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David Grossman eulogizes settler teen who was murdered hugging his book

  • August 13, 2019

(JTA) — Those tighten to Dvir Sorek, a 19-year-old tyro who was murdered Thursday in a West Bank militant attack, described him as a singular immature man.

One of his friends from a West Bank allotment of Ofra, where Sorek’s family lives, described him to Ynet as “an honourable person, a poet, a musician with a special tie to nature.”

This is maybe a reason that he chose to give an surprising goodbye present to his teachers during a West Bank eremite seminary, or yeshiva, he attended: Instead of Jewish scripture, he bought them complicated literature, including a latest book by David Grossman, a fixed competition of Israeli settlements.

Sorek’s physique was found not distant from a yeshiva, still clutching those books, that he was bringing from Jerusalem to give to his rabbis. One of them was “Life Plays a Lot with Me,” a latest novel by Grossman, a distinguished Israeli author whose 1987 book “The Yellow Wind” was among a many successful on open opinion about Israel’s troops participation in a West Bank.

On amicable media, Sorek’s final literary choices became a absolute pitch of togetherness in a nation that is deeply divided over West Bank settlements and a purpose of sacrament in society.

But that’s usually partial of a reason that it deeply changed Grossman, a author pronounced Thursday during a debate he delivered during a decoration for Nechama Rivlin, a late mother of President Reuven Rivlin.

“I didn’t know Dvir Sorek, though from what we have listened today, he was such a benevolent boy,” Grossman said, according to Ynet. “Sensitive. Loved amiability and desired peace. An artist in his soul. My heart goes out to his parents, his family and all his desired ones. we know from knowledge that a formidable trail lies before them.”

Grossman mislaid his son Uri, who was a infantryman fighting Hezbollah in a Second Lebanon War in 2006.

“I also know that such a special child as Dvir, so unique, will light their trail as they weep his loss,” Grossman said. He also pronounced during a event: “The picture of him hugging my book breaks my heart,” Ynet reported.

Sorek’s torpedo has not been found. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu pronounced Friday that he was assured a torpedo will be brought to probity in a nearby future.

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