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Arik Rashkes Author

Moshe Rashkes was a platoon leader in Israel's War of Independence and received a Citation of Valor when he was discharged in 1948 after a serious injury. In 1950, he was named chairman of Israel's Disabled War Veterans Organization, where he was responsible, through 1958, for the rehabilitation of more than six thousand disabled veterans. In 1965, he was named chairman of Israel's Ilan Center for the Physically Disabled, a world-class rehabilitative sports center. Under his leadership, the center became one of the largest and most successful rehab sports facilities in the world. In addition to being a best-selling author of Days of Lead, Rashkes wrote three other highly acclaimed books and was a journalist who covered the Six-Day War. He lived in Herzeliya, Israel until his passing in 2018.

Max Cleland represented Georgia in the US Senate from 1997–2003. Cleland was a Captain in the US Army during the Vietnam War when he was severely injured by a grenade that later caused the amputation of his two legs above the knee and his right forearm. He was twenty-five years old at the time. Among other recognitions, Cleland received a Silver Star and a Bronze Star for valor in combat. Senator Cleland is the author of Heart of a Patriot, Strong at the Broken Places, and Going for the Max. He lives in Atlanta, GA.

Arik Rashkes, the son of author Moshe Rashkes, grew up in Herzeliya, Israel and served as a lieutenant in the Israeli army for five years. He moved to the United States in 2001, and today lives with his wife and four children in Hoboken, NJ.