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Walking in our Uncle Yoni's footsteps

Yoni Jesner was an 19-year-old on a gap year in Israel when he was killed by a suicide bomber. His nieces Chloe and Leora Jesner never knew him. But they are inspired by his legacy.

September 14, 2017 15:09
Chloe and Leora

We are 13-year-old twin sisters and Yoni Jesner was our uncle. We have always known about Uncle Yoni. He was killed by a suicide bomb in Israel 15 years ago this month, before we were born. Uncle Yoni was 19 and just beginning his second gap year in Israel when he was killed.

He was head of Bnei Akiva in Glasgow and he was very involved in the Jewish community there — representing them at the Scottish Youth Parliament as well as being the youngest member of the Chevra Kadisha (the Jewish Burial Society).

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Uncle Yoni planned to be a doctor and had a place to study medicine at University College Hospital London but was killed before he could take it up. After he died, our family decided to donate his organs, meaning that Uncle Yoni could save lives after his death — one of his organs even went to a young Palestinian girl.

We have always loved hearing stories about Uncle Yoni and feel a real connection to him even though we didn’t meet him. This year, we were finally old enough to take part in the Yoni Jesner Awards. We are the first members of Yoni’s family to take part. The Yoni Jesner Awards, run by JLGB, encourage people our age to get involved by doing acts of kindness and volunteering.