I wish I had a clever trick to tell you on how to achieve rebasing in SVN but I've always avoided manual refreshing of a branch with trunk changes in SVN mainly because of the complications requiring manual cherry picking that jdehaan mentions.
What I generally do instead is follow the practice of merging changes from a branch to the trunk, deleting the branch, and then recreating the branch from the trunk. This allows me to refresh/rebase my feature branch but with the sometimes unfortunate side effect that any prior changes from that branch are now part of the trunk. For this reason I only follow this practice when a feature branch is at a stable and usable point yet I still wish to continue work on that feature in order to further complete some bigger objective.
What I would prefer is that refreshing a branch by merging trunk changes back into a branch not cause subsequent reintegration merges from that branch to pull those rebased revisions during the process. It should be possible to do this based on the merge-info properties but according to what jdehaan states and what I have feared is that doing this still requires cherry picking.
Note that proper rebasing implementation should also be able to take into consideration stair casing examples where a branch is made from another branch.
Update: According to the Subversion documentation it appears that when using the --reintegrate option that Subversion should be able to properly reintegrate work done in a branch in a way that minds any possible refresh merges that may have been done to bring base changes into the branch. Of course this is is technically a little different than rebasing but i think it is similar enough in usage that it could be referred to as rebasing.