ライブラリ ライブラリ
検索

Kurdipediaはクルド情報の最大の源です!


Search Options





詳細検索      キーボード


検索
詳細検索
ライブラリ
クルド名
出来事の年表
ソース
履歴
ユーザーコレクション
活動
検索ヘルプ?
出版
Video
分類
ランダムアイテム!
送信
送信記事
画像を送信
Survey
あなたのフィードバック
お問い合わせ
我々は情報をどのような必要はない!
規格
利用規約
アイテムの品質
ツール
について
Kurdipedia Archivists
私達についての記事!
あなたのウェブサイトにKurdipediaを追加
/追加メールを削除
訪問者統計
アイテムの統計
フォントコンバータ
カレンダーコンバータ
言語やページの方言
キーボード
ハンディリンク
Kurdipedia extension for Google Chrome
Cookies
言語
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
マイアカウント
サインイン
メンバー!
パスワードを忘れました!
検索 送信 ツール 言語 マイアカウント
詳細検索
ライブラリ
クルド名
出来事の年表
ソース
履歴
ユーザーコレクション
活動
検索ヘルプ?
出版
Video
分類
ランダムアイテム!
送信記事
画像を送信
Survey
あなたのフィードバック
お問い合わせ
我々は情報をどのような必要はない!
規格
利用規約
アイテムの品質
について
Kurdipedia Archivists
私達についての記事!
あなたのウェブサイトにKurdipediaを追加
/追加メールを削除
訪問者統計
アイテムの統計
フォントコンバータ
カレンダーコンバータ
言語やページの方言
キーボード
ハンディリンク
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
サインイン
メンバー!
パスワードを忘れました!
        
 kurdipedia.org 2008 - 2024
 について
 ランダムアイテム!
 利用規約
 Kurdipedia Archivists
 あなたのフィードバック
 ユーザーコレクション
 出来事の年表
 活動 - Kurdipedia
 ヘルプ
新しいアイテム
統計
記事 517,397
画像 105,682
書籍 19,149
関連ファイル 96,389
Video 1,307
ライブラリ
カワと7にんのむすこたち クルドのおはなし
伝記
レイラ・ザーナ
ライブラリ
クルディスタンを訪ねて―トルコに暮らす国なき民
ライブラリ
クルディスタン=多国間植民地
Iraq: Yazidi Kids Draw the Horrors They Saw Fleeing ISIL
グループ: 記事 | 記事言語: English
Share
Facebook0
Twitter0
Telegram0
LinkedIn0
WhatsApp0
Viber0
SMS0
Facebook Messenger0
E-Mail0
Copy Link0
ランキングアイテム
優秀
非常に良い
平均
悪い
悪い
は、私のコレクションに追加
は、この項目についてのあなたのコメントを書く!
アイテム履歴
Metadata
RSS
選択した項目に関連する画像は、Googleで検索!
選択した項目は、Googleで検索!
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
Emily Feldman

DOHUK, Iraq — Dozens of children, bundled in sweaters against a winter chill, sprawled on a patch of grass in their camp for displaced people and studiously began to draw. The kids, some as young as 6, drew pictures of beheadings or shackled women or their families running, with armed men at their heels.
The children fled when the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levent (ISIL) advanced on their villages last summer, with most of them witnessing their parents killed or captured along the way. Some of the children were also captured and held as slaves. Now living in a camp as battles rage in the villages they fled, they are haunted by the horrors they have seen.
Their caretakers do the best they can to comfort them but know the children's psychological wounds are deep and far beyond their levels of expertise.
There's definitely something wrong, said Nazik Shemdin, the director of a nongovernmental organization caring for children from the Sinjar region of Iraq who lost parents to ISIL. She organized the art project in February, distributing colored pencils and paper to about 50 children ages 6 to 14 at one of the many camps dotting the region. She told them to draw anything they wanted.
Intended as a respite from the monotony of life in limbo, it instead served as a grim reminder of how deeply they — and millions of other children in Iraq and Syria — have been traumatized by war.
Mental health care services are severely lacking in the Kurdish region of northern Iraq, where more than 1.5 million Syrians and Iraqis displaced by fighting currently live. In the province of Duhok, which hosts the bulk of them, officials say there are fewer than a dozen qualified clinical psychologists and well-trained psychotherapists.
So severe is this drought that Nezar Ismet Taib, a psychiatrist and the Health Ministry's Duhok director, is personally treating some of the most severe cases — victims of rape and torture at the hands of ISIL. He points out that those spared the worst atrocities are also suffering and in need of help.
Displacement by itself is trauma, and escaping from horrifying events is trauma, he said.
More than half the people displaced by fighting and now living in the Kurdish region of Iraq are children. In order to fill the gaps in mental health care, the government has invited doctors and organizations from outside the region to treat patients and run training sessions to bolster the expertise of workers already there.
Yet the additional assistance has not been nearly enough.
Wahid Harmz, a psychologist who spends two days a week at a camp housing more than 25,000 displaced people, said he has treated only about 50 patients there over the last three months. One person can treat only a limited number of patients, he added, and there is a reluctance among many victims to seek help.
Among those most in need of psychological care are the Yazidis, a religious minority considered infidels by ISIL and viciously targeted by the fighters. The children who sketched the grisly drawings this winter were all Yazidis. ISIL killed hundreds and kidnapped thousands of members of their communities, forcing the captives to serve as slaves. Many have since escaped, shedding light on the horrors Yazidis face in ISIL captivity, with some of the worst atrocities directed at children.
Sold as sex slaves, girls as young as 10 have been raped, according to doctors treating victims in the region. Boys have been forced to fight, attend ISIL schools and do manual labor or risk brutal punishments.
The Yazidis who escaped have joined the hundreds of thousands of other displaced Iraqis who fled to the country's relatively stable Kurdish region. Their stories circulate through overcrowded camps, where news of tragedy dominates conversation.
Harmz, who works with the Jiyan Foundation, an NGO that has been filling in many mental health gaps in the region, said the environment in the camps is especially tough on kids.
Besides being privy to all the grim, grown-up conversation, they are surrounded by people on edge. Parents suffering from their own fears, shame and exhaustion sometimes take their frustrations out on their children.
They beat them. They don't let them talk. They keep them in their tents and don't let them out to play, he said.
Sherwan Hassan, a trained nurse who received additional certification to counsel patients, explained that many children he sees cannot sleep well. They have a lot of fear, he said. I see a lot of sleep disorders, anxiety and behavior problems with kids.
Most children are not receiving mental health treatment at all. One Yazidi family that recently escaped ISIL captivity, for example, feels entirely forgotten. After making it from ISIL territory to safety in the city of Duhok, Sharf Ali Xudeda, a 38-year-old construction worker, was unable to secure a space for his family in any of the city's crowded camps. Instead, he was handed flimsy tents he set up on a patch of dirt on the side of a road. His son and nephews, who are struggling after months of manual labor, indoctrination and weapons training, have not been offered any help.
They're so tired psychologically, Xudeda said. His 4-year-old nephew, who witnessed ISIL beat his cousins with metal poles, dreams that fighters are trying to kill him. The boy is afraid of everything. He's afraid of beards. He is not normal anymore.
Even those spared the worst have found themselves unable to stop thinking about the horrors they have read and heard about.
Sarween Khero Qassim, a 17-year-old Yazidi from Sinjar, managed to make it to safety with her entire family before ISIL laid waste to her village. Her family had enough money to rent a simple home near Duhok and continue sending their children to school.
But stories of what other Yazidis suffered haunt her, and she found herself staring at gruesome pictures online and then drawing them.
I'm feeling this, she said as she spread some of her ISIL-inspired work on her living room's concrete floor. Her younger siblings looked on as she talked about the grisly inspiration for the work, which depicts women in chains and weeping families running from their homes.
Qassim considers herself one of the lucky ones but says that, even so, she has been scarred.
I still don't feel comfortable, she said.[1]
この商品は(English)言語で記述されてきた、元の言語でアイテムを開くには、アイコンをクリックして
This item has been written in (English) language, click on icon to open the item in the original language!
このアイテムは531表示された回数
HashTag
ソース
リンクされたアイテム: 2
グループ: 記事
記事言語: English
Publication date: 25-06-2015 (9 年)
Publication Type: Born-digital
ドキュメントの種類: 翻訳
パーティー: ISIS
ブック: テロリズム
ブック: 人権
プロヴァンス: 南クルディスタン
方言: 英語
都市: Sinjar
Technical Metadata
アイテムの品質: 99%
99%
は、 ( هەژار کامەلا 04-02-2023上で追加しました
Denne artikkelen har blitt gjennomgått og utgitt av ( زریان سەرچناری ) på 07-02-2023
最近の( هەژار کامەلا )によって更新この商品: 07-02-2023
URL
この項目はKurdipediaのによると規格はまだ確定されていません!
このアイテムは531表示された回数
Attached files - Version
タイプ Version エディタ名
写真ファイル 1.0.182 KB 04-02-2023 هەژار کامەلاهـ.ک.
Kurdipediaはクルド情報の最大の源です!
イメージと説明
カズィ・ムハンマド大統領の処刑

Actual
ライブラリ
カワと7にんのむすこたち クルドのおはなし
01-06-2015
هاوڕێ باخەوان
カワと7にんのむすこたち クルドのおはなし
伝記
レイラ・ザーナ
18-10-2013
هاوڕێ باخەوان
レイラ・ザーナ
ライブラリ
クルディスタンを訪ねて―トルコに暮らす国なき民
17-10-2013
هاوڕێ باخەوان
クルディスタンを訪ねて―トルコに暮らす国なき民
ライブラリ
クルディスタン=多国間植民地
18-10-2013
هاوڕێ باخەوان
クルディスタン=多国間植民地
新しいアイテム
統計
記事 517,397
画像 105,682
書籍 19,149
関連ファイル 96,389
Video 1,307
Kurdipediaはクルド情報の最大の源です!
イメージと説明
カズィ・ムハンマド大統領の処刑

Kurdipedia.org (2008 - 2024) version: 15.42
| お問い合わせ | CSS3 | HTML5

| ページ生成時間:0.328 秒(秒) !