Background
Efrat Ungar was born in Jerusalem to Judith and Rabbi Uri Dasberg.
Efrat Ungar was born in Jerusalem to Judith and Rabbi Uri Dasberg.
Later, Efrat studied in the "Tzvia" Ulpana and did Sherut Leumi (National Service) in Afula. After her national service, Efrat studied at the Emunah College in Jerusalem, and was trained as a graphic designer.
During her youth, her family moved to the Israeli settlement Alon Shvut located at the Etzion bloc. In 1993, Efrat married Yaron Ungar. The couple moved to Kiryat Arba, where Yaron served as an educator at Yeshiva Kiryat Arba (ישיבה תיכונית קריית ארבע).
The couple had two sons – Dvir and Yishai.
Foreign five years Unger worked as an illustrator and graphic designer in the children"s section of the Israeli newspaper "HaTzofe", in which she regularly published a comics series. Death When they drove near Moshav Gefen, Palestinian gunmen shot the vehicle and fled.
Their son survived the attack unharmed. Efrat and Yaron were buried in the Kfar Etzion cemetery and their funeral was attended by thousands.
In the site of the attack, a monument was erected, with the assistance of the Jewish National Fund, in memory of Efrat and Yaron Unger.
Later on, a scholarship fund was established at Bar-Ilan University in their names and in their memory. In 2000, Efrat"s family filed a lawsuit in a United States. federal court against Hamas and the Palestinian Authority. In 2003, the court ruled that the Hamas and the Palestinian Authority were liable for damages totaling $116 million for the murder of the couple.
The Palestinian Authority appealed the decision but the appeal was rejected.
In 2008, the District Court in Jerusalem confirmed the ruling of the United States. Federal Court and ruled that it would also be enforceable in Israel as well. Efrat"s father, Rabbi Uri Dasberg, who in practice became the caregiver of Efrat"s two children, was killed in a car accident in Gush Etzion on May 24, 2011.