Our fifteen-minute path passed along the fence of the country's largest naval base and naval military school. It is here that the main entrance to this complex is located, and the benches at the corner of the streets with memorial signs are the most common form of preserving memory in the country. In this case, we are talking about the Amster family - a family of hereditary doctors who lost one relative in the Arab pogrom at an English refinery in 1947, when the UN passed a resolution establishing Israel, and the second bench is dedicated to senior sergeant Igal Amster who died during the Six Day War . Both benches are a donation of the family to the Bat Galim district and residents of the city. Translated with Google Translate