It's 1960s vintage and the time spent on the farm (hay-akhzoot in Hebrew) is only three months out of the entire three-year obligatory service, sometimes more depending on your individual "maslool" (course of service)
@@Cabronazosisrael You seem to eat alot of pork, might wanna wash it down with some wine or beer, oh wait you can't it's haram, just like the pork you eat
Guessing volunteer in terms of his MOS especially being a Paratrooper. Also possibly this being in English it’s aimed at Jews in the English speaking world who would volunteer for service in the IDF
I was in the IDF in the 70's and this is not the seventies... more like early 60's or before. Looks so silly and too bad it was mistitled. We were much more modern in the 70's compared to pre 67.
@@Pattern51lover A mitznefet in Hebrew. In my time we didn't have the version they use today. We had a piece of a rubber tire inner tube that you tucked the netting into and the rubber ran around the rim of the helmet. Now it is ingenious what the IDF does with the added camouflage of the loose netting to break up your silhouette. My memory is lacking somewhat, but I don't' think it was netting back then, we used burlap (I think).
@@Pattern51lover There are collecting groups on facebook and years ago there were a few historical reenactors here and there. The IDF used their own locally-made webbing which was similar to the British P-37 in many ways. This cotton webbing was introduced circa mid to late 1950s and was used well into the 1980s by reserves and women recruits. In the late 1970s they introduced a revolutionary one-piece, padded, nylon LBE called simply "efod" which means "vest". This is still in production but now they have much, much, much fancier and comfortable versions.
Looks like they were still using K.98s for rifle instruction.
wny not one of the finest rifles ever made!!
@@keithmoore5306 Not complaining, I love them. Just surprised.
@@tholmes2169 i know and hey as long as they work and you've got them why not use them!
This was the 1960s when the K98 was still used in the reserves and the Uzi had not totally supplanted it.
This is cool showing footage of Israeli soldiers training learning how to defend Israel and their citizens against attacks
The sound effects during parachute practice had me laughing.
It's 1960s vintage and the time spent on the farm (hay-akhzoot in Hebrew) is only three months out of the entire three-year obligatory service, sometimes more depending on your individual "maslool" (course of service)
Join up...just in time for Yom Kippur weeeeeee
Sounds like fun and we can eat some pork too. Gonna get me some nice pork now bye
@@Cabronazosisrael You seem to eat alot of pork, might wanna wash it down with some wine or beer, oh wait you can't it's haram, just like the pork you eat
Oy vey, what’s with the 1970s porn music
1960s, and that's what people listened to back then....
Why is the narrator talking about volunteering? IDF is mandatory, at least for jews.
Guessing volunteer in terms of his MOS especially being a Paratrooper. Also possibly this being in English it’s aimed at Jews in the English speaking world who would volunteer for service in the IDF
I was in the IDF in the 70's and this is not the seventies... more like early 60's or before. Looks so silly and too bad it was mistitled. We were much more modern in the 70's compared to pre 67.
What did you all call the web gear that you used? Was there a model or pattern number? Not a lot of info out there about it.
@@Pattern51lover A mitznefet in Hebrew. In my time we didn't have the version they use today. We had a piece of a rubber tire inner tube that you tucked the netting into and the rubber ran around the rim of the helmet. Now it is ingenious what the IDF does with the added camouflage of the loose netting to break up your silhouette. My memory is lacking somewhat, but I don't' think it was netting back then, we used burlap (I think).
@@Pattern51lover
There are collecting groups on facebook and years ago there were a few historical reenactors here and there.
The IDF used their own locally-made webbing which was similar to the British P-37 in many ways. This cotton webbing was introduced circa mid to late 1950s and was used well into the 1980s by reserves and women recruits.
In the late 1970s they introduced a revolutionary one-piece, padded, nylon LBE called simply "efod" which means "vest". This is still in production but now they have much, much, much fancier and comfortable versions.
Me too, akhi. Nachal, Machzor P"V, June 1986, Gdud 931. How about you?
@@s.marcus3669 202 and eventually at Sirkin and Katzhar
Now it's an army of westernized tiktokers lol
Be all you can be...just in time for Hanukkah!
I thought service in the IDF was compulsory.
It is. The video was directed at young people outside of Israel and for volunteer to live, work and defend on a farming Kibbutz.
It is at 18yo men and women. 2 years in service.
Religious exemption for Rabbi students but many religious Jews do serve .
שלום
@@Nudnik1 Hasidics are too holy for this!
@@johnnyangel9163 Chabad is in IDF so are Breslever both Chassidus
for the regular army this seems to be something special for settlements though!!
Not an admirer of Franco but at least he was aware of the threat of them. Eat some jamon, I know you love it
child killer has a recruitment film? 🤣
Israel 🇮🇱❤🎉
This...was hard to watch. On many levels.
I enjoyed it.
😂😂😂🕺🏻🕺🏻🕺🏻
In Jesus' Name, Amen ✝️✨
Eat jamon and enjoy it
Eat jamon
👎
Ooh they kicked you up pretty bad eh?
@@aeroaero5472 pork on my fork, cow cheese with my beef, sorry you can’t have some because it’s not kosher anyways
@@Cabronazosisrael aaaaaand....we don't actually care lol
@@arne8158 smart
Eat jamon
Eat jamon
Who hurt you?
@@666mrdoctor who hurt you?
@@666mrdoctor pork on my fork