Levi, Michal
Daughter of Shlomo and Pnina. She was born on 28.11.1957 in Herzliya and studied at the Beit Yaakov Elementary School, where she continued and graduated from the Beit Ya’akov High School in Ramat Hasharon. She was a member of the Hanoar Haoved Vehalomed movement and devoted many hours to the activities of the Kibbutz, as her brother Daniel says – Michal loved literature and read many books, she even loved cinema and watched films a lot, and she did everything, With her music playing in the background, but her greatest love was nature and animals, she traveled a lot, and every animal in her path received special attention from her hands, raising dogs and cats. Michal was also involved in craftsmanship and often created fine chains and charms when she was 17 and decided to join the Nahal group and chose Kibbutz Shamir in the north of the country. She soon became absorbed in the new society, liked the members of the core and acquired many friends. There she even met her best friend, David, and with him she kept in touch until the end of her life. Michal was drafted into the IDF in May 1976 and volunteered for the Nahal Brigade. After basic training, she was sent to the Etgar Battalion, where she spent all her military service, being friendly and loved by all of them, and managed to maintain close contact with her parents, her brother, and her sisters On Friday, November 16, 1977, Michal fell in her role in the Golan Heights. She was laid to rest in the military section of the Herzliya cemetery. Survived by her parents, five brothers and three sisters. In a letter of condolence to the bereaved family, the unit commander wrote: “Michal was a girl who lived through compromise and compromise, and she did everything possible to solve problems and arguments peacefully and in good spirits.” Michal loved nature, “She managed to catch up with a lot of her friends in the farm with her love and enthusiasm, and Michal loved to play sports and excelled in the tennis game.” Her kibbutz members published a booklet in her memory on the anniversary of her downfall.