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Ginosar, Shahar

Ginosar, Shahar


Ben Rina and Yossi. He was born on Wednesday, August 2, 1972 in Jerusalem. The eldest son of his parents. Grandson of the eldest son of Arieh and Tanya Ginsburg and Rachel of Loya. With his birth, Shahar was a source of pride for the family and everyone who knew him. And even more so when he grew up and became a boy and a boy. Everyone he met was captivated by his charm, his uniqueness, his smile, his rolling laughter, his sense of humor and his radiant and sweeping personality. From the age of four until the age of twelve, Shachar grew up and was educated in Ramat Hasharon where he attended elementary schools in Oranim and Neve Magen. Shahar later joined his father, who went on a two-year mission to New York in the United States, where he attended the Remez School. From the age of fourteen, Shachar grew up in Kochav Yair and completed his studies with honors in physics at the Katznelson High School in Kfar Sava. In addition to his studies, Shahar engaged in extensive social activities and varied sports activities. Athletics, basketball, judo and diving at sea. He was also a member of the Society for the Protection of Nature (SPNI) and was surrounded by many good friends. After the matriculation exams, which he successfully completed, Shahar traveled to Cyprus, Greece and Italy with his good friends Lior, Assaf and Rez. Shahar enjoyed the trip and wrote an instructive travel diary. As an eighteen-year-old man, Shachar discovered a mature wisdom, combined with playfulness and a warm and sensitive heart. Values, were not something to learn, but were embedded in his personality. Personal integrity, courage, loyalty and reliability have accompanied Shahar in all his ways and are combined with personal charm, charm and always with a touch of youthful mischief, with the only special smile, with the small gap between his teeth, never leaving his face. In November 1990, Shachar was recruited to serve in the Israel Defense Forces in the Intelligence Corps, and Shahar was a pioneer both in infantry training and in the army. A few days after the end, when the whole nation breathed a sigh of relief, the worst blow came. On Monday, March 11, 1991, at 4:30 PM, when Shahar and his friends were in operational employment in the Gaza Strip, Shahar and his friend Guy were killed by a local driver who said he fell asleep at the wheel. Shahar, the eldest brother of his brother Tsur, Matan and Amir, was buried in the Kiryat Shaul military cemetery and is only eighteen and a half years old.

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