fbpx
Simla, Aliza (“Michelle”)

Simla, Aliza (“Michelle”)


Daughter of Albert and Rachel. She was born on March 28, 1952 in Tunisia and immigrated to Israel with her parents in 1955. When the family came to Israel, her financial situation was difficult, but her parents tried to keep her children in the dark, Aliza attended the Neta’im elementary school and the ” She was a quiet, nice and friendly girl, and she explained to everyone, but she was closed, and only her mother knew her well and knew how to tell about her.In the Be’er Sheva Comprehensive High School, she studied in the home economics program (the two-year track) In order to become a teacher of craftsmanship, because she loved the profession very well and was blessed with great craftsmanship, and when she graduated from high school she found out that She had only 12 years of schooling and had only 10 years, so the principal of her school recommended that she take her to a nursing school course, but she found that she could not cope with the pain and suffering she had seen at the hospital every day, Who did not have the time to realize them.Aliza was recruited to the IDF in late October 1970 and served as a clerk in the Tel Aviv city officer’s office. After her enlistment became very independent, her self-confidence increased and she became emotionally mature. She used to spend leisure time with a girlfriend, who was serving at the time in Sinai, and with her parents and family. She loved Yaffa things, and always dreamed that she would have children of her own and planned to marry when she was done. At every opportunity, she would call her parents to calm them down and tell them that “I’m fine.” About a month before she fell, she was promoted to corporal, and on Wednesday, 22 March 1971, she died at the time of her service and was put to rest in the military cemetery in Be’er Sheva. At the head of the booklet Pesach 5732 of the journal of the Comprehensive High School in Be’er Sheva, “Afikim B’Negev”, in the “Yad LaNovelim” section, several pages were dedicated to her memory.

Honored By

Skip to content