fbpx
Katz, Remy

Katz, Remy


Ben Gitta and Isaac. He was born on the 16th of Sivan 5718 (16.6.1958) in Givatayim. Rami was a gifted child and was in first grade at the AD Gordon school where he learned to solve fracture exercises and later studied in sociology and work studies at Tel Aviv University, but did not have time to finish. He also knew how to cook and showed a developed technical sense, especially when he liked to renovate old cars, and from a young age he was a member of the Hanoar Haoved youth movement and afterward a counselor and a middle class teacher. Rami was full of joie de vivre and knew how to play around and hang out Youth joined the Nahal Brigade / Shadmot and went with him to the Alumot group. Rami took part in Operation Litani and in the Peace-Galilee War and was involved in ongoing security on the northern border and in the territories, and was discharged in 1979. In the first period after his release, He worked in a construction equipment company for a while and completed his diploma studies as a computer technician, and in 1981 he married his girlfriend from Noar Ayala and two years later their first son, Nir, was born. He is a gifted computer scientist specializing in medical computing, among other things, Beilinson Hospital in 1983. He was awarded a prize by the Association of System Analyzers for analyzing a personnel system at the hospital. At the same time, he began studying at the university and focused mainly on the sociology of medicine, and his daughter, Chen, was born in 1989. In spite of his many occupations, Rami nurtured his family and spent every spare moment with his wife and children On the 17th of Tammuz 5771 (17.7.1990) In a training accident with many casualties during his reserve service at the Tze’elim base in the Negev. He was laid to rest in the Kiryat Shaul military cemetery. Survived by his parents, a nurse – Ayala, a woman and two children. In a letter of condolence, the commander of the unit wrote to his family: “Rami was one of the pillars of the unit, and although he was not an officer, he was a platoon commander, all thanks to his special weight.

Skip to content