his soldiers in the unit and his fellow commanders, as well as at a high professional level, which he was constantly careful about. Alongside his excellence, he knew how to be a true friend… Maher left us prematurely. His character, character and characteristics will accompany us further and act as role models. “On the evening that was held in memory of Maher on the first anniversary of his fall, the commander of the battalion in which he served spoke:” As someone who worked with him for a whole year, throughout his entire career as a battalion doctor, I can attest to his professionalism both as a doctor and as an officer. A combination of the ability to see things in command, military, combat, along with the professional vision as a doctor and as one who takes care primarily of the soldiers’ health. Dr. Maher was a first-rate consultant, explaining and clarifying issues I did not always understand. Maher had a sharp, open eye, an open and understanding heart, and excellent analytical ability that enabled him to get to the bottom of things … His main commitment was to the physiological health aspect, but Maher understood and worked extensively in the field of feelings and morale in the unit. Dr. Maher initiated and conducted surveys and conversations with soldiers in order to bring to our attention commanders, moods and feelings that did not reach us. “Maher’s friend, the battalion’s deputy commander, wrote in his memory:” I always remember Maher as a doctor and as an officer, but first as a friend. As a doctor, he had this remarkable quality of looking at a person walking from a distance and saying whether he was impersonating or ill, and if so, what kind of illness. As a doctor, he was able to sit with “problematic” people for hours and bring them back to normal. As an officer he did his work admirably, always knew how to analyze situations and was a partner in making decisions and procedures. But with all these we had the little moments together that we would forget the ranks and the role and run wild like two little children. We would conduct ‘soul talk’ about life in the night, while covering performance in the territories or during training breaks, and immediately when necessary – back to real life, to the army … It is always customary to elaborate on words, but in this case I think the words are too small to describe the greatness of this person. ” His friends in the unit wrote: “In any situation, whether it’s in a wet, hard winter workout or on a hot summer day in the clinic over a cup of coffee, whether in an incident with casualties or at an officers’ evening in one of the pubs in the area, there was always the pious father who takes care of everyone and tries to solve the problems, There was one who finds the points of light, the good that is bad and makes us all feel better. A man whose candle was extinguished prematurely, but his light will continue to illuminate our lives. “Other members of the staff wrote in his memory:” You have never said that you have ever been praised … You never loved and did not need to hear praise from us. Your pride and professional confidence and the fact that you are an autonomous person and your uncompromising independence have always given you a sense of ‘nothing to add.’ And now that it is too late, as we shall say, we will not be able to exhaust all that was possible and should have been said. Nevertheless, a number of things that we have learned, that we loved, that we will remember and that we will not forget you, the humanity and empathy in your attitude towards patients and people in general, professionalism, perfectionism, your being a doctor in every sense of the word,The philosophy of economics, politics, and of course medicine, history, theology and whatever, the morality and ethics that you have jealously guarded, our countless shared experiences, the spectrum The vastness of thoughts, views, feelings that filled you and now are an inseparable part of us.

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