CEOs and venture capitalists are among the thousands of reservists being called up to fight.
Israeli soldiers maneuver along the border with Gaza Monday. Hundreds of thousands of reservists have been called up to active duty. Last week, Or Shoval, a 29-year-old Israeli tech start-up CEO, was on holiday in a seaside Egyptian town, celebrating his recent engagement. His 18-month-old medical software start-up was thriving, and he was preparing to fly to the United States for a major health-care conference.
“It’s not just men. There’s women who are being called up, and there’s wives whose husbands are being called up — the disruption is all over,” said Eyal Bino, founding partner of venture capital firm 97212 Ventures. Still “the morale is high in making sure there’s no disruption to services, and also defeating Hamas.”Not all of the tech world supports Israel’s war with Hamas.
Most of the workers being called to reserve duty are ages 21 to 35, Angel says, which is also the prime age of tech workers in Israel. Angel predicts that Israel’s tech sector will have higher percentages of workers absent from their day jobs than other sectors like agriculture.Within his firm’s 30 employees, five — mostly young men — have been called to reserve duty, a number that could grow if the war drags on.
By 1 p.m., David was on a military base, in uniform. The scale of the attack and the mobilization is unlike anything he’s ever seen, he said. Even an older friend who had served in the, when Israel was also taken by surprise by an invasion from Syria and Egypt, told David this time was different.
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