A Knesset Research & Information Center paper found 124 IDF suicides from 2017 through July 2025, noting a significant increase in the number and share of reservists in recent years.By Shmuli Volkin, Jewish Breaking NewsIsrael’s defense establishment is preparing to expand recognition for service-connected suicides, with the IDF expected to treat certain cases involving civilians who take their own lives within two years of discharge as “fallen soldiers.”The shift targets a painful gap that has exploded during the multi-front war sparked by Hamas’s Oct. 7 massacre: fighters who return home carrying invisible wounds, only to collapse after the uniform comes off.Under current Israeli law, formal “fallen soldier” status generally hinges on death during regular service or active reserve duty, leaving families in a brutal gray zone when a death occurs afterward.That gray zone became a national flashpoint in the case of reservist medic Roi Wasserstein, whose family was initially told he would not be recognized as a fallen soldier because he was not on active duty when he died.The backlash pushed senior leadership to examine exceptions and potential legislation, and the IDF announced a professional panel—bringing together mental health experts, legal advisers, casualty officers, and Defense Ministry representatives—to reassess how the system treats suicides linked to military service even when they happen off-duty.“This is not a physical injury; it is a wound of the soul,” a family member said at the time, capturing what many Israeli households have been living with since the war began.The numbers explain the urgency. A Knesset Research & Information Center paper found 124 IDF suicides from 2017 through July 2025, noting a significant increase in the number and share of reservists in recent years.It also reported 279 suicide attempts documented from January 2024 through July 2025—about seven attempts for every suicide recorded in the IDF in that period.The IDF has publicly acknowledged the strain, saying it has expanded mental health staffing and access, set up a 24/7 assistance hotline framework, increased commander training to spot distress, and broadened trauma care for discharged soldiers alongside internal investigative processes after suspected suicides.If implemented as described, the new recognition approach would do more than adjust definitions—it would reshape how the state stands behind bereaved families.In Israel, “fallen soldier” status is not symbolism; it is also a gateway to formal commemoration, structured support, and a public message that the country sees these deaths as part of the war’s toll, not private tragedies to be handled alone.If you or someone you know is struggling, in Israel ERAN (Emotional First Aid) can be reached by dialing 1201.The post Israel moves to recognize service-linked suicides as fallen soldiers after military discharge appeared first on World Israel News.