Mildiner, Moshe
Moshe, son of Ida and Jacob, was born on September 24, 1950, as the son of parents who immigrated to Israel after having undergone all the horrors of the Holocaust in Europe. He completed his elementary studies at the Hess School and continued his high school studies at the Ironi High School, both in Tel Aviv. In elementary school he was discovered as a lively, alert, sociable and social life. Sometimes he even served as a substitute for a teacher who was absent, in lower grades. In high school, too, he was one of the most prominent students, and his teacher said, “The class can not be described without mentioning the name of Moshe Mildiner.” During his vacations, until his graduation, he served as a summer camp counselor and was very successful in his work thanks to his friendships and leadership abilities. Moshe was drafted into the IDF in mid-November 1968 and chose the Armored Corps, and after completing his basic training, he took part in a course for armored instructors and became one of the best instructors at the base. Moshe was an outstanding guide and his name was inscribed on the table of the “Outstanding Guide.” Moshe was very meticulous, knew his teachings well and knew how to control the apprentices, and his friends in the unit said that he was undoubtedly one of the pillars of the department. At the University of Bologna, Italy, until he went abroad as a teacher Who was born in Tel-Aviv, was born in Tel-Aviv and was educated in Tel-Aviv’s first high school in Tel Aviv, where he had a strong connection with the family and his friends and his letters were filled with nostalgia for his parents, the country and the society. When the Yom Kippur War broke out, Moshe waited all day for the reading order, and in the evening he packed the suitcase and said, “It’s good that it happened while I was at home. Because if I were in Italy I would return immediately; “After a brief reorganization, the unit went down to Sinai and immediately entered the braking battles against the Egyptians, and on the night between 15 and 16 October the unit advanced towards the bitter lake, and when it reached the” “The night of the breakthrough will never be forgotten from my memory: a bloody and cruel night.” Sergeant Moshe was brought to eternal rest in the military section of Kiryat Shmona, Shaul left behind a father, a mother, and a sister, who were published in the book “Moshe”, published in his memory on behalf of the family, John from Snouck booklet “memory”, which published “Dan” in memory of “Dan” and their sons, who fell in the battle, in “viewer” dated 01.09.1974, and the book “Division Yom Kippur War.”