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Stolzberg, Aharon (Stolz)

Stolzberg, Aharon (Stolz)


Son of Gitel and Mordechai, was born on May 15, 2222 in the city of Przemysl, Galicia, Poland, to a Hasidic-Zionist family. He studied in a Hebrew gymnasium and high school and grew up in an atmosphere of aspiration and building. In May 1935 he immigrated to Israel with his parents and continued his studies at the Reali School in Haifa. When he finished his sixth grade, he went to work for the Maayan and Kiryat Anavim groups. He then returned to the Reali School and graduated with honors. He was a member of the Scouts movement and after graduating was one of the founders of the “Scouts” group. As a member of this group he joined the Palmach when he was founded, he was promoted to the rank of lieutenant colonel, and served as a brigade information officer, and he participated in bringing immigrants to the shores of the country, transporting immigrants through the northern border, In the bombing of the Radar, etc. His aspiration was to unite the Jewish people, the integrity of the land, the building and the life of a partnership in a kibbutz society, and his role in educating the youth for pioneering and defense and bringing the young generation to the task of fulfilling these tasks. The siege imposed by the British army on Yagur after the “Black Sabbath” wrote: “What struck me the most these days is not The actual damage caused to us, but to insult live humbly, from the complete disarmament and the establishment of the ghetto. In light of Yagur, it is clear to me that it is better to fall in the war against oppression and humiliation than to live in such a way. They will not succeed in turning us all into a living while we are still alive … “In 1947 he was a member of the Hakibbutz Hameuhad secretariat, active in security and youth affairs, and died on his journey to the Negev to organize aid to remote communities. 1948) on the way between Halutza and Revivim, who owned the truck he was traveling on a mine. He was buried in Revivim. The Scout group published a pamphlet in its memory on September 14, 1950. It was transferred to the eternal rest of the military cemetery in Haifa.

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