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Noiger, Hadassah (Adela)

Noiger, Hadassah (Adela)


Daughter of Gittel and Shalom Krantz, was born on Wednesday, 30 October 1927, in the city of Kristianopol, Eastern Galicia, was educated in an elementary school and in the ” The family was deported to Siberia and all the Jews were deported to the Russian-occupied territory of eastern Poland, and soon afterwards they were deported to Siberia, where the spoiled child suffered from hunger and cold, and her parents and two sisters died. So that she was afraid that she would not be able to bear her grief.In 1942 an institution for orphaned children from Poland was established in Russia She was hoping to see her brother and sister in Israel, and in March 1943 she immigrated from Tehran as part of the Youth Aliyah. Desire to continue her studies, she joined the religious youth group in Mikvah Israel, where she managed to overcome the suffering of her past and the joy of youth returned to her. Hadassah quickly learned Hebrew and loved to wander around the country. Two years later she completed her studies successfully and left with the core for a year of training in Kfar Etzion and in 1945 joined the group. She had a strong and good character, and she filled every job with simplicity, vigor and without complaint. In the harsh winter, she worked in the summer, in the restroom and in the restroom. Love the place and the factory. At the end of the summer of 1947, she married Alexander Neuger, a member of the village, and a few months later the War of Independence broke out, and her desire to take on the burden of defending the place increased her desire to be in a home she had recently built. She went to Jerusalem in a convoy and headed for the village, and when they did not allow her to return immediately she cried and gave no rest. “They need me here,” she claimed, “I can not be here!” After a week she managed to reach Gush Katif, worked as a radio operator and did her job Hadassah fell in the last battle on the village on Wednesday, May 13, 1948, sitting next to the wireless transmitter in the monastery. At the same time her husband fell in the west of the village. On the 17th of Cheshvan 5710 (17.11.1949) she was brought to rest with the rest of the village in the military cemetery on Mount Herzl in Jerusalem.

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