AGONY OF YAZIDI WOMEN TORN BETWEEN KIDS FATHERED BY ISIS FIGHTERS AND RETURNING HOME
BAADRE, IRAQ (AFP) - Freed after years in captivity,
Ms Jihan Qassem faced an agonising ultimatum: abandon her three small children
fathered by an ISIS fighter or risk being shunned by her community. "Of
course I couldn't bring them home. They're Daesh (ISIS) children," said Ms
Qassem, 18, matter-of-factly, sitting in a sparse concrete structure she now
calls home.
"How could I, when my three siblings are still
in ISIS hands?," she added, highlighting the harsh reality that the
children serve as constant reminders of the brutalities inflicted on the
closed, tight-knit Yazidi community by the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria
(ISIS) group. Dozens of Yazidi women and girls, systematically raped, sold and
married off to extremists after being abducted by ISIS from their ancestral Iraqi
home of Sinjar in 2014, have faced the same gut-wrenching dilemma. What to do
about the children born of these forced unions?
Now freed, the women are desperate to heal from the
wounds inflicted on the conservative minority - but raising extremists' offspring
would make closure impossible, they said. Kidnapped at 13, Ms Qassem was forced
to marry a Tunisian ISIS fighter at 15 and then fled with him and their
children from ISIS' bombarded Syrian holdout of Baghouz four months ago. When
US-backed forces learnt she was Yazidi, they whisked her and her two-year-old
boy, one-year-old girl and four-month-old infant to a northeast Syria shelter
hosting other mothers from the brutalised minority.
The safehouse, known as the Yazidi House, circulated
her photograph on Facebook and her older brother Saman, still in northern Iraq,
recognised his long-lost sister. He wanted her home. But without the children. After
days of an anguished back-and-forth, Ms Qassem decided she would leave her
infants with Syrian Kurdish authorities in exchange for what she said was her
real family. "They were so young. They were attached to me and I to
them...but they're Daesh children," she murmured.
She said she does not have any pictures of her
children and does not want to remember them. "The first day is hard, and
then little by little, we forget them," she said. For centuries, Yazidis
who married outside the sect - even against their will - were ex-communicated. Girls
forcefully taken by ISIS in 2014 risked suffering the same fate, but a landmark
decree by Yazidi spiritual leader Baba Sheikh said survivors of ISIS' sexual
abuse should be honoured by the community. That compassion however has not been
extended to their children.
In April, the Yazidis' Higher Spiritual Council
issued an ambiguous decree welcoming "children of survivors",
sparking hope of a second reformation to accept those born of a Yazidi mother
and ISIS father. But a ferocious backlash from conservative Yazidis prompted
the Council to clarify that nothing had changed: it would only welcome children
born to two Yazidi parents. Any further reform was seen as a threat, opening
the floodgates of change to a traumatised community, said Yazidi activist Talal
Murad. "If there's this kind of change in the creed, other things
could change too - there will be a breakdown, a total collapse of the Yazidi
religion," said Mr Murad, who also heads Ezidi24, an outlet covering
Yazidi affairs.
Council representative
Ali Kheder told AFP the debate was not solely about dogmatic reform. "First,
according to Iraqi law, any child with a missing father will be registered as a
Muslim, automatically," said Mr Kheder in the council's headquarters in
Sheikhan. Islamic law, on which the Iraqi constitution is based, stipulates
that religion is inherited from the father. Psychologically too, Mr Kheder said
the Yazidi society remained too scarred by the prolonged abduction of their own
people to accept raising the children of their abusers. "Until now, we
have thousands of Yazidi women and girls in ISIS hands. No one asks about them.
They ask about a few children that can be counted on one hand," said Mr
Kheder. The council said it does not keep statistics on returning Yazidi
survivors with infants born of rape. While most Yazidi mothers leave their
children at the Yazidi House in Syria, some brought ISIS-born infants home to
Iraq. They declined interviews because of the subject's sensitivity.
One woman insisted to
her Yazidi family that she would raise her one-year-old infant fathered by a
missing ISIS fighter, but balked when she discovered she could not acquire
Iraqi identification papers for him as his father was not present. She gave him
up for adoption, her doctor said. Another 18-year-old arrived in Iraq in the
spring after finally being freed, but was heavily pregnant by her ISIS captor,
according to a social worker involved in her case. She spent weeks in a
safehouse without her family's knowledge until she gave birth, sent the newborn
away and joined her relatives in a displacement camp.
Last year, five
children born to Yazidi mothers and ISIS fathers were left at an orphanage in
Mosul, which helped local Muslim families adopt them, according to Mosul's
director of women and children's issues Sukaynah Younes. They are now
registered as Muslim. The psychological impact of this separation will likely
be long-lasting. Ms Qassem herself still seemed torn. Weeks ago, she had
described her children to a social worker as her "flesh and blood",
saying she missed them. While she sounded more detached when speaking to AFP, a
shy smile crossed her face as she remembered them. When she was out of her
brother's earshot, she cried quietly. "If it was up to me, I would have
brought them," she said.
Yazidis believe the
events of 2014 were the 74th "genocide" suffered by the minority in
its 4,000-year history, and that it has not ended. The most painful wound is
that hundreds of men, women, and children remain missing, despite hopes they
would be found after ISIS' "caliphate" collapsed in March. Some
100,000, nearly a fifth of the pre-war community, have been resettled abroad
and another 360,000 remain displaced in Iraq with their villages lying in
ruins. "The genocide is ongoing. People can't go home to Sinjar, we still
have women and girls missing, everyone is looking to leave to Europe,"
said Mr Kheder.
Mr Baba Shawish, a
cleric and custodian of the Yazidis' holiest site at Lalish, blamed Baghdad. "The
federal government in Baghdad knows very well that thousands of Yazidis remain
captive, but it has not decided to arrest the kidnappers. It's not cooperating
with us," he said. A Bill introduced in April by Iraq's president proposes
reparations for Yazidis and a way to determine children's legal status, but
parliament has yet to debate it. Gripped by such pressing issues, Yazidis
expressed frustration with what they saw as misplaced global pressure to enact
religious reform and welcome children fathered by ISIS fighters.
The best option,
community figures said almost unanimously, was for Yazidi mothers to be
resettled abroad. "It's a very complicated issue, and the most appropriate
solution right now can be found outside Iraq," said Ms Vian Dakheel, a
Yazidi and former parliamentarian."In my view, it's for these women to go
to Europe with their children. "Dr Nagham Hasan, an
obstetrician-gynaecologist who has worked extensively with Yazidi survivors
since 2014, said patients with young children had all but given up on Iraq. "I've
been warning that we would be dealing with the issue of mothers for
years," she said. "Everyone wants to leave. The Yazidi community is
broken."
Source: The Strait
Times – 14 July 2019
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