Aliza Bloch appeals to US Prime Minister: Set a state memorial day for the dozens of Israelis who died in the epidemic • claims: "their story is lost"
Alongside the plans to exit the Corona crisis, there are those who think about how we will remember the victims. Beit Shemesh Mayor Aliza Bloch yesterday addressed the prime minister with a proposal to set a remembrance day for the dozens of Israelis who died in the plague.
Facts about the Corona virus // Courtesy of MDA spokesmen
Bloch, who also died from residents of her city, believes that a state memorial day should be set for the corona virus victims. Turning to Netanyahu, Bloch writes that "we all face an invisible enemy and lack of a definitive solution, how and how to attack it. The strength of the crisis goes far beyond the health crisis. The distressed education system, the economy needs rehabilitation and the family circle has been deeply shocked."
Bloch adds, "Unfortunately, we have crossed over a hundred spaces. Not for nothing, I specified spaces and did not die. In my humble opinion, we are at war. The virus irrespective of whether it is a secular woman, a man wearing a knitted skullcap or an adult strumming his head." She emphasizes that the fight against the virus overwhelms the good and beautiful of the Israeli public, who enlisted in all its parts for the fight.
However, in the news reports of the fight against the virus, there is almost no reference to the lives of the deceased. "The story of the caverns is drowning in the current sea and in the rolling attempts to win the virus. We hear almost every day those who have passed away." Against this backdrop, she believes that although the epidemic has not ended, a remembrance day has already been set.
"I would like to propose and declare a state memorial day for the corona virus victims. A day when we will officially mark these days, we will tell the story of the spaces and the education system will engage in the common good and the power of social support networks. I see the importance of announcing a future Memorial Day, especially these days The virus is not over yet, "concludes Dr. Bloch.