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Harari, Rami (Aviram)

Harari, Rami (Aviram)


Ben Ilana and Uzi. He was born on August 31, 1974, in Tzuki Yam. The youngest son of his parents and brother to Malka, Nimrod and Noa. Rami was born when the family was on vacation in Israel, while serving on the Foreign Ministry’s mission to the Ivory Coast. Rami was three weeks old when the family returned to Ivory Coast, where he was in a French-African nursery and an Israeli kindergarten. When he was three years old, the family returned to Israel, to her home in Tzuki Yam – Havatzelet Hasharon. Rami was a curious and very alert child. From his childhood he has studied Encyclopaedia books extensively and has been interested in many different fields. He studied and was educated at the elementary school in Avihail and continued in junior high school and at the Ben Gurion high school in Emek Hefer near the Ruppin school. According to a high school teacher, Rami was a witty boy. He stood out in vast knowledge and deep understanding of history, geography and nature. His teachers had a brilliant future in these fields. Rumi had the ability to analyze intellectually and expressively, and at the same time have a special sense of humor, sometimes even sarcastic. Rami was an attentive boy, a fascinating, warm and sensitive conversation. A particularly kind boy, who always explained his surroundings. Rami loved sea, beaches and swimming. He read a lot, loved music and devoted himself to raising dogs. Rami has a high ability to learn languages ​​and has been able to travel almost all over the world. In his youth, he was active in an organization of young people in the moshav movement. He was interested in politics, and was preoccupied with the issue of the Jewish people. See things very mature. Rami planned to go to an academic degree in political science. At the end of November 1992, Rami enlisted in the Israel Defense Forces and was assigned to the Armored Corps, completed his basic training course, was sent to a training course at the Armored Corps School and assigned to serve as a liaison in a tank division in the Jordan Valley. On May 27, 1993, Rami fell to the military cemetery in Moshav Avihayil. He was nineteen when he died. Survived by his parents, brother and two sisters. In a letter of condolence to the bereaved family, the unit commander wrote: “Rami came to the battalion with motivation to succeed and study. A year after Rami’s death, his mother, Ilana Harari-Aviram, published the book “Stairs to the Sky”. Painful, simple and human songs express the pain and bereavement. In one of her poems, she wrote: “My child will not laugh, he will not cry, / he will not know a woman, he will not love, / he will not enjoy their taste, / will not blossom,” “The Four Seasons” are playing without him. / Father nods: “It’s you / /” I still can not believe it. “

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