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Druck, Moshe (Misha)

Druck, Moshe (Misha)


Son of Yochanan-Berl and Sarah. He was born on 28.1.1939 in the city of Krostfils in Latvia (the Soviet Union), his father died in the Second World War, and the burden of raising the three children fell on the mother: Moshe attended elementary school and was an outstanding student. He loved playing soccer and was part of the school’s team, and he had a different hobby – playing various instruments, especially the flute and the trumpet, and his love for music, both classical and jazz, was to accompany him all the days. Moshe was drafted into the Red Army, and thanks to his musical talent, he was attached to a military orchestra, where he moved to Riga, where he attended high school for mechanical engineering. At the age of 27, he married his wife, Raya Tantzer, and a year later their eldest daughter Sofia was born, and the second daughter, Dalit, was to be born as a sabra, on the land of Israel. To the Lev of Moshe and Raya, and they found their way to an organized Zionist group that strove to immigrate to Israel, where they fought for the right to leave Russia, and finally, in 1971, they set foot on the land of their homeland. To work as a technician at the Carmel Plantation, and that remained his place of work until his death. In January 1973, Moshe began his military service in a short reserve service, and during the Yom Kippur War he spent more than two months on the field of battle in the Sinai, in June 1976 he was called up for an active reserve duty, from which he did not return. 1976) was brought to eternal rest in the military cemetery in Haifa and left behind a wife and two daughters, a sister and a brother, and Moshe wrote to the bereaved family: “Moshe was a devoted soldier and a good friend, despite his being new to the country and not accustomed to military conditions He was always among the volunteers for all the hard work, and I was impressed that he was making every effort to be an example to others and to prove that he should not be born here, in order to serve his people And his brother in the homeland. “

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