OCCUPIED
JERUSALEM, December 9 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - The Israeli
army sentenced Jonathan Ben Artzi to a 35-day prison term Sunday,
December 8, for refusing to serve in the army, his sixth sentence since
he was first jailed on August 8. He has since spent 126 days in prison,
in what his father says is a record in Israel for a conscientious
objector.
Artzi
hates war and would rather spend time in jail than serve in the army.
But, he is not just any conscientious objector, he's the nephew of
Israel's ultra-nationalist foreign minister, Benjamin Netanyahu,
according to Agence France-Presse (AFP).
For
the same reasons, the army handed a 28-day prison term to Uri Yaacobi,
who has already spent 106 days behind bars.
Israelis
are called to arms when they turn 18. Men serve for three years and
women for 21 months, while ultra-Orthodox Jews are exempted on religious
grounds.
"Yoni",
20, is the youngest son of the Ben Artzi family, who divide their time
between occupied Jerusalem, France and the United States.
Before
leaving Israel to work in New York, both his brother and his sister
completed their compulsory military service in Israel.
"But
they weren't very enthusiastic either," said the father, Matania
Ben Artzi, who served 13 years in the army, first in an elite unit and
then as a mathematician for military scientific research.
His
wife Ofra was also in the army when they met, but she was the one who
turned him into a pacifist. Jonathan has always been revolted by
violence and everything related to the army, AFP said.
"His
first real shock came when he was 12," his father recounted.
"We
were visiting the Verdun battle field in France and the sight of those
endless crosses and the ossuary with the remains of 150,000 unknown
soldiers killed in World War I had a traumatic effect on him."
During
his time in high school in occupied Jerusalem, he actively promoted
issues linked to pacifism.
He
enjoyed sports but refused to learn karate, and one day even gave up on
a school outing because the bus had to drive through the Palestinian
territories, where the army had imposed a curfew.
"Already
back then, it was his way of protesting against the Israeli army's
occupation of the Palestinian territories," his mother said.
It
came as no surprise when at the age of 17, Jonathan refused to join up
after receiving his first conscription call.
"He
didn't even try to be exempted for medical reasons or anything
else," his father said. "He demanded, in vain, the right to be
a civilian conscript and even insisted on his pacifism to publicize his
struggle."
Jonathan
is slowly making a name for himself in Israel, where conscientious
objectors are few and far between. The young man even went as far as
dragging the army in front of the supreme court, although nothing came
of it.
"In
a country where the army is divine and sacred, he's more than a
traitor," the father said, charging that "Israeli democracy is
nothing more than a facade."
During
a recent family diner, Netanyahu, who is married to the sister of
Jonathan's father and leads the ultra-nationalist camp in the right-wing
Likud party, briefly broached the sensitive issue: "Maybe you'll
change your mind".
In
his army years, the charismatic nationalist politician served in the
elite Sayeret Matkal unit. His brother commanded the same unit when he
was killed in a 1976 rescue mission on a hijacked plane in Entebbe,
Uganda.
But
his notorious uncle's gentle prodding did not shake Jonathan's
determination. Quite the opposite.
A
mathematics student in occupied Jerusalem, he has taken up law on the
side. On Sunday he told his parents he intended to lodge an appeal over
his jail sentence with the International Court of Justice in The Hague.