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Primer, Ronit

Primer, Ronit


Daughter of David and Carmela. She was born on November 7, 1955, in Haifa. She studied at the Be’eri elementary school and went on to the WIZO High School in Haifa, where she studied architecture and was active in the class council and the student council, and was elected as chairman of the Student Council during the Yom Kippur War when she completed her studies and remained with her For a few months until her recruitment, Ronit volunteered to take care of a pair of twins whose father was considered missing in the war, and was also active in the youth movement Mahaneot Ha’olim, the Neve Sha’anan branch. On behalf of the National Council for the Prevention of Accidents – for her safety-shift activities, and her high school teacher wrote to her parents: “I loved And Ronit. We appreciated her, she was always the representative of the class. She would initiate various programs, bring them to her classmates for approval and then implement them. A shy smile had a gleaming, black eyes-Ronit was in the army at the end of January 1974 and served as a trainee in the air force. “Ronit, despite being new in her profession, has made great progress in her work, and her work has been perfect and accurate.” In a short time Ronit liked us with her cheerful smile, her dimples, her playful appearance, the gentleness and tenderness that flowed from her. So everyone loved her. Devotion to work on the one hand, love and concern for the other. Ronit was recommended by the unit to the officers’ course, but was not enough … “On July 29, 1974, Ronit fell in the line of duty. Was brought to rest in the military cemetery in Haifa. Survived by her parents and three sisters. The family and friends took out a memorial booklet in her name – Ronit; The booklet included poems and letters and paintings by Ronit, as well as the words of the parents, family members, friends, teachers and commanders, and letters of condolence sent to the family. “Ronit loved people, and once wrote to a friend that she does not hate a single person, and there is no such thing as hatred … Ronit was, and love …”

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