Isaac Dell
Yitzhak, son of Genia and Lazar, was born in Hod Hasharon on Wednesday, May 23, 1947. He completed his elementary studies at the “A” elementary school in Ramatayim and later completed three years of high school He was a good student, because he always took the studies seriously and made sure to be ready and ready for the material before each lesson. In addition to being a studious student, he was He is also active in the Gadna movement as part of his school. Yitzhak was drafted into the IDF at the beginning of November 1966 and assigned to the Medical Corps, where he served as a medic in an operating room, but after a short time he was sent to an officers’ course and when he returned as an officer he served as a technician in an operating room. In early 1969, after he was discharged from regular service, he began to work in the artificial kidney section of the Tel Hashomer Medical Center, where he was always Simcha and cheerful and knew how to create an atmosphere Of good will and good spirit to all the employees of the department and therefore was loved by all employees Even after he married a wife and established a family of his own, he made sure to live near his parents’ home, so that he could always help them when necessary, and in 1971 his eldest son was born, and his joy and happiness knew no bounds. After the Yom Kippur War, Yitzhak was sent to the northern front, and in the fierce battles to stop the enemy there were many casualties and in the temporary hospital that was established at the El-Al junction In the center of the Golan Heights, the doctors and the medical staff, including Yitzhak, were loaded with labor . On October 10, 1973, Lieutenant Yitzhak was killed while carrying out his duties. On October 10, 1973, Yitzhak served as an operating room technician in a field hospital in the Golan Heights, in the El-Al area, when heavy Syrian shelling began on an evacuation point in helicopters near the house Despite the explicit warnings not to get up when heavy artillery fire came, Lieutenant Yitzhak returned to the hospital and treated the wounded in the tent, during which he displayed courage and devotion to his position, praise”. He was brought to eternal rest in the Ramot Hashavim cemetery. He left behind a wife, two sons, one of whom was born after his fall and parents. His family immortalized his name by setting up a library in his name at the Aleph State School in Hod Hasharon and by donating a new Ark for his name to the Adat Shalom synagogue in Hod Hasharon.