, upon the victims' return to
Israel.
Funeral Hundreds of Israelis attended the funeral services of the Israeli soldiers who were killed during the crash. The bodies were returned to Israel on an IAF plane which arrived at the Tel Nof airbase. At the funeral services, friends, families, and fellow soldiers eulogized the 6 soldiers who were killed in the crash.
Impact All flight exercises were halted by IAF commander Maj. Gen. Ido Nechushtan for a day, in order to conduct safety inspections. The Romanian and Israeli military aviation commanders decided to collaborate in raising a memorial at the site of the crash. In 2011, the IAF announced that the Sikorsky CH-53 transport helicopters would return to Romania for training the following summer. Cooperation between Israel and Romania increased following the crash, and Romanian Air Force Deputy Commander General
Alexander Glushka said that "In the past year, the friendship between us has become a brotherhood. This cooperation is extremely important to us." Israeli Warrant Officer Ziv, Officer of the Cargo Department in the Equipment Squadron, explained that this upgrade was made apparent following the Sikorsky CH-53 crash in Romania, and that "after many examinations it was concluded that the Sikorsky 985 is the most efficient aircraft for our unique project."
Memorials On 12 August 2010, a memorial ceremony was held in the central synagogue of
Bucharest in Romania, and was attended by representatives of the Romanian Jewish community, Romanian public figures, Israeli President Shimon Peres, and IAF Commander Maj. Gen. Ido Nechushtan. Hermina Darganah, the widow of Romanian Air Force Captain Stephen Claudius Darganah who was killed in the crash, also attended the memorial service, where Peres addressed her personally, saying, "We share the same feelings. You are just as dear to us as any Israeli friend who lost her loved one." Peres' official visit was the first to Romania by an Israeli president. Nechushtan said: In September 2011, IAF chief Major General
Ido Nehushtan led a service with his Romanian counterpart in memory of those killed during the crash. In November 2011, the
Tel Nof base of the Israeli Air Force received an ancient 200-year-old
Torah, one which had survived the
Holocaust, as a donation from Romania's Jewish community in commemoration of the victims of the Sikorsky CH-53 crash. A special ceremony marked the occasion for the receiving of the scroll, which was found in Romania in the cellars of the previous Romanian leader
Nicolae Ceaușescu. A commentation ceremony was held on 10 June 2021 at the memorial site, attended by Romanian dignitaries, former Israeli president
Reuven Rivlin and the commander of the Israeli air force
Amikam Norkin == See also ==