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Mimran, Shmuel (Shmulik)

Mimran, Shmuel (Shmulik)


Son of Sima and Armand was born on April 25, 1962 in Jerusalem. Shmuel studied at the Arlozorov Elementary School and completed his studies in the social studies program at Beit Chinuch, both in Jerusalem. Although he was considered a good student and, according to his teachers, even a gifted student, he did not like to “invest” in studies. Shmulik learned to play classical guitar, and played his music around him for many hours. Shmulik joined the “Mahanot Ha’olim” youth movement and was a member of the Nahalat Nahal paramilitary group that was established in the movement, and Shmulik was a quiet, gentle and sensitive young man who respected his parents very much, and on Saturdays he used to visit his father at home Shmuel was drafted into the IDF at the beginning of January 1981. At first, the nucleus of his target group, the ghetto fighters, was a favorite and beloved of the nucleus, and his friends affectionately called him “a puppet” After the basic training he was sent to a course for combat medics, and they completed successfully, the period of the course was a period he loved most, Shmulik felt he was learning things S Lev and strengthened by the thought dedicate his life to medicine. After completing the course, he returned to the core that came with the northern Infantry Battalion engaged in ongoing security operations. When the Peace for Galilee War broke out, his unit was sent to the battles in Lebanon, and Shmulik, as a medic, presented his friends with the best possible help. On the third day of Tishrei 5743 (20.9.1982), Shmuel fell in battle in Lebanon during the Peace for Galilee War and was brought to eternal rest in the military cemetery on Mount Herzl in Jerusalem, where he left behind his parents and two sisters. Defense: “Shmuel was a good soldier, served as a departmental medic, and during the war he dealt with the soldiers and the company. Was beloved by his comrades. “And his commander noted that” Shmulik was a good soldier, trusted his commanders and excelled in the positions that his commanders placed on him. ” The “Bohemian” nucleus commemorated the name of Shmulik and the name of the other fallen fighters, in a book called “Instead of Flowers,” which they published in their memory. A relaxation area named for his fallen friends was inaugurated in the Jerusalem Forest

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