Malka, Hutnitzka
Daughter of Sara-Dvora and Baruch-Leib, was born in 1912 in the town of Vyszkow, near Warsaw, the capital of Poland. Nothing is known about her father’s house and the story of her youth and adulthood. During the Nazi occupation she managed to escape to the Russian interior. Upon liberation she returned to Poland, crossed borders in the “escape route” and arrived in Israel on the illegal immigrant ship “The Porsets” on December 4, 1947. Malka joined Kibbutz Ramat Rahel and worked in the food storehouse in the kibbutz, through fortification and fortification, from nurturing hope for better days, when the country was quiet, blooming and developing, and she would find happiness. She continued to bear the burden of the world until the 13th of Nisan 5708 (22.4.1948), the day she fell from the bullet of an Arab sniper when she went out to the yard for her work, and her fall served as a harbinger of the great attack that day on the farm. She was brought to rest in Ramat Rachel. Her memory was raised in the book “Ramat Rachel in Action.”