Teichman, Shlomo
Shlomo, son of Rivka and Zvi, was born in Hadera on July 17, 1953. He studied in Netanya at the HN Bialik elementary school and the Shaul Tchernichovsky High School. Afterward he studied at Kibbutz Gan Shmuel as a foreign student and planned to complete his matriculation exams after his discharge from the army. Shlomo was a good student, admired by his teachers and friends. He was well versed in many areas, participated in quizzes and won prizes for his numerous knowledge, such as the Bible Prize and a literature prize from his school, and was a member of the editorial board of the school’s newspaper and dreamed of being a journalist. Shlomo was a man of work, diligent, energetic, energetic, enterprising and wise, punctual and responsible and diligent in his work, and he was distinguished by the love of order, work and appearance, and his clothes were always neat and clean. He was always good at him and he laughed a lot and smiled, he was not picky, he was simple, and he knew S is Simcha. All he had dispensed with his friends. Solomon drafted into the IDF in early November 1971 and was assigned to the artillery corps. After completing basic training, he completed a course for advanced training and was an outstanding trainee. He was then assigned to a mobile artillery unit and was appointed commander of a team with a cannon battery. He was an excellent commander, accepted by his commanders and loved by his subordinates. He always took care of the welfare of his soldiers, intervened for them with his commanders, and tried to help every soldier who approached him on every matter. When the Yom Kippur War broke out, he felt from his home to his unit, which fought on the Golan Heights front so as not to lose time and reach its crew quickly, took advantage of every means, and in a vehicle that evacuated casualties, he reached his men by accident. On the evening of October 10, 1973, in Tel-Jukhder, an enemy tank hit a direct-fire cannon in its battery, killing him, and he was brought to rest in the cemetery in Netanya, leaving behind a father, mother and sister “In his letter of condolence to the bereaved family, his commander wrote:” Shlomo was blessed with rare courage and dedication, and was the commander of the senior team in the rampart and led his men to excellent achievements during training and operations. His comrades, his subordinates and his commanders alike. ” The local council of Ramat Hasharon published a pamphlet in memory of the local people who fell in the Yom Kippur War, and Solomon among them.