Moshe Silman was born in 1954. He was never married and he had no children. He ran away from home at age 14 and enlisted in the
Israel Defense Forces at 18. He received an early discharge but later volunteered for additional military service and served in the reserves until he was 46. After being discharged he took odd jobs, mostly in central Israel and
Eilat. Silman spent several years living in the
United States, where he established a delivery business. Upon returning to Israel he established the trucking business "Mika Transportation" in 1994. The company's operations centered on four trucks. He did not pay the sum due to a dispute regarding the justification of the billing, so one of his trucks was confiscated by the National Insurance Institute. The truck was sold a year later, after Silman did not pay his debt to the National Insurance Institute. His business subsequently collapsed. As a result, Silman filed a tort claim against the National Insurance Institute, claiming that the institute caused him damages of more than 4.5 million and a
foreclosure due to the confiscation of his truck. Silman asked the court to exempt him from paying for the legal procedure but he was refused, after the court's registrar held that "the amount of the claim is absurd, and so is the attempt to link the failures of the National Insurance Institute to the damage caused to applicant." Later on, Silman filed an appeal against the decision to the Supreme Court, but it was refused by the court's registrar on the grounds that Silman must appeal to the district court. In 2004, Silman attempted to establish a company that manufactured plant pots out of polyester, but this endeavor collapsed as well. He sued the plastic manufacturing company that had been the project's supplier but lost. The judge criticized Silman, stating: "Here is a man, without any experience or professional education, who invented a product that requires complex engineering and training in various engineering fields. He may call himself 'number one in the world in polyester' but still, there is no one responsible for this product from start to finish. Silman is convinced that he was terribly wronged, and he said harsh things to the defendants. 'You ruined my life. Today I was finished completely. This was a dream I worked on for half my life.' This is not a dream, it is a fantasy, and it is a shame that Silman chose to point all his arrows at individuals who actually tried to help him as much as possible in this project." The Ministry of Housing said that a special committee would discuss his request again in September, but it declined to provide emergency assistance to prevent him from becoming
homeless. All along Silman made it clear that he would not end up in the streets. At the time of his death, he had been staying in the Haifa apartment of a friend whose lease was due to expire shortly. == Social justice activities==