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Zibner, Dan

Zibner, Dan


Son of Sarah and Giora. He was born on 17 March 1956 in Kibbutz Ein Harod Ihud, where he studied at the elementary school and high school in his kibbutz. And today I can add, special. I felt this blue-eyed boy grow in front of me. I learned happily how he was taking his steps with caution and to open himself to others. “He was very interested in philosophy and read many books, as his friend testified:” Danny was a book reader. Not reading just for fun. “Danny liked to travel, he had a sense of beauty and a sense of history, and he would look for both of them on trips.” While on a trip to Spain, he wrote in one of his letters: “We began to touch Europe and began To appear in the woods, it’s really awesome. Such wildness of a vegetable with the dampness and the smell of moss and everything stuffed with creepers and small bushes and total silence and all that in nature. No one arranged and organized it that way. “In addition to his love of hiking, he enjoyed sports and excelled in it. In October 1974, Danny was drafted into the IDF and joined the Golani reconnaissance unit, after which he went on to become an officer in the reconnaissance company in which Danny was a member of the reconnaissance company. Danny was a very devoted and responsible officer, and the team liked and greatly appreciated his serious and uncompromising attitude at times, and we considered him to be an officer in the full sense of the word, with all that this entails (exemplary example, seriousness and devotion). ” Danny volunteered for the career army, and when he was discharged he returned to his kibbutz for the following year. He went to the city to earn a living, to see the world and learn. He intended to study agriculture, because he saw his future. He worked in archeology, gardening and agriculture, and traveled to Spain and Puerto Rico. The trip to Puerto Rico, to work on an agricultural farm, interrupted the Peace-Galilee War. He immediately returned to Israel and stationed himself in his unit in Lebanon. After the war, he continued his studies and studies, while continuing to become interested in philosophy, philosophy, the Bible in the vegetation of the Land of Israel, hiking and archeology, and during the period of his service he was brought to rest- A member of the military wing of Kibbutz Ein Harod Ihud, left behind his parents, brother-in-law and sister Hagar, who received a certificate of appreciation and respect for his military service. on the outside. He did not complain or complain. Another aspect of his character in the army was his constant willingness to be a good friend and a contributing team. He was always willing to help others without expecting change. “His aunt, Mimi Brand, wrote:” You were just a Yaffa boy with blue eyes. With a rare sense of stone, plant and landscape. With the ability to work that few people have: punctual, quiet, never ‘how important’, but ‘how’. Everything is just quality. “His family and the kibbutz published a pamphlet in his memory, including the words of family and friends about his character

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