Pinkas, Moshe (“Mozzi”)
Son of Meir and Suzy. He was born on December 13, 1947, in a Russian city in Bulgaria, before his family immigrated to Israel, and his first birthday was celebrated on the ship. After graduating from the Weizmann School in Jaffa, he participated in the Tzadikov choir because he loved music, he even started playing clarinet, but when he attended the Kol Israel Haverim High School in Ramat Aviv, Moshe left the choir After graduating from high school in the real world, he planned to continue his studies at the Hebrew Technion in Haifa, where he grew up in an atmosphere of unity and love in the family A pleasant and loving son, he was a bit shy, courteous and warmhearted, who was His modesty was expressed in his quietness and humility, because he was not one of the jumpers in his head, he liked to help and help all of them, he was not teasing or teasing or irritating his friends, and he was able to instill a good atmosphere around him. He and his task was done with faith. He was not a great man and he did not pursue honor. Loved life, read a lot, and preferred it over walking the streets in nothing. In February 1966, he was drafted into the IDF and this event brought about a change in his way of life: his entry into service gave him a matriculation certificate in life and problems in the relationship between one soldier and another and a soldier in his homeland. He did not aspire to a military future, but knew that to secure peace within the borders of his country, fighters were prepared to sacrifice themselves to achieve this goal under the most difficult conditions. “It was a difficult task, and yet the men of the company did not shy away from them and fulfilled their duties faithfully He fought the trenches of Tel-el-Fakhr in a face-to-face battle until his last drop of blood: in this battle, which took place in Tel al-Fakhr on the Golan Heights, Moshe fell on the fifth day of the battles, (9.6.1967). He was buried in the military cemetery in Afula and was later transferred to the eternal rest of the military cemetery in Kiryat Shaul. His name was immortalized in the booklet “Company A” tells. Several pages were devoted to his memory and his book “Katopim Babam”, in memory of the graduates of the “Kol Yisrael Haverim” high school in Ramat Aviv, as well as in the “Sparks” booklet published by the students of that school. In the book “The Battle of the Tel” by Aharon Megged, his memory was raised and even in the description of the battle published in the weekly Bamahane. In the Yalkut of the sons who fell in the forests of Israel – “Goily Ash”, Volume 4 – was brought from his estate.