Miller, Yitzhak-Aharon Halevy
Son of Michael-Elhanan and Sheindl. He was born on October 17, 1952 in Jerusalem. As a member of a religious family that immigrated to Israel from Czechoslovakia at the time of the establishment of the state, it was the course of Yitzhak Baror’s studies. After completing his studies at the religious elementary school “Horev” he continued his high school studies at Yeshivat Yerushalayim for Young People near the Merkaz Harav Yeshiva and later at the Merkaz Harav yeshiva in Jerusalem. He was a member of the ultra-Orthodox youth movement “Ezra” and as he grew older, he became a handsome, handsome, handsome young man. He was careful about the purity of the tongue, respect for others, and especially respect for parents and teachers. During his studies in Yeshivah for Young People, he traveled extensively with his friends in Israel and stuck to it for love. After a year of high school, Yitzhak decided that he should temporarily stop his yeshiva studies in order to contribute to the defense of the people and the homeland. Yitzhak joined the IDF at the end of July 1971, and together with the “Shalumim” group, composed of members of the Ezra youth movement, volunteered for the Nahal Brigade. Thanks to his outstanding qualities, his comrades chose him for the nuclear center. He worked on Kibbutz Shalabim, and there he stood out for his modesty, his pleasant manner and his willingness to act, without hesitation or calculation, from Kibbutz Sha’alvim to Kfar Darom and to operational employment, and here too he was a central figure, Of the service, being busy and tired, not a day went by that he did not devote time to the Torah until his last day he assembled minyanim for prayer at the base and even in the field, and he himself made sure to observe all the mitzvot on the 18th of Adar I 5733 (20.2.1973) A short while after completing a parachuting course, he fell while fulfilling his duties and was brought to rest on the Mount of Olives, and his commander wrote in a letter of condolence to the family: “The role of the machine gunner in our battalion is a difficult and honorable one, and your son carried it with pride and performed exemplaryly. Yitzhak was assigned two roles, which are actually one: to be a good paratrooper and a good religious Jew. Both were accepted by his friends and commanders. In his fall he had the machine gun and his pocket – the Book of Psalms. “The ultra-Orthodox youth movement” Ezra “, the” Shalumim “group and the Shalabim group published a booklet in his memory.