From Britto, across from her
Ben Enkoeyos and Tazera. He was born on November 18, 1987, in Ethiopia. A brother to five. From the moment he was born, Barto was a child full of joy and happiness. His parents divorced when Alberto was four years old, and he remained with his father and grandmother who helped raise him, and he was very attached to it. From the age of six he was given great responsibility, and he went out to graze the flocks. This indicates that he could be trusted as a child, and he knew how to do what was best for him. From 1st to 5th grade, he learned from Berto at the Mallet elementary school in Ethiopia. He then continued his studies at the Passeildes School in Gondar until the eighth grade. When he was eight years old, his father married a second wife, Zuma Alamo, and she said, “I raised him from the age of eight, and he became my closest friend and saw me as his biological mother.” In November 2003, at the age of seventeen, the Mola family immigrated to Israel, and after the family’s immigration he learned from Berto in a high school in Hadera for four years, and enjoyed playing football, reading and traveling. He was a man who took care of others and supported anyone who needed help in his surroundings, and after completing his studies he joined the IDF on 5.10.2008 and served in the “Menashe” regional brigade in 1986 in the Ordnance Corps. His profession was a locksmith. A service of one year and eight months was cut off on March 9, 2010, when Barto was seriously injured in a traffic accident. Two months later, he died of his wounds at the Rambam Hospital in Haifa, and Sela Mula of Barto was killed in an operational operation in Ma’ale Gilboa, and died on May 18, 2010. He was twenty-two and a half. He was laid to rest in the military section of the Kiryat Gat cemetery. Survived by his parents, his eldest sister – stood out; And four half-brothers-Angao, Asamna, Babi, and Andeshe. About a year after his death, his half brother was born from Tarshas Menachem. His friends opened a Facebook page in his memory, in which they express their longing for him.