We are called Shministim, which is Hebrew means "twelfth graders". In our final year of high school we, along with about 100 others, signed a letter declaring our refusal to be conscripted into the Israeli Defence Force. For this we have been labeled as traitors by our government, attacked in the street and in the media, and imprisoned repeatedly, sometimes in solitary confinement.
We have also received support from friends, and from people around the world. One such example is the invitation to attend the 25th anniversary celebrations of the End Conscription Campaign (ECC) in South Africa. The ECC campaigned in the 1980s against the system of conscripting white men into the apartheid defence force. To mark the celebration objectors from Israel, Eritrea and the United States have been invited to visit South Africa and speak at public events.
Like the members of the ECC, we refuse to use violence to enforce oppression.
We are also determined to struggle peacefully for an end to the dispossession of Palestinians, and to assert non-violence, and international solidarity, as the means for fundamentally changing the political reality. Harm to any civilians and force other than in self-defense are wrong.
Some work hard to prevent change. The SA Jewish Board of Deputies issued a statement calling us irrational, and saying comparisons between the Shministim and the ECC are "entirely fallacious".
Those who led the ECC feel differently. Laurie Nathan, the ECC national organiser in 1985/6, explains: