图书馆 图书馆
搜索

Kurdipedia是世界上最大的为库尔德信息来源!


Search Options





高级搜索      键盘


搜索
高级搜索
图书馆
库尔德人的名字
大事年表
来源
历史
用户集合
活动
搜索帮助吗?
出版
Video
分类
随机项目!
发送
发送文章
发送图片
Survey
你的反馈
联系
我们需要什么样的信息!
标准的属性
条款使用
项目质量
工具
大约
Kurdipedia Archivists
关于我们的文章!
添加到您的网站Kurdipedia
添加/删除电子邮件
访客统计
商品统计
字体转换器
日历转换器
语言和方言的页面
键盘
方便的链接
Kurdipedia extension for Google Chrome
Cookies
语言
کوردیی ناوەڕاست
کرمانجی - کوردیی سەروو
Kurmancî - Kurdîy Serû
هەورامی
Zazakî
English
Française
Deutsch
عربي
فارسی
Türkçe
Nederlands
Svenska
Español
Italiano
עברית
Pусский
Norsk
日本人
中国的
Հայերեն
Ελληνική
لەکی
Azərbaycanca
我的帐户
登录
会员!
忘记密码!
搜索 发送 工具 语言 我的帐户
高级搜索
图书馆
库尔德人的名字
大事年表
来源
历史
用户集合
活动
搜索帮助吗?
出版
Video
分类
随机项目!
发送文章
发送图片
Survey
你的反馈
联系
我们需要什么样的信息!
标准的属性
条款使用
项目质量
大约
Kurdipedia Archivists
关于我们的文章!
添加到您的网站Kurdipedia
添加/删除电子邮件
访客统计
商品统计
字体转换器
日历转换器
语言和方言的页面
键盘
方便的链接
Kurdipedia extension for Google Chrome
Cookies
کوردیی ناوەڕاست
کرمانجی - کوردیی سەروو
Kurmancî - Kurdîy Serû
هەورامی
Zazakî
English
Française
Deutsch
عربي
فارسی
Türkçe
Nederlands
Svenska
Español
Italiano
עברית
Pусский
Norsk
日本人
中国的
Հայերեն
Ελληνική
لەکی
Azərbaycanca
登录
会员!
忘记密码!
        
 kurdipedia.org 2008 - 2024
 大约
 随机项目!
 条款使用
 Kurdipedia Archivists
 你的反馈
 用户集合
 大事年表
 活动 - Kurdipedia
 帮助
新项目
统计属性
文章 518,328
图片 105,505
书籍 19,418
相关文件 97,443
Video 1,395
传记
塔拉巴尼
的地方
迪亚巴克尔
的地方
埃尔比勒
图像和说明
正在接受割礼的七岁少女,库尔德斯坦
Plight of Yazidi survivors continues, their voices unheard
小组: 文章 | 文章语言: English
Share
Facebook0
Twitter0
Telegram0
LinkedIn0
WhatsApp0
Viber0
SMS0
Facebook Messenger0
E-Mail0
Copy Link0
排名项目
优秀
非常好
平均
添加到我的收藏
关于这个项目,您的评论!
项目历史
Metadata
RSS
所选项目相关的图像搜索在谷歌!
搜索在谷歌选定的项目!
کوردیی ناوەڕاست0
Kurmancî - Kurdîy Serû0
عربي0
فارسی0
Türkçe0
עברית0
Deutsch0
Español0
Française0
Italiano0
Nederlands0
Svenska0
Ελληνική0
Azərbaycanca0
Fins0
Norsk0
Pусский0
Հայերեն0
中国的0
日本人0

The survivors of ISIS captivity

The survivors of ISIS captivity
Lazghine Ya'qoube

The absolute aim of the Islamic State (ISIS) was not only to control land and spread terror, but to eradicate the Yazidi minority for the benefit of the caliphate they were consolidating.
The 2014 ruthless genocidal campaign to eliminate the Yazidi culture by a system of sexual slavery in which women were routinely and persistently traded, with their bodies assaulted and violated in the most brutal ways.
The highest religious authority of the Yazidis, Khurto Hajji Ismael, known otherwise as Baba Sheikh, responded to ISIS’ brutal acts against the community and made an unprecedented call for family re-unification on February 6, 2015, stating that all Yazidis who were coerced into ISIS, both men and women, remain untarnished and should be welcomed back into the community after they were rescued from the hands of the terror group.
ISIS controlled swathes of Iraq and Syria in 2014 but it was territorially defeated in 2017 and 2019 respectively. However, that did not put an end to the dilemma of Yazidis.
While Yazidi survivors live in internally displaced persons (IDPs) camps that lack basic day-to-day needs, many ISIS affiliates and suspects live comfortably in Europe and elsewhere around the world.
The survivors of ISIS captivity, Yazidi activists, and individuals have done a lot of work for the community. However, a lot more needs to be done to find those who remain missing.
In April 2019, the Yazidi Supreme Spiritual Council issued a more important though short-lived decree saying the community would accept children born to mothers who were raped by ISIS militants, clearing the way for hundreds of women to return home.
Theologically, Yazidism is an endogamous faith that requires its members to marry from within their own community but the decree issued by Yazidi Supreme Spiritual Council was based on humanitarian grounds.
However, under pressure from Yazidi traditionalists and political groups, the decree was retracted three days later – women survivors and children kidnapped by the militant group were welcomed back to the community, but there was no place for the children whose father was an ISIS member.
This presented women intended to return home with a stark choice: abandon their children or remain in an everlasting exile. By all accounts, the Yazidi genocide is continuing.
Statistics on the number of abductees and returnees are held by the Office of Kidnapped Yazidis in Duhok, yet without knowing the exact number of Yazidis killed by ISIS, it is impossible to know the exact number of those still missing.
Many of the missing, particularly men and older boys, are assumed to be dead. Others, mostly women, are still held captive in Syria. Hundreds are believed to be kept inside the al-Hol camp run by the Kurdish- led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF).
But the question that poses itself is why do Yazidi girls and women refuse to reveal their identity and prefer this new medieval type of life to the prospect of starting a new one in a different country? There are two basic reasons for that:
The first is that most of the girls were abducted when they were around four to five years old and were subjected to ISIS indoctrination over the past seven years. Coercively dislocated, many of them have forgotten that they are Yazidis.
ISIS turned children against their culture, pulling them away from their families and relatives. They have been significantly impacted by the militant group and are brainwashed as they have spent their early and crucial years of life under the so-called caliphate.
With the specific intent of erasing Yazidis, ISIS fighters moved captivated Yazidis as far away as possible from their homelands to different parts across Iraq and Syria. They took them to areas where ISIS ideologists and Sharia law jurists gave lectures about how Yazidis were “infidels” and that they would not be accepted into the community if they return.
The profound psychological impact of seven years of captivity and the loss of family members is sensed in the community. A growing suicide rate is one sign of how difficult the returnees are finding it to reintegrate.
Mothers are not willing to abandon their children as they are well aware of the taboos engulfing the community that rejects marriage to non-Yazidis. Rape and impregnation by non-Yazidis is seen as a harsh hit to the Yazidi bloodline.
The public and ferocious stoning to death in 2007 of Du'a Khalil Aswad is evocative. Khalil had eloped with a Muslim and instinctively converted to Islam.
Mother-child segregation is a huge stumbling stone in the way of full re-integration of Yazidis. Mothers were falsely told that they would be allowed to visit their beloved ones, but they never dared to talk about them.
There are some exceptional cases of abandonment where mothers left their children behind as they viewed them as an unbearable reminder of being brutalized and raped by ISIS members. However, the vast majority do not want to leave their flesh behind.
The commodification of Yazidi women and girls left scars on individuals and the community alike. Some women and girls were sold and re-sold individually or collectively. Such dehumanizing acts were perpetrated strategically to destroy the individual and tear apart the group.
Physically and emotionally scarred by long years of abuse they seem unable to undergo new transformation. Psychologically, these women are destroyed, while culturally they are rejected.
The Iraqi Parliament, after prolonged debate, passed in March 2021 a law, legally recognizing ISIS crimes against Yazidis as genocide and mandating, among others, a decent life for female survivors.
Seemingly ground-breaking, the pompous law was too narrow to address the needs of the people in question, notably the fate of the children born to ISIS fighters.
Strikingly, in the very same month, nine Yazidi mothers were reportedly reunited with their twelve babies who were in an orphanage inside Syria. The secret operation was carried out at the Syrian Iraqi Faishkhabur-Semalka border crossing.
It seems, though strange, that after long years of family loss and dismemberment, many Yazidi girls and women now feel the comfort and protection of the new culture they unwillingly entered and they do not wish to leave.

Lazghine Ya'qoube is a translator and researcher focusing on the modern history of Mesopotamia, with a special focus on Yazidi and Assyrian affairs in Turkey, Syria and Iraq.[1]
此项目已被写入(English)的语言,点击图标,以在原来的语言打开的项目!
This item has been written in (English) language, click on icon to open the item in the original language!
此产品已被浏览1,384
HashTag
来源
[1] | کوردیی ناوەڕاست | www.rudaw.net/
挂钩项目: 5
小组: 文章
文章语言: English
Publication date: 04-07-2022 (2 年份的)
Original Language: 英语
Publication Type: Born-digital
书: 人权
党: ISIS
Technical Metadata
项目质量: 99%
99%
添加( هەژار کامەلا 10-07-2022
本文已被审查并发布( زریان عەلی )on10-07-2022
此产品最近更新( زریان عەلی ):10-07-2022
URL
此产品根据Kurdipedia的美元尚未敲定!
此产品已被浏览1,384
Attached files - Version
类型 Version 编者名称
照片文件 1.0.198 KB 10-07-2022 هەژار کامەلاهـ.ک.
Kurdipedia是世界上最大的为库尔德信息来源!
图像和说明
正在接受割礼的七岁少女,库尔德斯坦

Actual
传记
塔拉巴尼
20-10-2013
هاوڕێ باخەوان
塔拉巴尼
的地方
迪亚巴克尔
20-10-2013
هاوڕێ باخەوان
迪亚巴克尔
的地方
埃尔比勒
20-10-2013
هاوڕێ باخەوان
埃尔比勒
图像和说明
正在接受割礼的七岁少女,库尔德斯坦
20-10-2013
هاوڕێ باخەوان
正在接受割礼的七岁少女,库尔德斯坦
新项目
统计属性
文章 518,328
图片 105,505
书籍 19,418
相关文件 97,443
Video 1,395
Kurdipedia是世界上最大的为库尔德信息来源!
图像和说明
正在接受割礼的七岁少女,库尔德斯坦
Folders
的地方 - 普罗旺斯 - 北库尔德斯坦 的地方 - 广场 - 城市 的地方 - 城市 - Amed 的地方 - 方言 - 库尔德 - 巴迪尼 传记 - 党 - K. D. P. 传记 - 人键 - 政治活动家 传记 - 性别 - 男 传记 - 方言 - 库尔德 - 巴迪尼 传记 - 国 - 库尔德人 传记 - - 南库尔德斯坦

Kurdipedia.org (2008 - 2024) version: 15.58
| 联系 | CSS3 | HTML5

| 页面生成时间:秒!