Canadian 'lone soldiers' fighting with Israeli forces in Gaza

April 10, 2024
Issue 
Protest rally in Toronto
While Canadians are recruited to the IDF, organisers of Palestine solidarity actions face arrest. Photo: Sikander Iqbal (CC By SA 4.0 DEED)

The Canadian settler colonial state is deeply connected to its settler-colonial partner Israel and deeply implicated in the Israeli state鈥檚 occupation and genocide in Gaza 鈥 from shipments of military equipment to financial support and beyond.

One aspect of this complicity that has received too little attention is the recruitment of Canadians to fight in the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), and the Canadian state鈥檚 refusal to hold those who serve in, or recruit to, the IDF accountable. Incredibly, neither Global Affairs Canada, the Department of National Defence, nor Public Safety Canada keep track of .

Toronto police raided the homes of activists, and made 10 arrests on November 22, in relation to a Palestine solidarity action held at an Indigo Books store. Indigo has long been the target of boycotts because of the actions of its CEO Heather Reisman and her husband Gerry Schwartz. Reisman and Schwartz 鈥 who control 68% of the company鈥檚 assets 鈥 established the HESEG Foundation, which provides academic scholarships and stipends to foreigners, known as 鈥淟one Soldiers鈥, who serve with the IDF.

Canadians for Justice and Peace in the Middle East (CJPME): 鈥淓ach year, the HESEG foundation rewards hundreds of 鈥楲one Soldiers鈥 with more than CA$3 million worth of scholarships for further academic studies in Israel.鈥

Writer Naomi Klein has that the foundation provides 鈥渁ll kinds of perks as a reward for military service鈥 with the IDF. She also that HESEG 鈥渋s listed as the first source of scholarships on the 鈥楧raft IDF鈥 website鈥.

Critics argue that these actions put HESEG in violation of Canada鈥檚 Foreign Enlistment Act 鈥 which prohibits recruitment into the armed forces of a foreign state. Instead of holding HESEG accountable, the Canadian government has granted them tax-deductible status.

The bookshop action should have brought scrutiny to groups recruiting for the IDF. Instead, it sparked a hate-motivated mischief investigation into the protesters.

Yet, the recruitment of Canadians to the IDF goes well beyond the case of HESEG. Canadians are currently serving with the IDF as it undertakes its genocidal war in Gaza. Several groups based in Canada as well as the Israeli consulate in Toronto are implicated. It should be a national scandal 鈥 and could be, if it were receiving proper coverage in the mainstream media.

Canadian fighters in the IDF

It has been that as of 2017, there were around 230 Canadians serving in the IDF. It is not known publicly how many of these were recruited through means that violate the Foreign Enlistment Act.

Ironically, the Act was passed in 1937 to prohibit the recruiting of Canadian volunteers to fight fascism in the Spanish Civil War.

It is that Israel recruits about 7000 foreign youth annually to serve in the IDF as lone soldiers. In 2020, about 75 of them were Canadian. Canada has allowed IDF recruitment for decades, despite the Act being on the books for almost 90 years. Critics the state even encourages it.

If there was any doubt about the role of these soldiers in the Zionist occupation project, Israel鈥檚 President Reuven Rivlin them as 鈥渢rue Zionists鈥. Jewish Agency Chairman Isaac Herzog them as 鈥渁 true example of what Zionism is all about鈥.

Rather than hold them accountable, however, Canadian officials have celebrated Canadian lone soldiers. The Canadian embassy in Tel Aviv even hosted a party for them in January聽2020. The event was organised by Ambassador Deborah Lyons, who told The Jerusalem Post she 鈥渨anted to show the appreciation and care felt by the embassy for the 'lone soldiers' who left their homes to serve in the Israeli army".

鈥淐anadian lone soldiers are a particularly special group. I know some of the parents of these kids and I wanted to reach out and let them know that their Canadian family of the embassy is here if they want to talk hockey and a home cooked meal.鈥

Media complicit

Since Israel鈥檚 latest genocidal assault on Gaza began in October, Canadian media have run puff pieces profiling Canadians serving with the IDF. broadcast a January 2020 feature on Noy Leyb, a 30-year-old Israeli-Canadian reservist 鈥 who was born in Calgary but was living in New York when he signed up.

Leyb left Canada at 18 to join the Israeli army in 2009. He CBC that since finishing active service, he has continued to return to Israel once or twice a year to train as a reservist. Leyb trained as a machine gun operator and described his training as 鈥渟erious, but it's also fun鈥.

did a piece on Temima Silver, a 21-year-old born and raised in Ottawa, who moved to Israel in 2020 to join the IDF as a lone soldier. She was released from service last year, but in October responded to a call for members of her former platoon to voluntarily return to duty.

featured Michael Zenou, a 32-year-old Toronto-born Israeli reservist. Zenou was already on the frontlines in Gaza鈥檚 north when interviewed and admitted he had been 鈥渋n a gunfight鈥 that week 鈥渂etween a unit of eight Hamas terrorists who were all killed鈥.

The featured families of Canadians serving in the current assault on Gaza. They spotlighted 27-year-old Eden Philip, who left for Israel immediately the assault began. He also got his start as a lone soldier. His younger brother, Benjamin who was born in Montreal, left for Israel on December 18.

Palestine solidarity activists are asking if these fighters will face any legal consequences for their participation in genocide and potentially war crimes. IDF veteran Oren Medicks that about 95% of those who served in the occupied Palestinian territories 鈥渨ere involved, directly or indirectly, in the commission of war crimes鈥.

Recruitment

As reported by the , despite allegations by social justice groups in 2020 that IDF online recruitment ads posted by the Israeli consulate in Toronto were unlawful, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) refused to investigate, instead launching a 鈥渞eview鈥 into the matter. In June last year, it announced that the 鈥渇ile鈥 was concluded and no one would be charged. The ads invited young people to meet with an IDF representative at the Consulate if they wished to join up. This invitation extended beyond Israelis doing compulsory military service.

Critics are skeptical of any RCMP investigation into the activities of Israeli forces in Canada given its connections to the IDF, including sending officers to the occupied West Bank to serve alongside Israeli troops.

In another case, a criminal charge against Toronto-based organisation Sar-El Canada, which recruits 鈥渘on-combat鈥 volunteers with the IDF, was withdrawn in December 2022. Three months earlier, an order had been issued against the group, compelling it to attend court to respond to allegations that it had violated section 11 of the Foreign Enlistment Act.

The case 鈥渢hat Sar-El Canada acted as an intermediary to recruit or induce individuals to volunteer in a non-combatant role with the Israeli military. It is further alleged that once in Israel volunteers would reside on military bases, wear military uniforms, and complete tasks that would otherwise be assigned to soldiers. These tasks allegedly included (but were not limited to) packing food rations or medical kits, cleaning tanks, painting helmets, radio repairs, and gas mask refurbishment.鈥

Sar-El Canada makes public appeals for 鈥溾 via their website and their volunteers have been featured in the mainstream media

Accountability

CJPME started a campaign In January to make Canadians who serve with the IDF accountable. They to Justice Minister Arif Virani on January 18 calling on the government 鈥渢o investigate Canadian nationals who are serving or volunteering with the Israeli military in its war on Gaza鈥.

In addition to pushing the Canadian government to 鈥渄iscourage Canadian involvement in the Israeli military鈥, CJPME made several recommendations, including that the government warn Canadians 鈥渢hat serving or volunteering with the Israeli military may make them criminally liable under the Crimes Against Humanity and War Crimes Act鈥, and ensure that Canadians 鈥渞eturning from foreign military service鈥 are interviewed in detail by border agents.

It called on the government to 鈥淸p]ublicly investigate the HESEG Foundation for Lone Soldiers for breaching section 11(1) of Canada鈥檚 Foreign Enlistment Act鈥 and called for an investigation 鈥渦nder [the governmnet鈥檚] War Crimes Program鈥 into the participation of Canadians in Israel鈥檚 war.

It also recommended that any investigative findings are shared with the International Criminal Court.

It is highly unlikely the government 鈥 even in this period of open genocide 鈥 will act on these recommendations. Hopefully, however, this campaign will raise awareness of the Canadian contributions to genocide and war crimes.

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