Graini (Granero), Amir (Andre)
Son of Marcel and Sene. He was born on January 30, 1948 in Bucharest, capital of Romania. He studied at the Nikolai Belzysko Elementary School in Braila. Andrei grew up in a house of Jewish intellectuals, with a tradition of doctors and pharmacists, who was also steeped in Jewish tradition, moral principles and endless love for the people and the Promised Land. He was a healthy, cheerful, gifted boy, and from childhood he had a soul to be a doctor and a cure for others. This future filled his Lev and this ambition was integrated into his fantasies while he was at the center of communist fanaticism in the vision of teaching medicine on Mount Scopus. He knew this mountain from the stories of Grandpa. While he was still in Braille, he studied Hebrew, and on the day he reached the commandment he even went up to the Torah. In 1961 his family immigrated to Israel and settled in Netanya. Where he attended elementary school and graduated with honors. Afterward he continued his studies in the Tchernichovsky High School in Netanya, in the real world, but never abandoned his dream of becoming a doctor. He was an active fan of Maccabi Netanya and at every free time went out to watch the competitions, while he enjoyed playing puzzles in his spare time, but mainly he read books on history and medical literature , And was soon absorbed by his contemporaries, and even his name was passed from Andrei Granero to Emir Neri, who had many hobbies but mostly loved the pilot and everything related to air transport, out of solidarity with the needs of the people and the homeland under siege. About his future, when he said to her: “I will not go to study abroad, before I have been licensed as a doctor in Jesus But he did not receive medical studies, even though he had successfully passed the Concourse examinations, and was accepted to serve in the army after his army service in November 1969. He wanted to serve as a pilot in the Israel Defense Forces The university’s announcement of his acceptance to medical studies came after he was wounded as a result of an enemy bomb attack in late April on the grounds that he was a member of the IDF. The banks of the canal. On April 28, 1970, a few days after he was wounded, he died of his wounds. He was laid to rest in the military cemetery in Netanya. In memory of Amir, a scholarship is awarded to a medical student at the Bnei Brit, Shavei Israel office in Netanya.