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Jesse, Nathan (Adano)

Jesse, Nathan (Adano)


Ben Adis and Beydglin. He was born on July 5, 1984, in the city of Yuzheva, Ethiopia, to a brother to Trungo, Gabayo, Achme, Draghe, Mulia, Mitt and Shivshi. Shlomo “The operation was decided following the rebel war in the Mengistu regime that approached the capital of Addis Ababa, where Ethiopian Jews were concentrated and waiting for their immigration to Israel, which began on May 24, 1991 and lasted for 36 hours, during which 14,300 immigrants were brought to Israel. The immigrants were temporarily housed in hotels and caravan sites, and Natan’s family spent their first days in Israel at the Kaduri Absorption Center near Afula. In the Lavi State Religious elementary school on Kibbutz Lavie, he gradually adapted to the life of the country, and after a while his family moved from the Lower Galilee to Lod and Nathan continued his studies there at the Rambam State Religious Primary School. He completed his high school studies in Kfar Batya, a youth village of the Amit network in Ra’anana, and completed 12 years of study at the boarding school, where he was an integral part of a group of young people who contributed greatly to helping the community and excelling in mutual assistance, solving adversities and fostering ideals. Nathan, whose love for the Land of Israel, stood out and said that everything should be done for the country, and that he led friends and family and encouraged them to join the IDF and serve as fighters. Nathan joined the army at the beginning of December 2003 and without hesitation sought to serve in the Border Police. After being trained and trained as a combat soldier, he was stationed in a Border Police unit in Jerusalem, and was very fond of his fellow fighters who appreciated his good qualities, and his commanders testified that he was a man of great stature and abilities, He was always devoted to giving, and he did not ask for anything, he was a devoted family member, and he had great respect for his parents and his family, during his service in constant contact with his mother, (3.7.2005) during an operational activity of the Border Police force in the Jerusalem envelope. The force that secured the construction of the separation fence in the Har Adar area was attacked with stones by dozens of Palestinians. Nathan opened the pursuit of the rioters but stumbled and deteriorated dozens of meters down the cliff to the channel Kfira stream. His injury was fatal and he was rushed, unconscious, to the Hadassah Ein Karem hospital. The doctors’ efforts to save him failed and after several hours died of his wounds. He was twenty-one years old when he fell. He was laid to rest in the military cemetery in Lod. Survived by parents and seven brothers and sisters. President Moshe Katsav paid a condolence visit to the family and noted his actions as he heard from his commanders about Nathan’s exemplary example, as a fighter and as a person.

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