We work with amazing people to bring about positive and lasting change in some of the world's poorest places.
Noam Chayut is no ordinary Israeli soldier. Since leaving the Israeli Defense force, he’s joined Breaking the Silence – an organisation of former combat veterans that talk about how they treated Palestinians as part of a brutal occupation that violated ethical norms.
Noam Chayut was born 31 years after the foundation of the modern state of Israel and 12 years after the Israeli occupation of Gaza and the West Bank.

As a child he remembers his father taking part in military action against the Palestinian people who lived in these areas.
“When I was 10, my father and his comrades in a reserve duty unit forced innocent Palestinians out of their homes and shops and, as a form of collective punishment, sent them to clean the streets of graffiti and placards that were calling for resistance to Israeli rule as part of the first Palestinian uprising,” he recalls.
Collective punishment was something which Noam was to become familiar with during his own time in the Israeli army, which coincided with the second Palestinian uprising.
“In one month of mass riots we killed 100 Palestinians and many more were wounded by live ammunition,” he says. “One of our main missions was to ‘demonstrate our presence’ in Palestinian villages and cities. This usually meant entering residential areas during either the day or night and throwing stun grenades, shooting in the air or at water tanks or wherever, throwing tear gas grenades, and simply creating noise and fear.”
The policy of creating fear led to homes being destroyed, people being killed and curfews being imposed.

Since 2004, Noam has been involved with Breaking the Silence, an organisation which collects testimonies from former Israeli soldiers. To date they have over 700 such testimonies, which they use to inform the Israeli public of the realities of Israeli occupation of Palestinian lands.
The organisation aims to “stimulate public debate about the price paid for a reality in which young soldiers face a civilian population on a daily basis and are engaged in the control of that population’s everyday life.”
Noam is in Ireland this week to take part in a series of meetings organised by Trócaire and Christian Aid, as we both support Breaking the Silence's work. He will take part in a series of public events in Belfast, Derry and Dublin to which all members of the public are invited.
Tuesday 20 September - see Noam in Belfast & Derry:
Ulster Hall, Bedford Street, Belfast, 1:00pm – 2:00pm.
Book launch and panel event in Verbal Arts Centre, Derry. 7.30pm
Thursday 22 September - see Noam in Dublin:
Public talk, Tailors’ Hall, Back Lane, Dublin 8. 6.30pm (Chaired by Proinsias de Rossa).
PHOTO AT TOP: By Mark Condren. An Israeli Jewish soldier praying in front of the Wailing Wall – a holy Jewish shrine.

Comments for this post:
Great talk, well done
As someone who has seen both sides of the conflict first hand, I found this very interesting and a great insight into noam (and many other IDF soldier's experiences. Would like to have a listen of the audio recording, where is it available?
Breaking the Silence. Ulster Hall, Belfast
My compliments to Noam for an excellent input at the Ulster Hall yesterday. He is very courageous; it is never easy to step out of one's own community and embrace 'the other'. This is what BtS has done. We had some challenging questioning at yesterday's session which led to a very lively event. Good luck with the rest of your trip. Eithne McNulty
Breaking Trocaire's silence
Eithne, further to the previous posting, can you point me to Trocaire literature and campaigning regarding Palestinian breaches of international law? Does Trocaire partner any Palestinian organisations which expose Palestinian breaches and which campaign internationally on these issues? Trocaire's commitment to "breaking the silence" seems a little one sided - should we also not hear about the suicide bomber, the random missile and mortar fire into Israeli towns, the commitment to international law enshrined in the Hamas charter, for instance?.
Breaking the Silence, Ulster Hall, Belfast
Agreed Eithne, Noam was an impressive speaker. However, the point was made at the meeting that a Palestinian who wanted to talk about his former conduct as a fighter for Hamas or Islamic Jihad would need to be a lot braver than Noam to tour the world talking about missiles launched from schools, ambulances used to transport weapons, incitement of children as young as 8 to martyrdom. If he did this he could never return home. Noam was good enough to acknowledge this. Can you point to any Trocaire literature or activities that highlights this particular point?