After drifting in the river: Searches for an Israeli young man who went missing in New Zealand
The 24-year-old drifted into the Vaughanui River yesterday, so he lost contact with him. Local detection and rescue forces are operating at the site with the help of boats and a helicopter, but it has not yet been located. Israeli Consul in the State and Department of Israelis Abroad in the Consular Division of the Foreign Ministry informed his family and manage the event
After drifting in the river: Searches for an Israeli young man who went missing in New Zealand
Photo: Magnus Rescue and Rescue, Editing: Shaul AdamRescue and rescue forces in New Zealand launched a search for a young 24-year-old Israeli who was swept up in the country's Waganui River in the country on Sunday and has been missing since. Local detection and rescue forces are operating at the scene with the help of boats and a helicopter, but the young man has not yet been located.
The New Zealand Consul, Roy Rosenberg, and the Israelis Abroad Department at the Foreign Office Consular Division, in conjunction with the Magnus Rescue Company, manage the event and inform the family.
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Last October, Jonathan Peled, 82, of Kibbutz Maabarot in the Emek Hefer Valley, died in Ras Abu Galum in Dahab, Sinai. Yonatan, a Holocaust survivor, was born in Hungary and came to Kibbutz Ma'abarim at the age of 12. He was married to Hannah, a father of three and the grandfather of five grandchildren.
"Jonathan was a significant man in the kibbutz. He was a peace man, worked hard to promote equality and justice, founded the Sadaka-Reut movement for coexistence, and raised generations of youth in this spirit," his daughter Galia wrote on her Facebook page. Among other things, the kibbutz secretary. He was a farmer, one of the first to grow pineapple in Israel. For a time he was an educator at Ramot Hefer School. His daughter went on to say: "My beloved father, my life's inspiration, man of peace, knowledge and dream - left our world yesterday."
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