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Dreemer, Moshe

Dreemer, Moshe


Son of Shmuel and Bracha. He was born on March 27, 1947 in Schlitz, Germany, where his parents immigrated to Israel and brought him to Israel, where he spent his first years in the kibbutz, and when he was two years old he moved to Rehovot where he studied and completed elementary school Weizmann then decided that the one place that would allow him to give his whole homeland to the kibbutz was to return to kibbutz life, where he received his high school education when his teachers and his friends at the bench and work recognized him as a devoted young man who fulfilled all his duties, In May 1965 and served in the ranks of a sapper and a company patrolman. The Six-Day War broke out and he was in the middle of his compulsory service. Participated in the occupation of Jenin and at the end of the battles, where he volunteered to immigrate to the Golan Heights, and in the battle that took place in Tel el-Fakhr on the fourth day of the battles, he fell in his military operations as a saboteur and a patrolman. Direct and began to go up in flames. The commander ordered to leave the half-track, but Moshe, despite his order, continued to use the machine gun from the burning half-track, and when he was given this cover he burned himself in the flames of the half-track and was buried at the cemetery in Afula. His heroism and dedication to the mission was given to him by the Chief of Staff a commendation. “The Heroism Section” was opened in his name in the school library in Rehovot where Moshe studied. In an investigation conducted in 2017, it was emphasized that the Chief of Staff’s Citation awarded to the first corporal, Moshe Drimer, was converted to the Medal of Heroism.

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