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Tzali, Moshe-Petachya

Tzali, Moshe-Petachya


Son of Jacob and Shoshana. He was born on the 8th of Elul 5708 (August 8, 1948) in the city of Genoa, Italy, where his parents, the survivors of the Holocaust and the hardships of their journey to Israel, were three months old and despite the difficulties of absorption as new immigrants in the new country, And when Moshe arrived at the age of six, he began to study at the Yahalom Elementary School there and completed his studies successfully. His friends and teachers loved him, he was also gifted with music, and according to his music teacher’s advice he began to play the accordion, Great speed. He was also received Youth Orchestra of the Municipality of Ramat-Gan and performed in concerts and parties. When he graduated from elementary enroll in vocational school “Ort” (Singalovski) but later moved to the school of IMI and studied there for four years. At the beginning of his studies, he entered the Hashomer Hatzair movement in Ramat Gan, and here, too, he liked his friends and became a “classroom teacher”. The walks, walks, and marches were an integral part of his life. He loved nature and was Simcha with it. At the age of 16, he participated in the Gadna training course and completed his studies at the vocational school in July 1966. He was preparing to enlist in the Nahal Brigade with the members of the nucleus. His stay there was Yaffa and interesting for him and when the course was over, a tour guide was appointed. He wanted to enter a parachuting course and join a paratroop brigade, but he was not allowed to do so, and in pain and irritation he was forced to remain at the command of his commanders and received a squad of soldiers from the farms. Not only a commander, but also a loyal and devoted friend, until now the days of tension before the Six-Day War began, when Moshe was sent with his class to the southern border, where huge Egyptian army and armored forces were concentrated all along our southern borders, Defense trenches and prepared for every surprise attack, Moshe often wrote encouraging letters containing me On the first day of the war’s battles, Moshe wrote a postcard to his parents and described with great feeling their departure for the destination on that day, and expressed his confidence that he would not disappoint anyone – neither on the home front nor on the front. In the battle between Mr. and Akzari during an assault on enemy strongholds in Umm Katef in Sinai, Moshe was hit by a mortar shell when he was hit by a mortar shell Marching at the head of his comrades-in-arms. The commander of his regiment, in a letter of condolence to his parents, wrote that Moshe “stormed his head, clung to his mission and was stubborn to carry it out.” He was buried in the emergency military cemetery in Bari and was later transferred to the eternal rest of the military cemetery in Kiryat Shaul. A pamphlet in his memory was taken out by his parents and his name was read on it. His name was immortalized in Nahal Negev in the Battle of the Six Day War. In the booklet 53 of them, published by the Kibbutz Artzi in memory of its fallen comrades, a page was devoted to his history. In Gogli Esh, vol. 4, the school bag of the sons of the fallen soldiers in Israel, was brought from his estate.

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