| Not since the days before  the War of Independence – when David Ben-Gurion and  Menachem Begin scoured the globe seeking members of the Diaspora to  fight in the  War of Independence – has an organization proactively recruited  non-Israelis to  serve in the nation’s military. 
 Aish Machal decided to fill this  void by  establishing a full-enlistment army volunteer program for non-Israeli  citizens.
 
 This month, the first 20 participants began a six-week  program  of rigorous physical activity, ulpan, classes and excursions focused on  Jewish  history, Jewish identity and Zionism in order to prepare for IDF  service.
 
 “With the creation of JoinTheIDF.com we have the  first-ever  pro-active recruitment effort for the IDF,” said Jay M. Shultz,  executive  chairman of Aish Machal. “It’s amazing that no one has actively  recruited for  something this important before.”
 
 By connecting with other  Diaspora-recruiting organizations, like Birthright, and Jewish  organizations on  college campuses, like Hillel, Aish Machal plans on reaching tens of  thousands  of young Jews per year to connect with with their homeland. A lone  soldier  center that will include dorms in Tel Aviv is also in the works.
 
 Although   the program currently comprises only boys, Aish Machal says it plans on  hosting  girl groups in the near future. The organization not only focuses on  bringing  young Jews to Israel for military duty, but also encourages other types  of  national civil service, like Sherut Leumi.
 
 And Aish Machal has  just made  history again – by having the first-ever male from the Diaspora to sign  up for  Sherut Leumi.
 
 “It’s not about trying to get them to just serve in  the  army,” Shultz said. “It’s about substantively serving Israel and  connecting to  our identity as a people.”
 
 Most 18-year-olds graduating from high  school  are not ready for college, Shultz says. By spending a year serving the  Israeli  community – whether through the IDF or Sherut Leumi – young Jews not  only gain a  sense of belonging to their homeland, but also the greater maturity they  need  for college.
 
 “Israel is no longer a welfare state,” says Shultz.  “We are  at a time in history where the Jews of the Diaspora need Israel more  than Israel  needs them.
 
 This program can do a tremendous amount of good in  building  up our next generation internationally, both as Jews and as contributing  members  of society – regardless of whether they stay in Israel after service, or   not.
 
 “Serving Israel should not just be seen as a responsibility;  it  should be seen as a noble honor.”
 
 The key problem for many young  Jews has  not been their willingness to serve Israel, but rather an inability to  cut  through the Israeli government’s bureaucracy.
 
 Steve Rieber, a  24-year-old  from Los Angeles, had been trying to enter the August draft for the past   two-and-half months before he finally found Aish Machal.
 
 “I had  been  looking around, office to office, to sign up for the army,” Rieber said.  “They  sent me here and they sent me there, and it got so ridiculous. I  eventually ran  into a buddy of mine who was joining [Aish Machal] and he told me to  join.
 
 I was able to cut through all the bureaucracy.”
 
 Entering the  program, however, seems to be the only part of it that is easy. Aish  Machal  recruits wake at 5:30 a.m. every morning and are immediately forced to  do  physical exercise.
 
 If they are caught not speaking Hebrew, they must do  more push-ups. The recruits, however, do not seem to mind. On the  contrary; they  have been waiting – some of them for their whole lives – to serve.
 
 “Since  I was a little kid, I was fascinated by the Israeli soldiers,” said  Yakov Kroll,  a 20-year-old American who studies at community college in L.A. “I never  thought  twice about it, I always knew I would do this. And, honestly, I could  not be  happier right now.” Motivated by their love of Israel and a sense of  duty, these  young men came to Israel already feeling an attachment toward the  country. Asked  why he decided join the IDF, as opposed to the US army, Rieber pointed  to his  Jewish heritage.
 
 “I’m an American, but at the same time, I’m also a Jew,”  he said. “So if I’m going to take a bullet for somebody, when you get  down to  it, I’m going to take it for a place I’m more connected to.”
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