Esther and Israel’s eldest son, was born on the 15th of Sivan 5717 (June 15, 1957) in Jerusalem. Shlomo’s father – a professor of mathematics at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and one of the greatest teachers in game theory – is the daughter of Dr. Schlesinger, the director of the Shaare Zedek Medical Center, who both raised their children on the Torah But Shlomo did not give up on general studies, and Shlomo grew up and was educated when Shlomo was one year old, when his father was invited to study for the United States government, and the family moved to live in Washington, In the United States, Shlomo absorbed the values of American society and its behavior alongside the values of Israeli society He was a sabra among the Sabras, but the people of the United States saw him as one of their own, Shlomo was able to walk everywhere in nature and in total freedom and to behave everywhere in the local custom, and perhaps this was the secret of Shlomo’s wonderful personality, Horev “in Jerusalem, first in the elementary grades and later in the high school yeshiva, and Shlomo absorbed the same atmosphere of profound Torah study with a broad education, with a major emphasis on the fear of Heaven and the development of the individual personality. Unusual memory. The school was easy for him and he did it almost absentmindedly, and he had plenty of time to do other pursuits. He read whatever came next and acquired a broad education for it. He had many interests. He loved poetry and fine literature, but was also interested in natural science. While reading and studying, he acquired a rare bibliographic knowledge, especially in the field of sacred books and Judaica. This knowledge was available to him at a later stage of his life, when he was asked to organize and set up the “Otzar Ha-Sfarim” of the Sha’alvim yeshiva, which he joined when he joined the army as part of the arrangement. Another area that took a significant part of Shlomo’s experiences was music. Shlomo began playing the piano in first grade. He loved playing and listening to music at all. He also continued his music lessons at high school, and when he was at the Sha’alvim Yeshiva he used to leave the yeshiva building after midnight to sneak into the music room of Kibbutz Sha’alvim and play the piano for his pleasure. At one point in his life, he even thought of a career as a musician and conductor. Shlomo was friendly, welcoming and involved. He was a member of the ultra-Orthodox youth movement “Ezra” and passed through all the stages from mentor to counselor, and even a member of the central leadership. Shlomo loved to travel, discover new places and enjoy nature. Love was a mixture of love of the homeland with a thirst to see and absorb more beauty of the world. On his walks he took great pictures of the landscapes and plants, since he was also the master of photography. His friends say that immediately after his fall, he pulled out the camera he carried with him everywhere and said: “How Yaffa this view is … We had to come here with tanks …” He quickly became acquainted with the teachers and his classmates, and soon began to turn to him to help them solve a complicated question or to impose on him responsible tasks. The yeshiva became a bone of its own flesh and flesh, and the study of the Torah filled its whole being, and it rose to the heights of character The day to day. One could say that the fundamentals of studies acquired at school, “Horev” while someIn the yeshiva, Shlomo’s personality was shaped and shaped as his friends would remember in their hearts. At that time, while dealing with the ways Abaye and Raba, he married his girlfriend Shlomit Kahan, also a Jerusalemite. Shlomo and Shlomit set up their home in Shalabim and the house was, in a short time, a social, cultural and educational center. Later the eldest son was born, and Shlomo began to dedicate a considerable part of his time to him. He would spend many hours with him, as if he wanted to give his son all he could in the short time that the Lord Almighty had given him. After five years of yeshiva studies in Shalabim, Shlomo felt that he should deepen and enrich his Torah education at one of the oldest and largest yeshivas, and he chose the Mir Yeshiva in Mea Shearim in Jerusalem. To everyone’s surprise, and even to his own surprise, the move from the world of “knitted skullcaps” to the world of “black domes” was not complicated and difficult at all. Soon, Shlomo felt himself a “fish in the water” in his new environment as well. The veteran yeshiva students have come to recognize and appreciate the “foreign plantation,” which has just come to them, and is equipped with its own way of learning and ways of thinking so different from their own ways. Needless to say, here too he immediately became fond of his friends and yeshiva rabbis. In the summer of 1981, Shlomo and Shlomit left their studies at the Faculty of Law at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and the transition from the Torah world to the world of justice was easy and smooth for Shlomo, During his studies after his marriage, Shlomo did not agree to be close to others, and he worked as a teacher in order to support his family, and in Jerusalem his life was closed, when he began his studies. To teach at the “Horev” high school yeshiva that he is a student Shlomo was a good and devoted friend, his ear was always attentive to the needs of others, and he never spared any effort to help a friend in need of help. He was the organizer of the religious experience in his battalion and the liaison between the command staff and the hesder yeshiva students, and Shlomo loved life and knew how to exhaust every bit of pleasure and everything good and Yaffa in the world of God. He also knew how to share his experiences with everyone around him. He was a symbol of a full, rich and meaningful life. The commander of the company tells of Shlomo: “As a tank crewman, Shlomo was excellent at being an excellent gunner … When Shlomo arrived at the time of enlistment, it was evident that he was more serious than ever and that he knew what we were going to do. I do not accept the assumption that Shlomo was afraid of the war. He simply knew how to properly read every situation, and here too he came to the conclusion that we were not going on a trip to Lebanon but to a real war. “During the battle, the tank on which Shlomo sat as a gunner was hit and he fell in the line of duty, on June 9, 1982 ), And was laid to rest at the military cemetery on Mount Herzl in Jerusalem, leaving behind a wife, son of-David and Shlomzion, who was born after his death, parents, sisters and brothers.