7 thoughts on “IDF Jails Officer for Refusing to Fight in Gaza – Tikun Olam תיקון עולם إصلاح العالم
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  1. That was an elightening video. How large was this protest? How many members on the left? How many moderates? And how many Israelis drop out from mandatory service in 2008? I am interested to know.

  2. An Israeli-American friend of mine with ties to the Ashkenazy elite tells me that most of the younger generation of that elite gets out of military service these days – they get mental health exemptions, they leave the country, or they get themselves posted to units away from combat. I wonder what the numbers are on that? Who is really doing the fighting? The Arab blogosphere says they’re using Ethiopian Jews and Druze as cannon fodder. What’s the real story? Does anybody have numbers?

  3. An Israeli-American friend of mine with ties to the Ashkenazy elite tells me that most of the younger generation of that elite gets out of military service these days – they get mental health exemptions…I have heard this to be true as well. The army is slowly being filled by religious zionists

  4. Leila, reliable numbers are hard to come by, but in today’s Haaretz it is claimed that:

    […]Defense Ministry statistics show that 25 percent of Israeli’s avoided military service in 2007. While 11 percent of those were exempt for religious reasons, the majority falls into what is commonly referred to as “grey refusal.” This category refers to those exempt for mental or physical health reasons, or marriage, in the case of women.

    This does not address the numbers actively seeking to serve in non-combatant roles (“jobniks”) and says nothing of the numbers that avoid the service on idelogical, rather than opportunistic grounds

  5. What I thought was most interesting about the video was people admitting that it was harder, it took more courage, to stand up for their beliefs and not fight a war they thought unjust, then to follow the majority, even if that meant being injured or dying.

    Peer pressure, the feeling of belonging and not be ostracized, is a very strong motivator. Not everyone is willing or has the strength of character, to possibly jeopardize the approval of their friends, their family or the society they live in.

    Kudos to you and your readers, for taking a stand and trying to make a diffence.

  6. These people are great. As other contributors have indicated, it is not difficult to evade conscription if one wishes to do so. By specifically refusing a call up these people are doing a great deal more. They deserve our admiration and wholehearted support. It is they who are really building a secure future for Israelis.
    Peter is as usual, spot on. Even if Israelis accept conscription they can avoid contact or combat roles. I think this in itself goes a long way to explain the inexorable degradation of IDF ethical standards and the increasing dehumanisation experienced by Palestinians in contact with the IDF.
    http://www.yeshgvul.org/index_e.asp

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