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Hacksaw Ridge (2016, Mel Gibson)
23/11/2025
CCW advocates for the rights of conscience, opposes military conscription, and serves all conscientious objectors to war, including military

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ISRAEL AND THE OCCUPIED PALESTINIAN TERRITORY: RELEASE CONSCIENTIOUS OBJECTOR
18-year-oldĀ Yuval PelegĀ is currently serving a 30-day sentence at Neve Tzedek military prison for refusing to enlist in the Israeli military over its involvement in the genocide in Gaza and the unlawful occupation of the Occupied Palestinian Territory (OPT). Israeli authorities must immediately and unconditionally release Peleg and other conscientious objectors, who are prisoners of conscience.
Email your message now!
Send a letter to IDF Chief of General Staff, Lieutenant General Eyal Zamir
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PLEASE TAKE ACTION AS SOON AS POSSIBLE UNTIL: April 7, 2026
On this day in 1945, a Seventh-Day Adventist engages in an action that would earn him the Medal of Honor. He was the only conscientious objector to receive a Medal of Honor for his service during World War II.
Doss, of course, objected to the term āconscientious objector,ā right from the beginning. He preferred āconscientious cooperatorā or ānoncombatant.ā After all, he intended to help the Army in any way that his religion allowed.
He worked to get himself assigned as a medic ā then to *stay* assigned as a medic when officers kept trying to transfer him to infantry.
Indeed, there was constant conflict between Doss and the Army. He refused to serve on the Sabbath, unless it was a critical health need. He was always asking for passes to go to church. He would not carry a gun or even train with one. He knew that heād never kill another human being.
The other soldiers couldnāt understand him. One of his fellow soldiers would later observe that Doss āwas immediately branded with a Scarlet Letter, so to speak.ā No one wanted to be with him. Some thought he was faking to get out of service. Others assumed he didnāt love his country. When he got to his knees and said his prayers at night in the barracks, soldiers would sometimes throw their shoes at him. And yet Doss never wavered in his beliefs.
āI knew if I ever once compromised,ā he said, āI was going to be in trouble because if you can compromise once, you can compromise again.ā
At one point, Doss had an opportunity to get out of the Army, but the discharge that was offered would have released him on grounds of mental instability. Doss refused to accept the discharge. He wasnāt mentally unstable just because he wanted to go to church on the Sabbath!
Finally, after years of battling the U.S. Army, Doss was dispatched to the South Pacific. He initially went to Guam, where the fighting was horrific.
āAt night, thatās when Desmond done a lot of his work, was at nightā one soldier later described. āHeād go out and crawl around amongst our boys and see if they wasnāt dead heād take care of them, drag them back. . . . He wasnāt supposed to do it at night.ā
Doss was warned that he could be mistakenly shot by friendly fire if he continued these night-time efforts. He just kept going anyway. Those boys needed his help, and he was there for anyone who was wounded and in need.
The actions that earned Doss a Medal of Honor occurred between April 29 and May 21, 1945, during the Battle of Okinawa. Americans were fighting for control of an escarpment known as Hacksaw Ridge. The 400-foot high cliff had been heavily fortified by the Japanese.
Dossās Medal citation contains a long list of all the soldiers that he saved during those days, but one notable rescue stands out.
Doss was then at the top of the cliff. Americans had been attacked and dozens lay wounded. Doss remained in this dangerous zone, carrying injured American soldiers to the edge of the cliff, one by one. He lowered each man on a rope down to friendly hands below. When one soldier reached safety, Doss would pray out loud, āLord, please help me get one more.ā Then he ran back into enemy fire, looking for another wounded American to save.
One witness described what he saw: āTime after time, I saw Doss go back into the enemy, into the Japanese, and pick up wounded and bring them there and let them down on these ropes . . . and the bullets were flying like bees or something. It was just miraculous. I couldnāt understand how he could do this. . . . It was as if God had his hand on his shoulder.ā
One Japanese soldier later reported that he repeatedly had Doss in his sights, but his gun jammed every time he tried to pull the trigger and kill Doss.
Doss saved at least 75 men during this effort.
The conclusion to the story is perhaps appropriate. A final assault was planned for May 5, but that happened to be the Sabbath. Doss was the only medic left in the company by then. He was injured, but he intended to stay and help. Nevertheless, he still needed to respect his Sabbath, so he asked for a delay while he took time to pray and read his Bible.
The American officers agreed to Dossās request. On that day, Americans finally seized Hacksaw Ridge for good.
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Gentle reminder: History posts are copyright Ā© 2013-2026 by Tara Ross. I appreciate it when you use the shar e feature instead of cutting/pasting.
I am posting the following from my Facebook post, so sorry it is not all perfectly lined up and correct. Summarized, ICE has far too much power, Trump is a tyrant/dictator and people are finally reā¦
If you are a marine or any form of law enforcement beingĀ āforcedā to participate against the people of Los Angeles, please note, you do have a right to object, under conscientious objector status. Ā Trump is not just another president; he is a tyrant; a racist tyrant. Stand up and do the right thing. Call the above number and join the people. Please.Ā