Fischer, Yosef Yom Tov
Son of Moshe Haim and Chaya Reiza. He was born on March 27, 1936, in Warsaw, Romania, to a veteran Zionist Zionist family and immigrated to Israel with his family the following year, and when he reached the age of elementary school he studied at Bar-Ilan and completed his studies there. He went on to study at the BILU high school and at the age of 17 completed high school, was pleasant and noble, had a deep and independent thought, and showed an inclination toward Hebrew literature, especially in the chess game and in one of his letters to his younger brother He asked him to keep all the news from the chess world published in the press for him: Yosef asked to enlist in the IDF before he reached the age of enlistment, because he said, “My comrades were drafted – See the house? ” His parents tried to dissuade him from this parade, claiming that he was too young and that he should rest a bit after he graduated – but to no avail. Finally, the parents agreed, signed the enlistment form, and Yosef found himself in the IDF in July 1953. During his service he dreamed of continuing his studies after the liberation, saying that he would study in the humanities at the Hebrew University: “At the Gymnasia I learned Hebrew literature on the edge of the fork” , He used to say, “and you have to deepen your learning.” Yet, as a student, he was very timid and did not want to stand out to his friends, and even hid from the eyes of his teachers, but the talent that attracted him to writing led him to publish light poems and humorous notes in several places. He was impressed by everything and made his impressions easy and humor. During his service, he took a course of class commanders and on the day he completed his course, he wrote on his diary: “The end of the course.” Although many ambitions and plans are in the Lev of man, , On the 10th of Adar 5705 (March 4, 1955), the end of the training and the end of his life came to an end. Joseph fell in the line of duty and was put to rest at the military cemetery in Kiryat Shaul. On the anniversary of his death, the “Alumni Newsletter” appeared on behalf of the Mizrachi High School – “Bilu”; This booklet is dedicated entirely to Joseph’s memory. That same year, his parents and friends established a society and a cultural hall in his home area in northern Tel Aviv.