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There are no epic battles or heroic deaths in Talya Lavie’s debut directorial film, Zero Motivation, which follows a unit of young Israeli women serving out their mandatory two-year Army service ...
Among women, the decrease is even ... An internal survey conducted by the IDF Behavioral Sciences Center indicates a decrease in the motivation of Israeli youth to enlist in combat positions ...
IDF stands by integration of women, after spate of condemnations Army spokesman Moti Almoz praises female soldiers’ motivation and desire to contribute, says they are fully part of people’s army ...
FEMALE TANK CREWS are deployed along the border as part of a pilot program to assess whether or not to integrate women into the IDF’s Armored Corps (photo credit: MARC ISRAEL SELLEM) By ANNA ...
Talya Lavie’s first feature film “Zero Motivation” is a satirical look at the lives of three young women doing mandatory service in the Israeli Army. It has been a hit in Israel. It is now ...
Over the weekend I finally got around to watching “Zero Motivation,” the 2014 IDF tragicomedy by Talia Lavie ... cliché of Israeli women as somehow immune to the petty concerns of American ...
(JNS) Sixty-one graduates of a new version of the Israel Defense Forces’ Shlav Bet (Phase Two) program were officially sworn in on July 1st at Camp Dotan near Pardes Hanna. The graduates, women ...
A new IDF combat platoon lets religious women join the fight while keeping the faith Spurred by October 7 and bolstered by shifting mores, an all-female force is taking shape within the army ...
Female conscripts in the Israeli army, employed as office clerks, ... 'Zero Motivation' review: Female Israeli soldiers slack off in this amiable comedy. Updated: Jan. 15, 2015, 1:07 p.m.
“Zero Motivation,” which won the best narrative feature award at this year’s Tribeca Film Festival, is an IDF version of “M* A* S* H.” Apparently, not everyone in the Israeli military is ...
Inspirational quote by this inspiring Israeli woman: “I think that the struggle for women’s equality needs to be waged not only by women but by men and women together.” Ruth Dayan to Haaretz, 2013. 9.