Tenzer, Boris
Boris, son of Mosia and Moshe, was born on September 25, 1946, in Kazan, Russia, and immigrated to Israel with his family in 1959. He studied in an elementary school in his hometown and in Poland, Holon and the Max Payne High School in Tel Aviv, in the evening, with the aim of regrets. During the day he worked in a printing press and soon became an excellent typist with a sense of responsibility, devotion, devotion and precision. Boris was a sports fan. He was especially enthusiastic about the basketball game, and was also a member of the Hapoel team in Holon. He was also a fishing enthusiast, for, according to him, there was nothing that calms man more than fishing. Boris was drafted into the IDF in early 1964 and was assigned to the supply force and became a print-mullet at the military printing press, where he was very punctual in his work, carrying out difficult, complex and complex tasks. He had a sense of humor, and he used to joke and joke in good spirits, and his parents had a loyal and good son, his wife Leah had a devoted husband, and his son was a loving and caring father When the Yom Kippur War broke out, At the time of the Yom Kippur War, Boris was conscripted and sent to his unit for guard duty on the Lebanese border. And attacked wartime fire in one of Gaza’s terrorists. Boris, who was a heavy machine gun operator, opened fire immediately, with great composure and efficiency, and was one of the decisive factors in the battle and led to the escape of the attackers. “When the war ended Boris was released again a few weeks later and sent to the northern border, He died in his army service near the Naftali camp two days later, and was brought to rest in the cemetery in Kiryat Shaul, leaving behind a wife, son, father, mother and brother. The bereaved family wrote to his bereaved father: “Boris was a loved one and accepted by his commanders and his comrades in the unit, and was an exemplary, disciplined, friendly soldier who volunteered for any mission, even the most difficult.”