Program connects students to Mt. of Olives graves (JERUSALEM POST) By MELANIE LIDMAN 04/23/12)
Source: http://www.jpost.com/NationalNews/Article.aspx?id=267119
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More than a million Israelis are estimated to visit cemeteries this
week ahead of Remembrance Day, in honor of more than 22,993 fallen
soldiers. Mount Herzl Military Cemetery in Jerusalem will become a
mass of humanity as friends and families crowd around the graves of
loved ones.
But despite the crowds at the cemeteries, hundreds of graves
belonging to soldiers who have no descendants or family in Israel
will be bare of flowers and memorial candles this year. One Jerusalem
group is working to make sure that the names of these soldiers are
not forgotten.
Youth for Jerusalem is spearheading the new “Adopt a Fallen Soldier”
program to encourage high school students to learn about a single
soldier buried on the Mount of Olives and visit their grave on
Wednesday morning.
Many of the soldiers were Holocaust survivors who were the only
remaining member of their family and were killed fighting in the War
of Independence.
The project was born after Hila Zisberg took a tour of the cemetery
with the Mount of Olives Information Center.
The ancient Jewish cemetery overlooking the Temple Mount is better
known as the burial site of famous rabbis, including Rabbi Avraham
Kook, and former prime minister Menachem Begin.
Zisberg was surprised to learn that there are also 228 soldiers
buried in the cemetery, most of whom died in the War of Independence,
and many of whom were Holocaust survivors with no family in Israel.
When the staff at the Information Center mentioned that very few
people visit these graves, she decided to take action to ensure that
the country does not forget the story of a single soldier on
Remembrance Day.
“We want to say their names out loud on this day so they won’t be
alone,” she said. “Because so many years have passed and they didn’t
have children, this year we decided to worry about them, each and
every one of them.”
Zisberg partnered with the Information Center and a number of area
high schools in Jerusalem, including Boyer High School and the Israel
Arts and Sciences High School. More than 170 students have signed up
thus far.
Each student will be responsible for researching one soldier buried
on the Mount of Olives, and presenting information to a small group
on Wednesday. Zisberg also hopes the public will attend the memorial
services on Wednesday to bring the story of these soldiers to an even
wider audience.
The Mount of Olives also hosts an official government memorial
ceremony on Wednesday, where Knesset Speaker Reuven Rivlin will speak.
Rivlin welcomed the Youth for Jerusalem initiative and expressed hope
that it will expand to additional sites across the country where
soldiers with no descendants are slowly being forgotten.
“There is nothing like the Mount of Olives to symbolize the stories
of continuity and loyalty to the land of Israel,” Rivlin said in a
statement released by his office. (© 1995-2011, The Jerusalem Post
04/23/12)
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