Two Jewish veterans of World War I paid the final price of their country and were buried in the sacred lands of the Arlington National Cemetery, below Latin crosses. Just before Easter, the leg of this fog of a fog of a century finally put on the right.
Soldier David Moser, born on September 7, 1898, in Suffern, New York, enlisted in the United States Army in 1917 to fight for his country and was deployed in France a year later, where he fought in numerous battles. Despite surviving the catastrophic European theater in what was the war to end all wars, he succumbed to the Spanish flu in Germany during the armistice on March 1, 1919 at the age of 20.
When Moser’s father was informed that his son had died, he suffered a stroke and never spoke again. Initially he was buried in Germany before being transferred to the National Cemetery of Arlington on September 25, 1920 at the request of his family. His tombstone was stamped with an image of a cross, despite the fact that he was Jewish.
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The representative Debbie Wasserman-Schultz speaking in the National Cemetery of Arlington. (Vera Mandel through Shield Communications)
Adolph Hanf was a Jewish immigrant to the United States from Poland, arriving in Texas at the age of 27. Hello, he joined the army and was sent to Europe in 1918, only one year after becoming a completely naturalized American citizen. Hanf was killed during the battle of Fismes. Anyway, his remains were buried in Arlington, but despite his family’s protests, his tombstone was marked with a cross. Hanf has no living relatives.
Operation Benjamin, an organization dedicated to “preserving memories of American military and women” and more than 100 attendees, including the representative of New York, Ritchie Torres, the representative of Florida, Debbie Wasserman-Schultz, the secretary of veterans of the veterans, Doug Collins and other DC officials, by the two officers of DC, in which the secretary of DC finally The homelands of DC are finally the secretary of the homelands.
“My baby uncle and Adolph gave their lives. They loved this country, they went to defend it and gave their lives for it. It’s time for us to all do it too,” said Moser’s 102 -year -old niece, Dr. Deborah Eiferman.
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Soldier presents respects in the National Cemetery of Arlington. (Vera Mandel through Shield Communications)
Wasserman-Schultz, D-Fla., Announced that the RESTORATION LAW OF RELIGIOUS PERFORMANCE of Fallen Services that will dedicate federal funds to amend the tombstones of the 600 members of the US Service Service Service that were mistakenly buried buried buried.
“I am a proud Jew every day, but particularly today. We are people who have faced annihilation and erased attempts during a millennium, including, unfortunate, in our hollow institutions.” Wassman-Schultz said in the presentation.
“There is something especially moving on being here only a few days before Easter, the Jewish liberation and redemption festival and, in a deep sense, we are involved in a form of redemption … As we approach Easter, we are the memory of redeeming our oursheatingating, the increase in an recorded error,” representative. Torres, Dn.y., he said.

Representative Ritchie Torres and Secretary Doug Collins were present for the ceremony. (Vera Mandel through Shield Communications)
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When the two new tombstones were announced with David’s stars, the assembly recited the Kaddish mourners, the Jewish prayer for the dead, in their graves for the first time. And now, when a generation of Jewish people feels the pressure too familiar to hide their identities for fear, thesis two Jewish patriots now have monuments that proudly show their faith and sacrifice tea for their country.