
OCCUPIED QUDS August 07. 2024 (Saba) - Clashes erupted between the Zionist enemy police and dozens of Haredi settlers from the "Yerushlami" movement, who stormed the recruitment base in "Tel Hashomer" in the "Ramat Gan" area, south of "Tel Aviv", to refuse to recruit.
According to the media of the Zionist enemy, clashes broke out between the Zionist enemy police and Haredi settlers, from the "Yerushalmi" movement, at the recruitment base in "Tel Hashomer" in the area of "Ramat Gan", south of "Tel Aviv".
This came after the Haredi of the Yerushlami movement stormed the base to get out the Haredi who were recruited into the army of the Zionist enemy.
During their storming of Tel Hashomer, they shouted anti-conscription phrases, such as conscription is worse than death.
In light of this, Zionist media reported that the first day of the Haredi recruitment failed, after only some of the young men who were invited responded.
On Monday, clashes took place at the same base between the Zionist enemy police and hundreds of Haredi people, after hundreds of Haredim arrived in buses to the recruitment office at the base, in protest against the Zionist enemy army's summoning of 1,200 Haredi as part of the procedures for the first conscription order.
The Haredi protesters chanted slogans rejecting the draft, including "We die and do not join the army," while the Zionist police and army sent large forces to the scene, as police blocked the street around the office in advance.
Commenting on these events, Yesh Atid said: "Three Israeli army bases were stormed in the past week, not by Hamas or Hezbollah, but by incitement groups that want chaos and evasion of service," referring to what happened in the bases of Beit Lid, Sde Timan, and Tel Hashomer.
It is noteworthy that the Zionist enemy army published, on the ninth of last July, a plan aimed at recruiting three thousand Haredi Jews in its ranks, in light of its urgent need for soldiers as the war on the Gaza Strip continues.
The plan calls for recruiting three thousand Haredi between the ages of 18 and 21, 40 percent between the ages of 21 and 24, and ten percent between the ages of 24 and 26.
Afterward, the Sephardic Chief Rabbi of the Zionist entity, Yitzhak Yusuf, urged "not to join the recruitment offices, to tear up recruitment orders, and not to cooperate with the army."
E.M
According to the media of the Zionist enemy, clashes broke out between the Zionist enemy police and Haredi settlers, from the "Yerushalmi" movement, at the recruitment base in "Tel Hashomer" in the area of "Ramat Gan", south of "Tel Aviv".
This came after the Haredi of the Yerushlami movement stormed the base to get out the Haredi who were recruited into the army of the Zionist enemy.
During their storming of Tel Hashomer, they shouted anti-conscription phrases, such as conscription is worse than death.
In light of this, Zionist media reported that the first day of the Haredi recruitment failed, after only some of the young men who were invited responded.
On Monday, clashes took place at the same base between the Zionist enemy police and hundreds of Haredi people, after hundreds of Haredim arrived in buses to the recruitment office at the base, in protest against the Zionist enemy army's summoning of 1,200 Haredi as part of the procedures for the first conscription order.
The Haredi protesters chanted slogans rejecting the draft, including "We die and do not join the army," while the Zionist police and army sent large forces to the scene, as police blocked the street around the office in advance.
Commenting on these events, Yesh Atid said: "Three Israeli army bases were stormed in the past week, not by Hamas or Hezbollah, but by incitement groups that want chaos and evasion of service," referring to what happened in the bases of Beit Lid, Sde Timan, and Tel Hashomer.
It is noteworthy that the Zionist enemy army published, on the ninth of last July, a plan aimed at recruiting three thousand Haredi Jews in its ranks, in light of its urgent need for soldiers as the war on the Gaza Strip continues.
The plan calls for recruiting three thousand Haredi between the ages of 18 and 21, 40 percent between the ages of 21 and 24, and ten percent between the ages of 24 and 26.
Afterward, the Sephardic Chief Rabbi of the Zionist entity, Yitzhak Yusuf, urged "not to join the recruitment offices, to tear up recruitment orders, and not to cooperate with the army."
E.M
resource : Saba