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Israeli IDF Program Integrates Disabled Youth As Soldiers

Special in Uniform project empowers young people with disabilities, providing training and opportunities for integration

Eleven young men and women with various disabilities recently joined an unforgettable Israel Defense Forces “Beret March,” marking their induction as full-fledged soldiers.

These new soldiers, all from Ashkelon’s Moriah School, are proud members of Special in Uniform, a revolutionary project of the IDF in conjunction with the Jewish National Fund-USA. The program incorporates young people with physical and mental disabilities such as Down Syndrome, cerebral palsy and autism, into Israel’s military.

During their service, they receive training and skills that empower them to integrate long-term into Israeli society and the workforce.

For most soldiers, basic training in the IDF culminates with a “Beret March” of 30 km (98425.2 feet) (18.6 miles) followed by an official ceremony in which the soldiers receive their berets.

For most soldiers, basic training in the IDF culminates with a “Beret March” of 30 km (98425.2 feet) (18.6 miles) followed by an official ceremony in which the soldiers receive their berets. MAJDI FATHI/GETTY IMAGES

For the Special In Uniform soldiers, it meant a 1 kilometer (3280.84 feet) (0.6 mile) march to the Zikim army base near Ashkelon. Afterwards, they received the orange berets of the IDF’s Home Front Command.

“Volunteering with the IDF has changed my life, and the life of my friends,” said 19-year-old Snir Jamil, who has already been volunteering for close to three years. “Each and every one of us is a warrior, who found a way to contribute his skills and talents to our country. We learned that when we give, we get back. The IDF gives us all a chance to be our very best and give our all. They taught me to believe in myself.”

Family, friends, and fellow soldiers from the Home Front Command joined in the march.

Close to 1,000 Special In Uniform soldiers from communities across Israel are serving in 45 bases in all branches of the IDF.

Lt.-Col. (res.) Kobi Malcha, one of Special In Uniform’s directors, explained to the Tazpit Press Service that the program is more like “a class outside of school.”

“In school, they learn what they can learn. But real life is outside the school. They meet regular soldiers. They meet their commanders, and they are doing things that make them feel like everybody else. The magic is when they get their uniforms like everybody else. You see them grow up immediately,” said Malcha.

Israeli special-needs schooling continues to the age of 21, so between the ages of 17-21, they are taken by bus from their school to the army base once or twice a week. “They salute the flag, eat breakfast and begin work,” said Malcha.

Tasks might include helping in military logistics, gathering and entering data on computers, or other office work. “They do what they can,” said Malcha. In the process, they learn the value of teamwork, as well as how to solve problems and other skills.

After finishing school, participants have the opportunity to be more formally recruited into the army, which includes pay and other benefits, even though they are technically excused from conscription. So by the time Special In Uniform’s participants take off their uniforms for the last time, they will have been in military life longer than many Israelis. Israel has universal conscription with a minimum service of two years and eight months.

Whether they continue with the army or not, Special In Uniform also helps its graduates find work.

The program includes Bedouin, Druze and Arabs.

Snir Jamil’s father, Itamar, said, “Snir has been part of Special in Uniform for close to three years, and we are all so proud of him. This organization offers kids like Snir the chance not just to feel like an equal, but to really be an equal. They invite every individual, regardless of ability or disability, to maximize his or her potential and give whatever he can to benefit our nation.”

Produced in association with Jewish News Syndicate

Edited by and

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