Lustig, Yehuda
Yehuda, Ben Betty, and Martin, was born on 23.2.1948 in Glasgow, Scotland, where his family traveled from Israel on the occasion of his father’s studies. Yehuda was drafted into the IDF in May 1966 and assigned to the Armored Corps, where he was assigned to the Armored Corps. After completing his regular service, he was assigned to reserve duty in a reconnaissance company of the Armored Corps, and when the reconnaissance battalion was established, he joined him out of a desire to be a soldier in the Armored Corps. Among the soldiers leading the fighting was Yehuda, who underwent a training course for armored personnel carriers and recently served as an armored personnel carrier commander Plot scouts, and according to his commander, he excelled Judah stages of setting up the unit, and played his part to the complete satisfaction of the census. When the Yom Kippur War broke out, Judah was called to his unit. When he said goodbye to his parents, he tried to reassure them by saying that by the time he reached the battlefield, the war would be over. He participated in the fighting in Sinai as a noncommissioned infantry officer and in the battle that took place on October 10, 1973, at the “Abu Katira” fortification on the Hill of Hechalutz, in the northern sector of the Suez Canal, Of which two of the shoulder-fired missiles were destroyed, and Judah and five of his fighters were killed and killed, while the APC remained in the area occupied by the Egyptians and Judah’s body was returned only months later. He was brought to eternal rest in the cemetery in Gedera. Survived by a wife, parents, brother and sister. After his fall, he was promoted to First Sergeant.