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Wednesday, 10 September 2014 00:00

Conscription during War

Written by Soldiersandorder NZ-FR
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We have researched who objected to conscription and refused to fight in the First World War. We came up with a number of key ideas when researching our topic about what type of people refused to fight during the First World War.

—Conscription, which is the compulsory enlistment of people in the military forces, was not popular with all New Zealand people.

—  In 1915, 78 000 men stated that they were not willing to volunteer in New Zealand. —  Campaigns only managed to enlist 30% of those eligible for military service.

Religious objectors

It was not possible for many Christian Pacifists to be exempted from military service 

—  The 1916 Military Service Act added a clause allowing genuine religious objectors to refuse conscription. —  Only the Quakers, Christadelphians and Seventh-day Adventists had said that military service was contrary to “divine revelation”

Socialist objectors

Socialists were an important group of objectors to conscription

—  The Labour Party strongly opposed conscription. They saw war as a way for the rich to become wealthier and believed that opposing conscription was fighting against “militarism and capitalism”.

By Misa Wells.

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Published in Disobedience and Rebellion of Soldiers and the Treatment of Conscientious Objectors in the First World War in France and New Zealand – a comparative historical study. La désobéissance et la rébellion des soldats et le traitement des objecteurs de con
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