qos

Women of the Israeli Army

Jan 21, 2008 22:08

I just stumbled across a fasciating website: Rachel Papo: Serial Number 3817131

Rachel Papo is an Israeli who was born in 1970 in Columbus, Ohio but was raised in Israel. She began photographing as a teenager and attended a renowned fine-arts high-school in Haifa, Israel. At age eighteen she served in the Israeli Air Force as a photographer. These ( Read more... )

warrior path, photos

Leave a comment

Comments 5

heron61 January 22 2008, 07:27:16 UTC
The odd thing is that people think of the Israeli military as well gender integrated, but actually the US military is the most gender integrated military I know of (significantly more than the Israeli military). For all of the many ills of the US military (or any military for that matter) its one of the more gender integrated portions of the US.

Reply


coen January 22 2008, 07:40:47 UTC
Yes, the pictures are disturbing. Not so much because they are women, but because they look so young and so vulnerable.
Here and there I see a guy in the picture, and they look young and vulnerable too.
And yet this is one of the most dangerous and deadliest armies in the world.
It's weird to think that some of those people may have died the day after the picture was taken. Or they may have killed people. Or both.

War is weird. Those pictures show that without actually showing the war.

Reply


rebeccax January 22 2008, 12:55:24 UTC
I've known a couple of people who served in the Israeli army. One of which was a woman. Service in mandatory for all 18 years olds who want to remain in the country. Although I hear it's easy to get a desk job if you want it, especially for women.

Thanks for the link. I want to spend more time with those images. There's something disturbing about the weapons because they seem to be regarded so casually. And I like the shots that are so gender-bending. Plenty to think about.

Reply


iswari January 22 2008, 15:28:15 UTC
When I first arrived in Jerusalem, I was taken aback by the (on- and off-duty) military presence everywhere, but I soon got used to it. A friend of mine was a commander in the Israeli Air Force. She did not have any traumatic experiences, but her husband was in the IDF special forces, diffusing landmines. He saw his best friend blown up right in front of him and still suffers PTSD.

Reply


athenian_abroad January 22 2008, 18:44:51 UTC
Nice work. Thanks for bringing it to my attention.

Reply


Leave a comment

Up