We continue bringing you updates and messages from Einat, Shahar, Nave and Evyatar. A group of 18 and 19 year old Israelis who are being imprisoned repeatedly for being occupation objectors. Last week, each of the four refusers received a jail sentence of 30 days for refusing to enlist in the Israeli army and 15 days for being AWOL. In total, Einat was sentenced to 102 days in prison, Shahar was sentenced to 105 days in prison, Evyatar was sentenced to 95 days in prison and Nave was sentenced to 80 days in prison.

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In the photo left to right: Shahar, Nave, Einat, and Evyatar, moments before being tried a fourth time for refusing to serve the occupation.

Israel forces Ukrainian refugees to enlist into the Israeli army — you can help

Hi

My name is Inna. I am New Profile’s Counseling Network legal aid coordinator. I am writing to you with an urgent request to support our work of providing legal consultation and representation to Ukrainian refugees who are forcibly drafted to the Israeli military. Since the Russian invasion of Ukraine, we are the only organization in Israel assisting Ukrainian refugees, fleeing the horrors of war, in obtaining an exemption from the compulsory military service in Israel.

Inna, New Profile

New Profile is a feminist and de-militarist movement founded in 1998. We believe that militarism, which is deeply rooted in Israeli society, makes society more violent, sexist, and racist. Furthermore, it blocks the path to peace and to ending the Israeli occupation of territories captured in 1967, and perpetuates human and women rights’ violations in Israel and Palestine. A substantial part of our work is the Counseling Network, which since the establishment of New Profile to date has supported over 22,000 youths who independently chose not to serve in the Israeli Military. 

Most of the updates you get from Refuser Solidarity Network are about the handful of Israeli youth who refuse military draft publicly, publish a public statement, talk to the press about their refusal, and get imprisoned. The work of our counseling network is complementary to that, by supporting the dozens of thousands of youth who refuse “under the radar,” in a non- public way. Typically, the youth we support come from marginalized backgrounds. We help them go about obtaining a military exemption via ongoing support, free legal aid, and additional resources and information.

I am an immigrant from Russia. I came to Israel at the age of 21. Because of this, I was able to experience first-hand the layers of discrimination of Jewish society in Israel, which is still trying to melt—into a single mass—the Jewish people living on "their own land." I quickly found out that every citizen who does not meet the ideas of the occupation regime, about how a "real Jew" and "real Israeli" should be, instantly becomes demonized. A good citizen, in the eyes of the state and most of Israeli society, is one that takes part in the occupation of Palestine and serves in the Israeli military. The "real Jew" and "real Israeli," according to the system, must be a loyal soldier of the occupation.

Since the Russian invasion of Ukraine, countless refugees from Ukraine have arrived in Israel. A short period of time after arriving in Israel, those of the appropriate age are required to enlist in the Israeli Military. These are people who fled war, lost relatives, and experienced severe traumas from the brutal war taking place around their home—bombs, shootings, rape, and political prosecution. These are not people who are supposed to enlist in any army, but refugees who deserve healing and rest.

We can't handle the flow of immigrants. There are only two members in our Counseling Network who speak Russian, including me, and a volunteer. I work in a part time position - fifteen weekly hours. As part of my work, besides the direct legal and emotional support of the counselees, I protect their interests by directly contacting the internal military systems to take care of their needs and regularly visit our counselees imprisoned in military jails. We are struggling to fundraise in the current socio-political environment. We need your help to raise funds in order to hire an additional legal aid coordinator and, in doing so, help immigrants who choose not to serve in the Israeli army receive an exemption.

New Profile, following the decisions of the UN European and International Commissions on Freedom of Conscience and the Right to Conscientious Objection, believes that anyone who declares that they are unwilling or unable to perform military service has the right not to serve.

We believe and know that the demilitarization of our society can end the long years of injustice and occupation, and change the country into a more equal, free, and democratic place.

Since our mission is perceived as radical, both in Israel and abroad, it is hard for us to find new funds to support our work. With your help, we will be able to continue to support young refugees struggling with an extremely rigorous, bureaucratic, and violent system. 

In solidarity,

Inna

The Israeli military imprisoned me for 10 days for staying true to my moral compass

Sliman abu ruken, a 19 years old Druze enlistment refuser, had spent 10 days in military prison. With support by the Mesarvot network he received his military exemption three weeks ago. This is his statement: 

Recently I refused enlistment to the Israeli military after the first semester in a military academic course, since I realized that I can’t serve the military system and stay true to my moral compass - a moral compass driven by an understanding that our identity as humans is stronger than any other identity, and that a brutal, discriminatory treatment of other people, just because they are different than us, is unacceptable.

Sliman abu ruken

The fact that the army imprisoned me for being loyal to my sense of morality has strengthened the insight that I cannot serve in it. I’ve experienced the military’s apathy towards the soldier (or the would-be soldier), the system’s apathy towards the individual who cannot and does not want to serve it.

In prison, I’ve gotten the tiniest taste of the Israeli military’s punishment for the Palestinians in the West Bank and in the Gaza Strip, a severe life sentence they received simply for existing as different humans. The means of punishment include a complete denial of freedom of movement, freedom of speech and any possibility of deciding how my day will go. On top of that, I’ve experienced a total indifference towards my basic mental needs during my imprisonment.

My time in prison made me appreciate my family and friends, things I took for granted, but which are taken away daily from millions of people who are forcibly separated from their loved ones, who need several different documents to visit friends and receive medical care, whose way of life is constantly disrupted by Israeli policy determined without their choice, arbitrary policies which can sometimes deliberately seek to undermine their daily lives in order to force them into isolated enclaves and further the illegal settlements. These are millions of humans whose existence and needs Israeli society chooses to ignore, using a system that simultaneously denies their basic legitimate rights and works to dehumanize them.

The refusal and the process of learning about the reality and the crimes committed around me, crimes which Israeli society works to hide and whitewash, made me understand that I am morally obligated to learn more and to take action; at the very least, to not ignore the reality and serve the system responsible for these wrongs. This is the obligation of every person with a moral compass, every person who believes that no group has the right to oppress and humiliate another. 

Thank you to my family, to the Mesarvot network, without which I wouldn’t have been able to survive this period, and to all the people surrounding me who’ve supported and empowered me.

In solidarity,

Sliman

The Israeli army is going to send me to jail again for objecting to the occupation

We continue to bring you reoprts of the four youth occupation objectors who are being sentenced to prison again and again for their refusal to enlist in the Israeli army and take part in the Israeli occupation over the Palestinian Teritorries. Einat Gerlitz (19), Shahar Schwartz(18) and Evyatar Moshe Rubin (19), were all tried a second time for their refusal and each received a 20 day prison sentence, after already serving 7-10 days after their first trial. Nave Shabtay Levin, (18), served 10 days in prison and is going to refuse enlistment a second time in the next few days. He is expected to be imprisoned again. Today we bring you Nave’s full refusal statement.

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I held a gun in my hands before I was 10 years old. 

You could say I was raised in the Israeli army, or at least in the spirit of the Israeli Army. My father, who was a military officer during most of my childhood, took my sister and me to his military base on weekends. There I held a gun, entered tanks, and collected gun bullets lying on the ground. As a child, that was cool! I also grew up without a grandfather. From very early on, on every national Memorial Day, I would skip the school ceremony to attend the grave of my grandfather who was killed in the 1973 war (The Yom Kippur War). I was nurtured on the glory of the army and  on war-related bereavement.

Nave Shabtay Levin (18)

But as the years went by, I became more aware, and I started to attend demonstrations against the occupation with my mother. When I was at high school we started visiting Sheikh Jarrah, where I met families that stood to lose all they had, and to end up in the streets with their children as a result of the Jerusalem municipality campaign, jointly with the settlers to empty Jerusalem of Palestinians. Among other things, I saw a fence that settlers had build through a private Palestinian backyard, and the police who were securing it, prevening all from entering, until we ourselves yanked it from the ground. In Sheikh Jarrah, the police stopped and interrogated me for the sole reason that I had a Palestinian flag. Almost weekly, police violently seize flags from the protestors. 

Although I was raised in a militaristic family, where the army was a sacred cow, and although I was told in school that soldiers are heroes, I never wanted to enlist in the army. My unwillingness to enlist, was transformed over the years to the act of active refusal of the draft and the more I realized what soldiers really do. I realized that there is an entire system, military, economic and ideological, whose task is to preserve the occupation and the oppression of the Palestinians.

Support the refusers! send a letter to Israeli PM to stop the occupation!

This year, during the Jewish holiday of Simchat Torah, tens of masked settlers went to Masafer Yatta, threw stones at the Palestinian residents, at their children and at their houses. Windshields were smashed, and many people injured, including a three-year-old child who was injured in his head. This event was not unique. It was just one more day in the violent reality that the population in Masafer Yatta endure, where attacks by settlers are a daily occurrence.  

And where is the army in this story? The same one I was expected to enlist in? Where are the heroic soldiers that we hear of? In almost every violent incident perpetrated by settlers the army, under the best of circumstances, does nothing. More frequently, however, it enables, supports and even provides weapons and backup to the settlers. This is the occupation – this violence is not a bug, it is a feature. The state, the army, and the settlers have the same purpose – in Masaffer Yatta and throughout the rest of the occupied Palestinian territories:  the creation of territorial continuity in Israeli control that cuts the West Bank into pieces. These aims – territorial control and the removal of the Palestinians – has led to the biggest population transfer since 1967, taking place as we speak in Masafer Yatta.  The army and the settlers are equal partners in this project.

Support the refusers! send a letter to Israeli PM to stop the occupation!

The occupation and the oppression of the Palestinians are closely linked to Israeli capitalism. For the Israeli elites, the occupation is profitable. Israeli Weapon companies make millions from selling weapons to regimes such as Yemen and the United Arabs Emirates. Weapons that are sold after they were tried on Gaza and the West Bank – and are promoted by the misery, the poverty, and the death that it had created. As well, the occupation is profitable  – as a device to abuse Palestinian workers. Israeli corporations and wealthy people employ Palestinians both, in the occupied territories and inside Israel, and abuse them with long working hours and low salaries, taking advantage of the fact that the Palestinians have no way to secure their rights. In that way the rich profit directly from the oppression of the Palestinians people. 

The narrative of the country perpetuated through the educational system provides a narrow colonialist view on history and on the reality in the state of Israel. It tells us that  the country was built by heroic pioneers, without ever discussing what and who was here before. It tells us about villages and cities that were built, but not how Palestinian lands were bought and their inhabitants banished. It creates a false unity of Jewish interests with the Jewish rich, rather than with the Palestinians. It tries to make us think that the occupation benefits us, the Jewish workers, in order to eliminate any possibility of true solidarity with the Palestinians or bringing an end to the occupation – all of which stands to hurt in their pocket. 

We live in a country that call itself self enlightened and liberal, "the only democracy in the middle east", but at the same time, runs a murderous apartheid regime and commits war crimes regularly and systematically. Israel implements policies of house demolitions, journalists’ killings, of breaking into homes, mass arrests, the arrest of children, collective punishments; illegal settlements, a siege on Gaza and much more on a daily basis. This country exploits our personal loss and pain over the people we loved and who died because of this cruel reality, to further its propaganda.

As humans we must resist this reality. As humans we must refuse to demolish homes, arrest children, and refuse the destructive reality that Palestinians live in. As humans we must  make amends for the wrongs of the past of the occupation and the Nakba.

As workers we must show solidarity and cooperation with Palestinian workers, and fight against the rich that profit from our expolitation.

As potential army inductees, this is our opportunity not only to serve the country and the army. It is our opportunity to support the fight for justice, peace, and equality. Whether through psychological disqualification, by appealing to the army’s conscientious objection’s committee or through serving jail sentences, we refuse to serve in the occupation army. We must fight for a better future. It will not be easy. Our opponents are strong. However, where there is oppression, there is also brotherhood and solidarity, and that no one can take from us.

In solidarity,

Nave

I am in prison for opposing the Israeli occupation

Conscientious objector Einat Gerlitz, 19, is currently serving a 7 day prison sentence for her refusal to enlist in the Israeli army and take part in the Israeli occupation over the Palestinian Teritorries. In addition to Einat, two other conscientious objectors, Nave Shabtay Levin (18) and Evyatar Moshe Rubin (19), are currently imprisoned and another, Shahar Schwartz(18), whose statement was sent last week, is awaiting trial for the second time after he was jailed for 10 days. Today we bring you Einat’s refusal statement. 

Send the four refusers a letter of support

Einat Gerlitz

Hi,

My name is Einat Gerlitz, I am 19 years old, and I just completed one year of civil service. 

At the age of 16, when the enlisting process started and discussions turned to what would be a  "meaningful army service". I asked myself what a meaningful service might mean. 

In high school I was a youth activist on issues of climate change, and through this activism I met youth from all over Israel. I met Palestinian youth from Sakhnin, and together we thought about the future of our generation in the reality of the climate crisis. Through my connection with them I learned about the experience of Palestinians who live in Israel and that encouraged me to learn about the hard life of Palestinians who are under Israeli occupation. I knew there is a violent regime in the west bank, but I did not know how that statement translated into an everyday reality. The acquaintance with the Palestinian activists led me to start asking questions and to wonder about the connection between serving in the Israeli army and the violent regime of the occupation. 

I wondered how I could work  in solidarity  with Palestinians, while at the same time being part of the army that violently controls them. As time went by, I was exposed to the hidden realities of the occupation. To the reality of hundreds of children being arrested by the army every year, and by the effect of these arrests on the children's future; the reality of soldiers who prevent Palestinians from accessing their land and limit their ability to earn a living; the reality of the support that the army gives settlers’  violence against Palestinians. I realized that to serve in the army is a political choice, and I chose to refuse. 

Send the four refusers a support letter

My friends say that serving  in the army is a lifetime opportunity. But I think that the act of refusing is my chance to use my privilege as an Israeli Jew in order to actively change our cruel reality. This reality hides behind the one-sided Zionist narrative that we learned. The generations before us did not build the nation on empty lands, but they built the nation on top of Palestinians who lived there before. We are not better than the Palestinians. They deserve the same basic democratic rights, the same independence, the same access to water, freedom of movement, education, and a secure life.  

Therefore, I choose to refuse to take part of an army that control the Palestinian people and deprive them of their freedom. 

In my act of refusal, I take responsibility for the society I live in. I want to live in a society whose people do not surrender to silencing. I want to live in society that knows how to acknowledge the experiences of different people even if it destabilizes its official narrative.

Send the four refusers a support letter

I call on my age group to open their eyes and ask questions - does violent control over civilian population can bring security? Do not weapons and violence increase hatred and desire for revenge? Who would you be if you grew up with the threat of guns and with nightly searching operations in your neighborhood? I refuse because I want to remind you that there are children living there, on the other side of the wall. Children like you and like me. 

In solidarity,

Einat

This week: 4 (!) Israeli refusers imprisoned - here is their message to you

We bring you today a special message from four youth refusers - Shahar Schwartz (18 year old), Einat Gerlitz (19), Evyatar Moshe Rubin (19), and Nave Shabtay Levin (18) - who declare this week their refusal to join the Israeli army and take part in the Israeli occupation over the West Bank and Gaza Strip. Shahar has refused before and was sentenced to 10 days in military prison. Einat refused Yesterday and was sentenced to 7 days in prison. Evyatar and Nave are refusing today and will likely be imprisoned. We reach out to you today because they need your help in getting their message across to Israeli officials. Click here to help them.

Left to right: Evyatar, Einat, Nave and Shahar

Hi

Israel will be holding parliamentary elections in November, and we need to make sure our Prime Minister and parliamentary candidates for office understand the occupation needs to end NOW. We will not accept nor participate in human rights violations. We have written the following statement and we need your help to make sure it reaches these Israeli politicians.


We, Israeli youth, refuse to join the Israeli army and take part in the Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza strip. We call out to all citizens of Israel to open their eyes and see the policy of oppression over the palestinian people carried out by the Israeli government. We object to the militaristic education forced on us by the same oppressive policies, we object to the educational system teaching us to hate our neighbors, and we object to the social norms that prohibits the educational system from sharing the true reality in the Palestinian territories with children and youth. We feel it is important to show there is another way. We all have the option to refuse to take part in the oppression and in the occupation and we can all make sure human rights, including physical and emotional security, are provided without discrimination. Therefore we demand the following from the Israeli government: 

Stop the killings of Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip; Stop the ethnic cleansing in the territories and the transfer of Masafer Yatta; Stop the siege of the Gaza strip; Stop home demolitions; Stop administrative arrests and arrests of minors; Stop supporting settler's violence towards Palestinians and start acting against it. 

We demand a stop to the Israeli military presence in the Palestinian territories and we demand giving the Palestinian people the right to independence. We, Israeli youth, born and raised in Israel, call on the Israeli public to see there is a better way to treat our neighbors, a human way that guarantees human rights for all. We demand an end to the Israeli occupation over the Palestinian territories and we declare today our refusal to take any part in it. 


Will you help us make sure the Prime Minister and the parliamentary candidates who are running for office hear our message loud and clear? We need you to send them an email saying that you support our statement, asking them to listen to us. The more emails sent the louder we will be heard. Click here to support our statement.   

In solidarity,

Shahar Schwartz, Evyatar Moshe Rubin, Einat Gerlitz, Nave Shabtay Levin

Today is my enlistment day to the Israeli military. I am going to refuse enlistment and will be sent to jail

Hi, 


My name is Shahar Schwartz. I am 18 years old. Today is my enlistment day to the Israeli military. I am going to refuse enlistment and will be sent to jail.

Write Shahar a support letter

When I was 10 years old, during the Gaza war in 2014, I was home alone when I heard the missile alarm. It wasn't the first time I experienced it in my life but it was the first time I was alone. I live in an old house that doesn’t have a shelter so I sat in the hallway and waited for the alarm to stop. It was the scariest moment of my life. Fortunately for me, I live in central Israel, and wasn't in real danger, but as a child all I felt was great fear.

Shahar Schwartz

This is the reality forced on children by the war we’re living in. Children in Gaza do not have shelters or missile defense technology like the iron dome to protect them. For them it's not just one moment of terror before they can go back to normal life - it is their everyday life. Children in the West Bank live in an ongoing war, unlike me who experiences it every few years during a military operation. Israeli kids who live near the border with Gaza also suffer greatly from this reality, which is fully created and operated by the army. Israeli youth join the army when they become adults, after their fear and trauma has turned into hatred towards the other side.

Write Shahar a support letter

During the summer of 2019, when I was 15, I participated in an Israeli-Palestinian summer camp in the US. There I heard Palestinians my age share how the Israeli military, which is made up of young Israelis like me, oppresses the Palestinian civilian population on a daily basis – by check points, street patrols, home demolitions, and arrests of children. Many Palestinians only know Israelis through the actions of the occupation. Similarly, many Israelis only know Palestinians through media reports about bombings, or through enforcing the occupation as soldiers. The Israeli Military policy is actively preventing any possible change.

I refuse to enlist in the Israeli military because it sustains inequality and oppresses any hope for a positive change. Even though the state of Israel did not officially annex the Palesitnian territories, it effectively controls them and denies Palestinians their rights to independence while trampling  their basic human rights. Young Israelis who serve in the army are the ones who actively oppress the Palestinian people and enable settler violence against them. I refuse to partake in this. 

Write Shahar a support letter

Due to my refusal to join the army, the military will interfere with my human rights and imprison me. I am willing to pay this temporary price of freedom, a price Palestinians pay their entire lives, because I refuse to cooperate with the system responsible for it. I am also willing to suffer the social price - to be marked as a traitor in Israeli society, in which I’ve lived my entire life. I believe I am doing the right and moral act in the current political situation. I hope that my actions will influence others who are in a situation like mine. I hope it makes people see the crimes the military is committing and the suffering it causes, and makes them consider what part they want to take in this conflict. I hope to see the day in which Palestinian and Israeli children will not have to live in fear, but will be able to live in peace. 

In solidarity,

Shahar

Thank you for your support during the attack on Israeli conscientious objectors

My name is Yuval, I’m 27 years old and in 2013 I refused to join the Israeli army. Nowadays I am a steering committee member and responsible for social media in Mesarvot, an Israeli network that supports refusers to military service. I want thank you all for your support! Thanks to you we succeeded in our campaign to raise money to increase our visibility, which means that we can spread the refusers’ voice louder throughout the Israeli society. Please answer this short survey to let us know how else you’d be interested to help our work.

Yuval Gal Cohen

It is a lonely and not an easy experience to be a draft refuser in Israel. In the Israeli society, the Israeli occupation and refusal to serve in the army are taboo topics, and the refusal to serve is perceived as betrayal. This hostility towards us is harsh and we are constantly under attack by the political right. It was heartwarming and exciting for us to get such support from around the world. Your solidarity is truly helpful in sustaining and developing our activity within Israel. Going forward, we would love for you to be involved in our activities. There are many ways you can support Israeli conscientious objectors, even from your own home. Please fill up this survey to share with us your thoughts and ideas.

During our Campaign last month a ultranationalist right-wing settlers organization sent a letter to officials in Israel asking them to stop our work. They claimed that because we support refusers we are an illegal organization and the government should shut our activity down. They try to shut us down, delegitimize and divide us from the anti-occupation movement. I was a part of the team that worked on that campaign and I can tell you that I was terrified. I was terrified because this is not only a threat to our work in general and an in-person threat to all Israeli refusers, but also a threat to our freedom as citizens to criticize our governmental policy, especially when horrible war crimes have been legitimized for decades. However, it also shows that even though we are a small network, our work is important and we do influence the Israeli society, and pose a real threat to the settlers.

The right wing is scared of us and this is why they try to shut us down. That is the power of civil resistance, that is the power of refusing. With your help we can now reach more people, raise our voice so everyone knows about the Israeli occupation, and everyone knows that they have the option to refuse. We would love for you to become an active member of our community in any way you like. Please answer this short survey to share with us the ways you are interested in getting involved in our work.

The support we got from you is a reflection for us of how much people care about our work and how important it is. Let's continue working together to make sure no refuser is left alone.

In solidarity,

Yuval

Right wing extremist group attempts to stop support for conscientious objectors and shut down Mesarvot

Hi

My name is Yasmin. I refused Israeli military conscription in 2019 and nowadays I am the coordinator of Mesarvot (which supports youth conscientious objectors in Israel). I am writing you this urgent letter because we are currently under attack by a right wing group who are attempting to shut down Mesarvot and silence the voice of the refusers.

Yasmin, coordinator for Mesarvot

A couple of weeks ago we initiated a crowd-funding campaign in Israel addressed at left-wing friends and supporters, with the goal of reaching $11,500. That would allow us to hire a spokesperson, to raise public awareness of the refusers, and to hold events for the general Israeli public.

Toward the end of our campaign, when we have already managed to raise $9,300 we were attacked by right wing extremists who were trying to silence us. They pressured us by publishing articles in the media accusing us of illegal actions by supporting army refusers. Even worse, they sent a letter to officials in Israel asking them to stop our work, all actions that stand to gravely harm our organizational infrastructure. We need your help to raise the money we still lack to hire for a spokesperson and to demonstrate that attempts to silence us will only make our voices louder.

We hope this hateful attack won’t hurt our efforts to promote a more peaceful society in Israel, but we are not sure which sanctions may be imposed on us going forward. With that being said, nothing will keep us from supporting these youths who are following their conscience and who are refusing to serve a violent system that harms civilians under the guise of “self-defense”. They are the ones doing the right thing!

The refusers' actions have created shockwaves in the Israeli public, who have normalized life in a highly militarized atmosphere and who regard the military as sacred. We believe that these shockwaves are vital in order to awaken the Israeli society from the normalization of the reality of apartheid and military occupation. Even though we have great international support, the walls surrounding us within the Israeli society are getting thicker. A spokesperson could help us reach a wider audience and increase our impact.

We need your help; with everything that has happened, we are not sure our campaign in Israel will be enough to counter this vicious attack and raise locally the full amount of money we need. That is why we are turning to you, as one of our international supporters, to ask for your support. Would you be willing to help us raise the needed amount of $2,200? Every dollar you can contribute is crucial! You can also share this information with people you know will support us in our struggle. With your help we can make sure the the voices of the refusers, those who have spent time in jail for the values we all believe in, are heard loud and clear throughout Israel and in the rest of the world

In solidarity,

Yasmin

Free after 28 days in Jail!

Hi

I’m happy to let you know that after 28 days in Israeli military jail I am finally free! My name is Yoav, I’m a 19 years old Israeli. I wrote to you in May about my refusal to become a soldier of the Israeli occupation and to enforce appartheid on Palestinians in the West Bank and the Gaza strip. I want to thank you for supporting me! I received over 400 support letters during my stay in jail and it really meant a lot to me. 

I would also like to take this opportunity to invite you to a free webinar this Wednesday, June 22nd, with my dear friends Shahar Perets and Eran Aviv. In the webinar Shahar and Eran will share their stories of refusing to do military service, as well as discuss current developments in the conflict in Israel/Palestine, with their particular significance for us as young people. Please register at this link and share it with your friends and family

When I first set out on my journey of conscientious objection I was unaware of what a long and hard process it would be. I first refused in December and was given the following options: Service in a non-combat position; seeing a psychiatrist; or going to jail. After receiving support from Mesarvot, I was able to push for a meeting with the committee that is in charge of granting exemptions from military service based on conscientious objection. 

I got to plead my case in front of the committee in February. Afterwards I was notified that I only received an exemption from carrying a weapon during my military service. A month later when I was called back to begin my service I refused again, because even without a weapon I am not willing to take any part in the oppression of the Palestinian people carried out daily by the Israeli army

That time I was sentenced to 8 days in military jail. After my release I was asked to report back to the enlistment center. I refused a third time and was sentenced to 20 days in jail. At that point I appealed the committee’s decision to give me an exemption only from carrying a weapon and finally, after serving 28 days in jail, I was granted a complete exemption from service! 

Looking back at the whole process, it was all worth it. Refusing to serve is the most powerful act I could take to counter Israeli militarism and show solidarity with Palestinians. 

I was held by police at the pride parade for holding up the Palestinian flag

Hi,

My name is Ayelet. I’m a 16 years old trans teen and an activist in the Mesarvot network, an Israeli Network supporting war resisters and political objectors. Last Friday (June 10th), at the Israeli pride parade in Tel Aviv, I was arrested for holding the Palestinian flag with the slogan “there is no pride in the occupation” in Hebrew (see below picture of my sign).

Support the refusers

I made this sign not only to show my objection to the Israeli occupation of the West bank and the Gaza strip, but also to protest the way the Israeli government uses the LGBTQ+ community to justify the occupation. The government uses Pinkwashing - displaying superficial support for LGBTQ+ rights in order to justify horrible actions. In actuality, Israel supports gay rights only when people from our community are supportive of the state’s actions. For example, a trans woman who is a soldier will be able to receive hormonal treatment, but a trans woman who is an army refuser will be sent to a men’s prison for her refusal. 

I attended the Pride parade with the intention to protest the way the Israeli state is using my community, the LGBTQ+ community, to appear progressive without actually showing support for our rights. For instance there is no option for same sex marriage, no access for gay people to adopt children, and accessing gender affirming healthcare is incredibly difficult. The police officers pulled me out almost immediately, about 5 minutes after I joined the march and held up my sign, and threatened me with an arrest. 

Share this link with your family, friends and colleagues for them to get our refuser updates

Zionism means wanting a Jewish state in the land of Israel. In the Israeli political ethos, the idea that this notion could be immoral is unthinkable. The fundamental problem with it is the fact that a Jewish state, by definition, discriminates against people who are not Jewish. Especially in this piece of land where people with different religions, ethnicities, and cultures have been residing for centuries. Meaning, Zionism is the desire to settle an already populated country and discriminate against all who lived there before you. 

This ideological foundation has created a downward spiral - The 1948 Nakba and the 1967 occupation are the clear continuation of the Zionist ideology. Today, in the occupied territories of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip there are 4.5 million Palestinians living under military law. They can’t vote in the Israeli elections even though Israel has complete control over their lives. In contrast, Israeli settlers living in the same territory have full citizenship rights. Also, We can’t ignore the fact that Israel’s control over the Palestinian territories undoubtedly fits the definition of colonialism - “The policy or practice of aquiring full or partial political control over another country, occupying it with settlers, and exploiting its economy”. 

Share this link with your family, friends and colleagues for them to get our refuser updates

All of the above is why last Friday, I, a trans teenager, chose to attend the Tel Aviv Pride parade with a sign that shows the Palestinian flag with the inscription: No pride in the occupation

To be clear - I was arrested at a demonstration for holding up a sign. The police read me my rights and did not let me go. They accused me of “incitement”, for holding a Palestinian flag in a public space. It is important to say that even though some of the Knesset members are working on passing a law that would make it illegal to hold a Palistinian flag in public property, such a law has not yet passed, meaning I did nothing illegal. 

Ultimately, the police did not take me with them back to the station but held me for about an hour at pride and then they released me. It is important for me to mention that I had it easy with the cops. More than most people would. If I was a Palestinian boy this whole story would have taken a horrible turn for the worst. I was released quickly because I am an Ashkenazi (white Jew) kid from Tel Aviv that doesn’t even have an ID yet and the police did not consider me a threat. 

I want you all to know - We live in a country where people are arrested for protesting. We don’t need to shout or even say anything, it is enough to hold a Palestinian flag next to an officer to be arrested - that’s how much they are scared of the Palestinian flag and Israeli solidarity with Palestinians. But no arrests or pinkwashing can hide the truth about the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.

In solidarity, 

Ayelet

After serving a jail sentence I finally received an exemption

Hello everyone,

My name is Oren. Last time I wrote to you was right after I was released from a jail sentence of 14 days for refusing to do my reserve service in the Israeli army. In Israel, in addition to serving two or three years in regular service, you are also obligated to continue to serve as reserve duty for 15-20 years. As someone who is wholeheartedly and completely against serving any time as a soldier of the occupation, I’m happy to let you know that I have now received an exemption from military reserve duty. 

Oren Feld

Not many people around the world know this, but there are many Israelis who oppose the Israeli occupation of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, and who are trying to receive an exemption from military service so they would not participate in these war crimes. Because it is so hard to receive an exemption based on conscientious objection and there is a risk of incarceration, many resort to indirect ways of receiving an exemption on psychological or physical grounds. 

Help us support youth refusers

My journey was a bit different. I was asked to report to reserve duty and I refused. I was sentenced to a military trial in which I received a jail sentence of 14 days. Before entering prison, I wrote a strong, critical, political letter to the army. It stated the reasons why I am not willing to serve an occupying army and why I am not willing to support the militarization of Israeli society, after which I served the sentence I was given. A couple of weeks ago, I finally received my exemption from reserve duty. I am glad I stood my ground and received my exemption from service solely by stating my objection to the occupation. 

This is a very important accomplishment. Like some of my refuser friends, who you heard about in previous updates, I did not try to present other personal reasons that might make it a problem for me to serve. It shows that we have the option to stand up and speak our truth. If many more will join us in doing so we will be able to understand the true extent of the resistance to the Israeli occupation. The real number of Israeli citizens who are not willing to be a part of an occupying force but are not able to publicly state that fact because they are reluctant to serve jail time or suffer dire social sanctions. If we can make that happen, then the Israeli army will not be able to conceal citizens' objections to its detrimental policies. Help us in supporting youth refusers, to make sure this happens. 

Help us support youth refusers

In solidarity,

Oren

Tomorrow I will be going to prison

Hi,

My name is Yoav. I’m 19 years old from Israel. Tomorrow, I will refuse conscription to the Israeli military and will most likely be sentenced to military prison. 

Write Yoav a support letter

I grew up with the belief that no person should cause harm to any other human being. I truly feel that all people should help those who are in need, those who are less fortunate, and those who are being wronged by others. 

In Israel, the occupation and oppression of the entire Palestinian people is a part of day to day life. The Israeli military and Israeli governmental policy continue to cause great suffering and wrongdoings to Palestinians. I am not willing to accept this reality or contribute to it. Refusing to enlist is one of the most important ways of supporting, even a little bit, the Palestinian struggle

Write Yoav a support letter


Last December, on the day of my conscription, I arrived at the enlistment center and refused. I was arrested for a day until the army released me and gave me a date to have my case reviewed by the army’s conscientious committee (which is the military body that is in charge of recognizing conscientious objectors). 

The conscientious committee exempted me from carrying a weapon and the army expected me to enlist. However, my issue is not with shooting in a range or firing practice. With or without a weapon, the Israeli army is still an organization whose essence is war and I do not want to take part in it. So I refused again and was jailed for 8 days. 

Write Yoav a support letter

This Tuesday I will refuse a third time and will probably receive another prison sentence. Everywhere in the world there are injustices that need to change. In Israel, my place of birth, the suffering of Palestinians is a blatant injustice that needs to be fixed. This is why I will continue to refuse.  

In solidarity,

Yoav 

Israel puts youth in prison isolation for resisting war!

Hello everyone,

My name is Yasmin Eran Vardi, and I am the new coordinator for Mesarvot Network. I’m 21 years old from Jerusalem and a long time activist against the Israeli occupation of the Palestinian Territories. I refused the military draft myself, risked imprisonment, and received an exemption from military service in 2019 after a long journey claiming my case in front of the army’s “conscientious” committee, which sometimes recognizes some conscientious objectors.

Yasmin Eran Vardi, Coordinator for Mesarvot

Over the years, as an activist I participated in Mesarvot’s youth group, which is a part of Mesarvot activity to support young conscientious objectors. I also accompanied Palestinian farmers and shepherds in order to provide support against attacks by Israeli settlers, with a group called Ta’ayush. Today, I focus my activism on documenting violations of human rights by the Israeli army in the Palestinian Territories. 

I want to share with you that we were recently invited to testify by the United Nations Human Rights Committee (UNHRC) regarding the situation of conscientious objection in Israel. We explained to the UNHRC that what sustains the occupation of the Palestinian Territories is the increasing militarism in Israeli society, reinforced by the media, but mostly by the educational system which makes sure to put pressure on teenagers to enlist to military service. 

The Israeli army and state policy work in violation of international law in many ways. We need to make sure the information from our fieldwork supporting refusers spreads across the globe. We ask for your help to do this. By donating only $10 a month, you will be a driving force in our ability to share this information with the world. 

According to UN resolutions, the committees exempting refusers and conscientious objectors should be non-political civil committees that base their decisions on the personal testimony of the objector. This is definitely not the case in Israel. The committee is an army body composed of soldiers and only one civilian. It does not accept the objector’s self testimony, requests witnesses, and inspects the refuser’s social media. Moreover, it does not accept objection based on political circumstances such as objection to serve the occupation. 

Not only that, refusers like us stand for recurring trials for our objection to service and are sentenced to multiple incarcerations. Those who refuse to wear army uniforms during their prison stay are punished a second time, for not identifying with the army’s values, and are sent to prison isolation. We are teenagers! It is not right to send 18 year olds to prison isolation for not wanting to practice violence and for resisting war! 

This is but a partial list of the everyday violations committed by the Israeli army and we hope the UNHRC will take this information and raise much needed questions towards representatives of the state of Israel. 

We need to increase our voice in the international arena in order to have more international bodies push Israel to form human policies that recognize basic human rights. We ask for your support and contribution in helping us sustain our work by contributing $10 a month. By doing so you will help us sustain our core activities such as supporting refusers and making sure the information from our field work will be delivered to citizens worldwide and in Israel, and to international and national bodies such as the UN and Israeli authorities. 

We hope that over time by exposing this information in and outside Israel we will start seeing a much needed change in Israeli policy.  

In solidarity,

Yasmin

After 88 days in jail I’m finally free!

Dear friends,

I’m happy to share with you the knowledge that after serving 88 days in military jail for refusing to enlist in the Israeli military I finally received my exemption! This has been a long journey that started years before I was supposed to enlist. Since I was a young girl I knew I would not take part in the injustice of the Israeli occupation ofthe Palestinian territories. This was evident in my life during high school where I stood my ground in arguments with my peers, in my active participation in Mesarvot’s youth group and in refusing to participate in workshops and training which Israeli youth must take in preparation for army life.

Congratulate Shahar on receiving an exemption!

Going in and out of jail in the last few months has definitely been hard,  but there was no way I was going to change my mind, no matter how long my prison sentence. Before going to jail I heard from older refusers how lonely it was in prison and how disconnected you feel from the outside world - which turned out to be very true - but what was really amazing is how supported I felt because of you! All of your letters and kind words changed my world every time I was released home for a few days because it showed me that there are many people around the world who care for this place and who want to help us end the occupation. It showed that my act of refusing is meaningful in shedding light on the oppression of Palestinians and that it travels across the world. It shows that if enough Israelis do the same we could stop this appartheid system.  

Congratulate Shahar on receiving an exemption!

Although I am out of prison, our struggle is far from over. Just a few weeks ago the Sallehiya family lost its home in Sheikh Jarrah when it was demolished by Israeli authorities. They were tossed into the street in the middle of the night in winter. Many more Palestinian families are at risk of losing their homes, and one of them is the Salem family. As part of the weekly demonstrations against these heinous acts towards the residents of Sheikh Jarrah, I went together with many other activists to the Salem family residence, where settlers had put up fences around the house and the police put up roadblocks over the settler’s fences. We smashed the fences and roadblocks and continued our protest around the neighborhood. We will continue to do everything within our power to make sure these families will keep their homes, and to make sure all discriminatory acts against Palestinians stop. For that to happen we need more Israelis with us. 

That is why now that I’m out of prison my plan is to continue my peace activism and make sure more youth learn about the consequences of taking part in the military system. Everyone deserves to be free like me. 

In solidarity,

Shahar

After spending 114 days in military jail Eran is a free man!

Hi, it's Eran and I’m happy to be writing to you as a free man. After spending 114 days in military jail for refusing to enlist to the Israeli military and not be complicit in the occupation of the Palestinian territories, I finally received an exemption from military service.

This year our community of refusers has grown and many youth who are fighting for Palestinian liberation have joined our community. Just a few months back we facilitated the Shministim letter (Shministim meaning high school seniors in Hebrew) that was signed by 120 high school students declaring their intention to refuse to enlist and become soldiers of the occupation. We are the future of Israel and it is important to continue our work and provide a space for youth that is not complicit in upholding the unjust policies of the occupation. And we need your help to do that.

It is our responsibility to make sure that the voices of refusers, like myself, are heard. Supporters like you, the international community, can make this a reality. As the year comes to a close, we need your help to continue to fuel the critical work of Mesarvot and RSN. All contributions are essential to ensure that we can continue to give youth who object to war crimes a political home and advocate for their rights to express their political opinions. Join our growing community by donating today to help support our objection to the occupation. 

In solidarity,

Eran

🚨 ACT NOW: Isreali refusers need your support

Hi, 

It’s me, Shahar. For those of you not familiar with my story, I'm 19 years old from Kfar Yona, Israel. Earlier this year I declared my refusal to serve in the Israeli army because I am not willing to take part in Israel’s policies of occupation and apartheid in the Palestinian Territories. In response to my refusal, I was sent to military prison where I’ve served three prison sentences totaling 58 days. Last Sunday I was sentenced to another 30 days in prison.

The army will continue to sentence me to prison for refusing to enlist, but nothing can break my spirit or change my mind. I decided at a very early age that I will not become a soldier of the occupation and will not hurt my Palestinian friends. Today, I’m writing this message because I need your help and solidarity. 

Donate to support the refusers

In the past year we’ve seen a rise in the number of refusers. I am not alone. Eran Aviv, a fellow refuser, has served his sixth jail sentence totaling 114 days, and Oren Feld, who also refused reserve duty, was jailed for 14 days. With this rise, we, the refusers, are suffering from worsening conditions in military prisons. As I wrote in my previous message, I was not allowed to bring writing utensils to jail or write anything without the prison authorities monitoring what I’m writing. 

Not only that, I asked to see a doctor because I need physiotherapy but my request was not answered and to date I still don’t have a doctor’s appointment. Because I’m considered a part of the military system I cannot go and see a doctor in my time at home either. 

I’m fortunate to have Mesarvot and the Refuser Solidarity Network by my side. They make sure my rights in prison are not violated. I have legal representation that is already in touch with the prison authorities to make sure I receive my full rights. This is incredible help for me during my prison sentence that is only growing longer with each sentence renewal. Knowing that there is a community of refusers that supports me, and my fellow refusers, allows me to continue my struggle against the occupation. 

Donate to support the refusers

Now, more than ever, we need your help to support our movement. We need $25,000 to sustain our work through next year - will you donate today? We are counting on you to continue our critical work. With your generosity, our community of refusers can grow and we can continue to protect youth that refuse to be complicit and stand on the right side of justice.

In solidarity,

Shahar

Sentenced to 14 days in prison for refusing to serve the occupation

Hello, my name is Oren, I’m 29 years old. I live in Jerusalem and I am an MA student. I run a social worker NGO and work in the Jerusalem branch of the Hadash party (The Democratic Front for Peace and Equality). I was just released after 14 days in military jail for refusing to do my reserve duty in the Israeli military

When I was first drafted to the Israeli military as an 18 year old, I did not have the strength to resist it. Now I do. I spent 3 years of my life in a military service I did not believe in and over the years I have witnessed numerous injustices and wrongdoings performed by the army.

Oren Feld. Photo credit: Ore Cherbelis Hod

That is why now, at the age of 29 years, I said ENOUGH when I was called to do reserve duty. I will no longer be a part of an institution that oppresses, kills, and exploits innocent people. It is time to speak the truth about the history of our land, - starting with past  expulsions of Palestinians and continuing with the multiple present day measures aimed at the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians, that are part of everyday life. Only truth will stop the occupation. 

The occupation manifests itself in many forms. It has controls over the Palestinian leadership; It controls transportation routes through the use of lockdowns and blockades; It performs mass arrests; It has the power to prohibit gatherings and demonstrations. The occupation is undeniable, and it is a political choice: there is no justification for an endless, limitless foreign rule over millions of innocent people. 

I choose peace. That is why when I received the order to report for reserve duty, I told my army commander that I will not comply. He sentenced me to 14 days in jail for my refusal. I sent a request to the conscientious committee asking them to release me from reserve duty, but they denied my request and I went to military jail. Serving time was a harsh and humiliating experience but I will continue to stand firm in the face of oppression!

I will not serve in an army that uses its resources to control the Palestinian civic population, which has virtually no basic human rights. I will not take part in the military rule in the west bank or in the naval and air blockade of Gaza. Nor will I take part in the monitoring of goods entering the Palestinian territories, which has given rise to a life without any basic means for millions of human beings, who have restricted access to food, to drinkable water, to housing and to electricity. 

This military control over another nation also corrupts the Israeli society from within. If we want to have a healthy, egalitarian society it needs to be based on solidarity, not on force and superiority of some over others. I care for this place and the people who live in this land! Anyone who feels the same should take a stand against the occupation and the oppression that have now been going on for over a half a century. This is why I chose to refuse now and why I will continue to refuse in the future. 

In solidarity,

Oren

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Another 30 days in prison

I just spent my 19th birthday behind bars and I’ve already served two prison sentences and spent 28 days in jail. Last Thursday I was tried again and sentenced to another 30 days in prison. I will continue facing recurring incarcerations for my refusal to cooperate with the Israeli occupation of the Palestinian Territories.

I am writing today from home because in the military prison we are not allowed to write. I am a person who writes down her thoughts and I scribble drawings when I try to focus. I write down tasks and ideas and I use empty pages to crystalize my thought process. When I arrived at the military prison for the first time I brought with me a pencil case, but it was taken away from me and I was informed by the prison guards who searched my belongings that I cannot keep any writing tools and can only write at specific times a day with pens provided by the prison authorities. 

Over time I realized that the specific hours considered proper for writing are very much dependent on the guards’ whims. Some days I could only get a pen for 10 minutes; on Saturdays or holidays you don’t get a pen at all. Privacy is a luxury I don’t get to have as a prisoner and I was not allowed to write anything without the rest of the inmates, guards and commanders getting to see what I’m writing. By the end of my prison sentence I returned home with all my notebooks completely empty.

In prison, writing is in itself a form of activism. We can use it to share our message about our choice to refuse as a form of resistance to the occupation. By depriving me of the option to write in prison, the prison authorities  hindered my ability to document what goes on behind bars, write articles and develop ideas and plan on how to share my experiences once I am released for a few days. The military does not want me to write, speak or share my thoughts. They are trying to silence me. 

The silencing of political refusers is a small part of a more violent pattern of behavior - The silencing of the Palestinian struggle for human rights in the West Bank and Gaza. The arrests of Palestinians that speak and act against the Israeli violent military actions and the violent oppressions by the military of Palestinian peaceful protests are just two emblematic examples of a broad policy aimed at suppressing any speaking, acting, criticizing or objecting on the part of Palestinians.

And so,  it is not surprising that after striving daily to hide the truth about the occupation and to silence those who are hurt by it, the next step is to silence those of us who  oppose it. But it is this silencing, this attempt to erase, hide and deny what is really happening, that makes me stand proud and declare my refusal publicly. Despite not being able to write about any of this from prison I’m happy to be able to share my message now, even if it is  from home. 

In solidarity,

Shahar

Write Shahar a support letter

Support Shahar and Eran

Shahar Perets (19) and Eran Aviv (19) once again arrived at the Israeli military enlistment center to declare their refusal to serve as soldiers and take part in the oppression of the Palestinian people. Each of them was tried and sentenced to 30 days in military jail. This is Eran's sixth prison sentence totaling 114 days. Shahar has already served 28 days in jail and this is her third jail sentence.

Write Eran a support letter: https://forms.gle/3jtzoWqujPzN4phr6

Write Shahar a support letter: https://forms.gle/ZQ3UpgoESCiHFo1P7