PLEASE HELP WOMEN AND CHILDREN WHO WERE
DECEIVED BY ISIS!
(Transcript interview with former ISIS member, Aida from Kazakhstan)
(Transcript interview with former ISIS member, Aida from Kazakhstan)
“I am Aida. I am from Kazakhstan. I am 25
years old and I have witnessed war, hunger and cold. Before that, I lived a
normal life in Kazakhstan, graduated from high school, used to play sports and
dance and dreamed of becoming a journalist.
Everything changed when in the summer of
2015 I, my husband and my son went to Istanbul. My husband suggested we spend a
vacation in Turkey. But a few days later, he said that we will not go back to
Kazakhstan, and will live in Syria.
I succumbed to my husband’s persuasion.
Back then, it seemed to me that this was the right decision. Much has been said
on the internet that Muslims must move to an Islamic state to live happily.
But once in Syria, we realised that it was
a lie. Our life became a nightmare. Getting out of this hell was impossible.
There were always ISIS agents around us. They searched for those who wanted to
escape, put them in jail, and could execute several people a day.
We lived in total fear and did not confide
in anyone. And after the death of my husband, I just fought for survival. ISIS
militants scared us by saying that if we were imprisoned, they would rape and
kill us. Falling asleep at night, I didn’t know if I and my child would wake up
in the morning.
I couldn’t see a way out. We were trapped.
We slept on the damp ground under an open sky. Every day children died in the
arms of their mothers who were unable to help.
My acquaintance was digging a grave for her
child with her hands, since cats and dogs had already begun to eat the body. I
could not look at this anymore.
I took a risk. Under fire, bypassing the
mines, we got to the refugee camp. Everything was like in a nightmare. I prayed
to return home, I wanted to see and hug my mother again.
In this refugee camp in Syria, there were
many women from around the world with a similar fate. We did not know what
would happen to us in the future.
But at one point in the camp they told us,
“Kazakhstan takes back its citizens!” I could not believe it. And only when I
actually saw rescuers from Kazakhstan, I realised that we were not abandoned.
Next to me were women from France, Germany
and other countries. I remember them looking enviously at us. They asked to
find out if Kazakhstan could also take them, pleading to at least take their
children from Syria.
I could not help these women. But I decided
to help and save an orphan boy from Kazakhstan. He is 7 years old. His name is
Musa. I found him in the camp and took him with me.
He is the only one who survived out of his
entire family. His father died, his mother was killed by ISIS, his sister was
missing, and his younger brother died of exhaustion.
When rescuers from Kazakhstan came to
Syria, I told them about Musa. Rescuers found Musa’s grandparents in Kazakhstan
and took him home with me. Now he is safe at home, as is my own child.
I returned to Kazakhstan just a few months
ago with other women and children. Of course, at first, I didn’t know what to
do next.
For about a month, we lived in a
rehabilitation centre. We were preparing for a peaceful life. Doctors,
theologians, teachers, psychologists and volunteers worked with us. They helped
us to recover our identification documents. And after that we returned home to
our relatives.
Honestly, I still go through a
rehabilitation course. Everyone experiences and copes with the nightmares of
war in their own way. Many people just want to forget everything. But I decided
that I would openly talk about it.
I managed to do it. I was lucky. My country
and my people did not leave me in trouble, did not abandon me. They took me in
and forgave me. Now I feel strong and have a great desire to help Muslims learn
lessons from my story and not to repeat my mistakes.
Addressing the UN is a great chance to
speak out loud about the war in Syria and the fraud caliphate that the
terrorists built there.
Yes, I am a victim of terrorism. But now I
want to become a fighter against terrorism, to contribute and be a part of this
great purpose. I want to be the voice of all female victims of terrorism!
Yes, we made mistakes, stumbled. But
everyone has the right to make a mistake, and to achieve salvation after
repentance.
Please help other women and children who
were also deceived. Perhaps they will also be of service to their country, as I
am today ”.
Ps: This text is a transcript of a video
testimony by a Kazakh woman caught up in the Syrian conflict who was returned
to Kazakhstan through the country’s efforts to evacuate its citizens from the
Syrian conflict under Operation Jusan which has already brought back around 600
Kazakh citizens, mostly children and women.
This testimony was prepared for a June
28-29 meeting near New York for the UN member states titled “Synergy among developing
states to achieve terrorism free world and 2030 Sustainable Development Agenda”
organised by the Permanent Mission of Kazakhstan to the UN and the UN Counter
Terrorism Office.
Source: The Astana Times - 30 June 2019
https://bit.ly/2xmZWS8
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