Jerusalem, Israel - April 30, 2025 - Tuesday night, multiple ceremonies began with the nationwide siren marking the start of Israel’s solemn Yom HaZikaron, Memorial Day. Families of fallen soldiers and victims of terror do not need a special day to remember, they remember every day.
Yom HaZikaron brings together bereaved families, lone soldiers, supporters, and community members to remember those who gave their lives for Am Yisrael.
This year, 25,240 is the official number of fallen. Since October 7, 2023, 850 new names have been added to this sadly growing number of soldiers killed.
Ammunition Hill was the site of one of the most important battles for Yerushalayim in 1967 during the Six-Day War. Located on what had been the Jordanian border from 1948, the site included a communications trench and a munitions storage bunker left over from the British Mandate, which served as a main command post of the Jordanian Legion.
The capture of this hill made it possible for Israeli soldiers to reach the Old City.
The Ammunition Hill Memorial Site & Museum was created in 1974 in memory of the 182 Israeli soldiers killed during the war.
In recent years, Ammunition Hill has been the site for an English language memorial ceremony organized by The Michael Levin Base. A maximum crowd of 1,200 attended.
Speakers included the mothers of Yonatan Rom, Yoseph Guedalia, and Yotam Haim, Each story reflected deep loss, strength, and unwavering commitment to Israel.
Former U.S. Ambassador Michael Oren, who served as a lone soldier and opened the program.
Michael Oren - Yom HaZikaron
Rabbi Moshe Scheiner, founding Rabbi of the Palm Beach Synagogue, where the Levins attend in Florida, brought 35 members of his congregation to the ceremony after a March of the Living trip to Poland.
In his inspiring remarks based on Midrash, he mentioned, "The promise to Avraham - each star is a unique light and can shine alone. One speck of sand is nothing. Put the sand together, and it can hold back a raging ocean."
The final speaker, Richard Corman, Chairman of the Michael Levin Base, stressed that the collective memory to grieve with courage and dignity has resulted in a resilient, deeply embedded and imbrakeable spirit and offered a collective hug to all the speakers.
The IDF Rabbinical Choir performed moving musical selections, and the program concluded with prayers, Kel Maleh Rachamim and for the Israel Defense Forces, and the singing of Hatikvah.
Am Yisrael Chai