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Today is Friday, May 9, 2008

Remembering the Victims

In Memorium of the 8 Victims of the Mercaz HaRav Massacre  


Segev Peniel
Avichail

Age 15, Neveh Daniel

Neria
Cohen
Age 15, Jerusalem

Yonatan Yitzchak
Eldar

Age 16, Shiloh
Ro'i
Roth

Age 18, Elkana
       
Yehonadav Chaim
Hirschfeld

Age 19
Kochav Hashachar
Yahai
Lifshitz

Age 18, Jerusalem
Doron
Meherete

Age 26, Ashdod
Avrohom David
Moses

Age 16, Efrat



































Click here to read an incredible letter that so eloquently expresses the emotions we feel just one week after the terrible massacre at Merkaz Harav


Segev Peniel Avichail

Segev Pniel Avichail, who was buried Friday in Jerusalem's Har Hamenuhot Cemetery, was the grandson of two well-known rabbis: Rabbi Eliahu Avichail, who studied the Ten Lost Tribes and their disappearance; and Rabbi Yehoshua Zuckerman, the
founder of the El Ami movement and teacher at Har Hamor Yeshiva. Segev Pniel's father, Rabbi Elishav Avichail, is the
rabbi of Adora, in the south Hebron hills. His mother, Moriah, was head of a girls art school in the community. A few years ago,
Segev Pniel and his father escaped injury in a shooting attack on the Telem road. Segev Pniel was the oldest of four children. An
uncle, Yair, described him Friday as a "serious student, a pure soul with a good heart."

Neria Cohen
Neria Cohen, who was laid to rest at the Mount of Olives cemetery Friday, grew up in the Muslim Quarter of Jerusalem's Old City, one of 12 children born to Ayala and Rabbi Yitzhak Cohen. His father is a rabbi at the Esh HaTorah hesder yeshiva in the Jewish Quarter, and was for many years among the heads of the Ateret Cohanim yeshiva in the Muslim Quarter.

Many in Neria's extended family are active in programs that combine religious studies with community outreach and education in poor towns. "Neria's most striking quality was boundless joy. Everyone always wanted to be with him," said Eliezer Avni, a ninth-grade counselor at the Mercaz Harav affiliate where Neria studied. "He was a boy who lived all the ideals in the world, who enlisted for every mission, whether it was activity on behalf of Jonathan Pollard, or on behalf of communities, or the needy."

Yonatan Yitzchak Eldar
Yonatan Yitzchak Eldar was buried with his copy of the Nedarim Tractate of the Babylonian Talmud, soaked in his blood. Despite the celebration scheduled at the yeshiva later that evening for the start of the new month, Yonatan didn't want to miss learning his daily page of Talmud and had taken the book with him to the library. One friend says he saw Yonatan studying alone at 1 A.M. Wednesday. "Usually you think of someone so young who is so deeply involved in Torah study as being square, but Yonatan wasn't at all like that," said Rabbi Uri Bayar, an educator in Shiloh and a friend of the Eldar family. "He was full of joie de vivre and had many interests,"

Bayar said.Yonatan Yitzchak was buried in Shiloh. After the funeral his friends gathered at the home of one of them and told stories about their friend. They recalled his love of hiking but also noted that he learned the rules of orienteering out of a book. Yonatan Yitzchak is survived by six brothers and one sister. His father, Dror, works in high tech. His mother, Avital, is a teacher.

Roi'i Roth
Roee Roth's friends described him as very spiritual. "He felt very close to God, and about every problem he would say,
'That, too, is from God' and tried to understand what God wanted from him," Eyal, his roommate and friend from home,
related. "He prayed long and loud and everyone in the beit midrash [study hall] could hear his 'Amen,'" another friend
from Elkana and fellow student at Mercaz Harav, Menashe Zimmerman, said. "He came late to meals, after his prayers."
Roee's decision to study at Mercaz Harav, with its high demands, was part of a spiritual journey that began in high
school. In 11th grade Roee stopped studying Jujitsu, in which he already had a brown belt, because he felt it was cutting into his study time. Roee was the son of Orly and Yaakov Roth. In addition to his parents, he is survived by four siblings.

Yehonadav Chaim  Hirschfeld
Yehonadav Haim Hirshfeld was the fifth of 13 children born to one of the oldest families in Kochav Hashachar, a community in
the Matte Binyamin regional council. His father, Zemah, serves as a mohel in the community and its surroundings. His mother,
Elisheva, is a housewife. Yehonadav went to a high school yeshiva near Mercaz Harav and later continued to study at the yeshiva itself, where he was killed on Thursday evening. He was a "talented young man with broad horizons, intelligent, and an admired guide in the Ariel youth movement," Haya Meir, a neighbor, said.

When his parents heard of the terror attack on the yeshiva they couldn't get a hold of their son, because he had no mobile phone.
The yeshiva's emergency hotline also couldn't help them and they sent relatives to look for Yehonadav. Finally, after midnight, the community's rabbi arrived to inform them officially of his death.

Yohai Lifshitz
Yohai Livshitz was the second of six children born to Tuvia, a supervisor in Jerusalem's Kotel Yeshiva and Zofiya, a teacher.
They live in the city's Jewish Quarter. "His most outstanding quality was his innocence," said Zvi Yehuda Herling, one of
the Kotel Yeshiva's instructors, at the funeral. "He had a constant desire to search for his own truth, whether it was to
rise before everyone and go to synagogue to study before morning prayer or practice for his army service."
"Thank you for everything you've done and given for 18 years," his father said at the funeral. Yohai's cousin, Jonathan Kelerman, said: "He was a good soul with an extraordinary ability to persist studying the Torah. Even up to his death he was studying Torah in the library."

Doron Meherete

Friends of Doron Meherete, the oldest of the eight students murdered Thursday at Mercaz Harav yeshiva, say that his face
would glow with joy as he studied with them. Meherete, who came from Ethiopia in 1991 in Operation Solomon, studied for
nine years at the yeshiva, where he was known for his trenchant mind and kind heart, challenging others intellectually and lending a helping hand whenever needed.

He was also a counselor at an after-school program for immigrant Ethiopian children. Three years ago he joined the
army, under a special arrangement for advanced yeshiva students, served nine months in the armored corps, and fought as a reservist in the Second Lebanon War. He was preparing to become a rabbi, and had already taken some of his
ordination exams. Hundreds attended his funeral in Ashdod on Friday. Meherete is survived by two parents and six siblings.

Avraham David Moses
Avraham David Moses, 16, left behind parents and five brothers aged between two and 11. His parents divorced,
remarried and live nearby each other in Efrat. At his funeral, Avraham David's father recounted that his son had visited him
at home last Saturday. "I blessed you, put my hand on your head and suddenly grasped how much you had grown in
spirit. You did not break. The murderers broke you. You were not a fighter but a loving person - you loved the Torah and
studying the Torah. You ended your life studying the Torah."

Avraham David's stepfather, David Moria, said the boy was "like an angel. He had amazing integrity." His mother, Rivka, said thanks for "the 16 years we had the privilege of raising him, 16 years of purity of heart and honesty." On Thursday night, when they heard of the attack, Avraham David's parents tried to find him but he had no mobile phone. They called all the hospitals in Jerusalem and when they couldn't find his name in any of the lists of the injured, they realized they'd lost their son.