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Suitsky, Ehud (Udi)

Suitsky, Ehud (Udi)


Ben Sylvia and Mordechai. He was born on September 9, 1965, in Denmark, when his parents were in Copenhagen on a mission of El Al Airlines. The youngest son in a family of three. When Udi was four years old, the family moved to Boston, United States. At a very young age Udi acquired the Danish language in part and the English language in its entirety. Udi studied at the Maimonides Jewish Elementary School in Boston, where he combined general studies, Hebrew and Jewish studies, and in 1973, at the age of eight, He completed his knowledge of the Hebrew language and after a short period of time was involved with the children of his age and felt like a “sabra.” At the age of eight, Udi began playing the trumpet, He has toured Europe and the United States several times and during this period was a member of the Hanoar Haoved Vehalomed movement Roar 1984 Audi recruited compulsory military service and was assigned to the Military Police. At the end of basic training, Udi was disappointed in his appointment to the Military Police Corps, but he did everything he was charged with respectfully and in good faith In February 1987, Udi was released from regular service, and the certificate read: “Dedicated, responsible and disciplined. After completing his studies, he traveled to the Far East and was accepted to study economics, political science and criminology at Bar-Ilan University, where he completed his undergraduate studies, was hired to organize events and congresses, and planned to marry his girlfriend and establish a family On 2 January 1994, Udi was killed in an operational accident while he was in prison at Ketziot Prison, and he acted with determination and dedication. When he tried to stop a prisoner who had broken in. Udi was brought to rest in the military cemetery He was survived by his parents and two sisters, Orit and Tami, aged 28. He was promoted to the rank of Staff Sergeant after his death. The commander of the unit said goodbye to the open grave: “You served as a regular policeman and served as a regular policeman, and you knew how to give both as a soldier and as a soldier, smiling, sociable and modest, and always in the ranks of the more frontal actions.” In a letter of condolence to the bereaved family, the unit commander wrote: “Sergeant Ehud took part in a prisoner count operation and tried to prevent the release of a prisoner from the corral by force.

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