WHY? BECAUSE IT'S THERE. Keeping up with the news these days can be a mountainous task. But a subscription to the JEWISH NEWS can increase your knowledge — of issues concerning our Jewish community — and lift your spirit. For subscriptions Call 354-6060 says, "I think that women are often a little smarter." Sarah Promislow, 19, for- merly of Regina, Saskat- chewan, would agree. Sarah, who emigrated to Israel with her family in 1974, has been in the Israeli Air Force since January. Her job is to under- take efficiency studies at bases throughout the country. "I'm very lucky," says Sarah, whose 21-year old brother, Baruch, is also a soldier. "Basic training wasn't too bad, and my pres- ent jobds actually easier than I'd expected. Some girls work from 7 in the morning till 11 at night." After her two years of mili- tary service, Sarah plans to travel and attend a universi- ty — "part in Israel, part in Canada" — and she is grate- ful for the "breathing space" she has during her stint in the army to think about what she really wants to do, "instead of jumping from course to course." "I also think serving in the army is important because it gives me a chance to do some- thing for my country and to meet people from all kinds of backgrounds, people I might not meet otherwise." Sarah was particularly struck during a summer visit to Canada last year by the relative immaturity of Cana- dian teenagers when com- pared with their Israeli peers. "It's a basic difference in outlook," says Sarah, whose 22-year old sister, Rachel, served in an army unit that combined military duties with cooperative farming on a kibbutz. "The army matures you, it demands things of you. I consider it a very valuable experience." Israel is the only Western country to draft its young women, excluding those who are married (although they may volunteer for service). Religious women are also ex- empt, although many commit themselves instead to a period of national service for up to two years — working in hospitals, homes for the elder- ly, development towns and centers for new immigrants. "I understand that it might be difficult for a girl from a sheltered religious home to cope with the army, and if religious girls choose to do national service instead of go- ing into the army, they are forgiven," explains a secular female conscript. "But those who do not do their`'-share make the rest of us angry. live in the same country and we must share the good with the bad." There have been rare, well- publicized cases involving young women who claimed exemption on religious grounds and who were later found to be non-Observant. They were tried, fined, and promptly drafted. The great majority, how- ever, simply accept their first call-up at the age of 16 for the medical, IQ and aptitude test- ing that will determine the tasks they will be given on en- try to the army when they finish school two years later. A few, particularly girls wishing to study medicine, are granted deferments until they complete their studies. Unlike their male counter- parts, who continue to be called up for up to two months a year until the age of 55, women do reserve duty only until the age of 24,,or un- til they are married. "I think most girls look for- ward to the army," says a young woman soldier who is just completing her initial two-year service. "From childhood, we know that we'll have to do army service and we've been prepared for it. "Of course, being in the army is hard — you can do a lot of things in two years — but it is a question of duty and responsibility. If I don't do it, who will?" The person who helps the young women cope with their new responsibilities is Briga- dier-General Amira Dotan, 8, head of the women's divi- sion\ of the Israel Defense Forces. She is alsolesponsible for many of the advances made by women soldiers in cent years. But General Dotan is not yet satisfied. She pinpoints slow-to-change attitudes in the army hier- archy, Israel's education system and the attitude of women themselves — "the Jewish mothers who don't want to see their daughters Continued on next page 6 3',