BS"D
Intolerable: A Religious Bas-Cohen Imprisoned For Her Refusal to Enlist in the Army
18 Teves, 5780  °°  Jan. 15, '20
Although
 Chanukah has passed,  Maitav (the Israeli Army Draft Office) refuses to
 allow concerned Jews to forget the timeless mesiras nefesh 
[selflessness] of Yehudis, and her heroic brothers, even 21 centuries 
afterwards. In yet another trans-generational reverberation of the 
righteousness of Yehudis, on Monday Jan. 13, another religious Bas-Cohen, Lital bas Miriam, of Tel Aviv, 26, was arrested at Ben Gurion Airport, for not enlisting in the Army. 
She
 sent in her religiosity-certification about nine years ago. She was 
then summoned for a Rayon Dat (Religious Interview/ Interrogation). 
 However, apparently, she never got a clear indication of her legal 
draft status one way or the other. Before she set out to the airport to 
travel abroad on Monday, she reportedly asked the Border Police if she 
would be allowed to travel without any legal complications over her 
draft status. They informed her that it was ok. However, on arrival she 
was arrested, and is now in incarcerated in military prison for her 
refusal to enlist in the military. Enlistment in the Army is prohibited 
for all girls (regardless of level of religiosity) - according to 
leading Rabbis across the spectrum. 
Her
 hearing has been postponed, and they're planning on keeping her in 
prison at least till then.  This callous extension of incarceration 
traces a recently-established pattern of military prison treatment of 
religious Refusenik girls and women over the past couple of months. They
 tend to keep girls (e.g. Orpaz Ora bas Aliza) in jail on the pretext 
that - for some reason - they are "unable" to arrange a hearing. This 
apparent charade can continue indefinitely.  Thereby, they punish and 
pressure the young women to submit to enlist. B"H, they are often 
unsuccessful, due to the fortitude of these special individuals and 
their advocates.
In legal systems that venerate
 G-d-granted individual liberties, non-violent infractions such as late 
submission of documentation (not to mention simple failure to answer 
arcane questions about religious observance) would not be grounds for 
arrest, much less incarceration, and much less extended jail time due to
 delays in the initial hearing. But the protocols of Maitav apparently 
 diverge from constitutional norms, standards which we in America 
unfortunately tend to take for granted. 
It
 now appears that she's sitting in Military Prison simply because she 
didn't answer one question correctly in her Rayon Dat nine years ago, 
pertaining to Kriyas HaTorah (the weekly reading of portions of the 
Torah). According to Jewish Law, women are generally exempt from Kriyas
 HaTorah (except for the reading of the Remembrance of the Obliterating 
of Amalek... and, according to some, Parshas Parah). To question 
her religiosity over such an issue is ludicrous. To arrest her over that
 should be criminal, but apparently raises no eyebrows.
Thank 
G-d, she's in contact with competent guidance, the Shomrei Torah 
organization, which is quite proficient at the providing quality 
information necessary to properly alert the public to the plight of 
incarcerated girls.
What makes this all even more 
outrageous is that her brother is suffering a severe health condition, 
and this unwarranted persecution  doesn't help that. In fact, the 
presence of a severe illness in the immediate family is a statistically 
significant factor present in a number of cases with which we are 
familiar. It appears that having an immediate family member severely ill
 tends to flag girls for arrest, incarceration and persecutory treatment
 by Maitav.
### Public Advisory: ###
A) 
 Anyone who has questions about his or her legal draft-status should NOT
 rely on verbal statements of government staff - including law 
enforcement officers.
B)  Anyone who's draft status is questionable should not assume it's resolved until obtaining confirmation.
C)
  Those unsure of their draft status who have serious illness in the 
immediate family should exercise additional caution, because they can 
least afford complications, and because they  may be more susceptible to
 being flagged for arrest by Maitav, if the opportunity presents itself.
 That also means: drive extra carefully to avoid being pulled over, even
 if you think you're not doing anything dangerous.
D)
  Again, do NOT enter the Draft Offices for any reason, even if you 
imagine that you'll "just be in and out" with your petur (exemption 
certification) -- even if you see other girls who do manage to enter and
 exit quickly with their exemptions. For all those girls who manage to 
avoid complications, many others don't - some of whom tragically succumb
 to the immense pressure to enlist in the Army.