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Opinion

The highs and lows of being a lone soldier

Being a lone soldier isn't always ideological and meaningful - especially around the yom tovim. Shira Silkoff describes bringing in Rosh Hashanah on an army base

September 26, 2018 14:42
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3 min read

If anyone reading this has ever seen any sort of promotional feature about lone soldiers, I’m sure you’ll be able to agree with me that it all looks very inspiring. Shiny pictures of soldiers standing proudly at their beret ceremonies at the end of training, moving clips of soldiers helping each other out in particularly tough moments.

Well here I am, the token lone soldier, ready to shatter the illusion.

It’s not that those things don’t happen, of course. It’s that they happen for a few minutes, over a couple of hours, in between often boring, often dirty, uninspiring moments.

If a video about Israeli soldiers were ever to be accurate they would need to start including the daily floor washing, pointless sweeping of cigarette butts from one end of a courtyard to the other, and of course, an inside look at the deep and never-ending exhaustion of the average soldier.