Peled, Shemit
Daughter of Jacob and Tova. She was born on July 3, 1958, in Tel Aviv. She studied at the Yehuda Maccabee Elementary School and finished high school at the Alliance High School in Tel Aviv, where she was named after her late father, Shemaia Paternak, who fell in 1948 In the campaign to liberate Safed, Shemit was an outstanding and active student, and contributed greatly to the classes she studied in. She was always looking for challenges for herself, she was diligent, and every subject she was interested in did not let him until she learned him in depth. : Biology, knowledge of the land and archeology, and she sewed the dresses for her dolls with her own hands: Shemit was the fifth generation to be born to the country, and as a family tradition, Leah was educated The country was recognized not only by maps and numbers, but by the fact that as a child she had been plowing the country up and down, never missing a trip or a trip in the framework of the Gadna, the school, or the Hashomer movement Young ‘who belonged to her. From childhood, she dreamed of becoming a pediatrician and trained herself in this direction, enrolled in university courses and youth activities. In high school, she studied biology. Shemit loved the family circle and was very devoted to the house. She always remembered the birthdays of all members of the family and made sure to send the blessings on time. She was sensitive, gentle, gentle and obstinate in her reactions to the injustices she encountered. She could always stand up to her principles, and with the ability to persuade she knew how to convey her will, and her influence was great in the circle of her friends. On the other hand, she was influenced by the frameworks in which she served in the Gadna youth movement and the National Service – frameworks that left their imprint on her, so that she decided to join the nucleus within the Hashomer Hatzair movement. Shemit was drafted into the IDF in March 1977 as part of the nucleus he left for Nahal, and with the nucleus she set out to complete Kibbutz Yehiam in the Western Galilee. Her family saw this service as a continuation of the father’s service in the Palmach, in the First Battalion, while she was active in the life of the nucleus and in maintaining its integrity. On 19 September 1977, Shemit fell in the course of her duty – she was 19. She left behind her parents and sister and was brought to rest in the military cemetery in Kiryat Shaul, Memory.