by Stephen Schwartz and Christopher Bilardi
ISIS murdered approximately 3,000 Yezidis, abducted 6,500, and sold 4,500 women and girls into sexual slavery. 186,000 children have been displaced.
Originally published under the title, "The Yezidi Sect: ISIS Targets for Death."
The
world's response to the attempted genocide of Iraq's ancient Yezidi
minority by the Islamic State (ISIS) has been woefully inadequate.
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A Kurdish people in ethnicity, the Yezidis practice a distinctive religion that is neither Christian nor Muslim. Tradition states that it is one of the oldest in the world, and that they have been a presence in Mesopotamia "for more than 6,700 years." During that long span of time Yezidism has incorporated elements of other faiths: Christian, Jewish, Muslim (Sufism), Zoroastrian, and Mandaean Gnostic. Like Hindus, the Yezidis have a caste system. Their tradition is hereditary and does not allow converts.
Most Muslims do not regard them as "People of the Book" since their traditions are oral, although some Iranians describe them as such based on their link to Zoroastrianism. Their apparent non-scriptural status is changing, however, as their core oral 'texts' (hymns or qawls) are written down "effectively transforming Yezidism into a scriptural religion," according to a Yezidi source.
The archangel Tawuse Melek
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The main Yezidi saint is Sheikh 'Adî ibn Mustafa, said to be of Umayyad descent, from the Beka'a Valley of Lebanon. He settled in Lalish in the Kurdish area of Iraq early in the 12th century CE, and died circa 1162 CE. He is said to have learned from the outstanding Sufis Ahmad al-Ghazali and 'Abd al-Qadir Gilani. At his death two groups formed: one went to Egypt and Syria and continued his Sufi body of disciples or tariqa (path). The other (mostly from his family) stayed in the Kurdish multireligious area and formed the basis of the Yezidi Sheikh caste.
Prior to recent events it was estimated that the Yezidi population ranged from 750,000 to 1,000,000.
An August 7, 2014 satellite photo shows over 5,500 vehicles in and around Mt. Sinjar.
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ISIS murdered approximately 3,000 Yezidis, abducted 6,500, and sold 4,500 women and girls into sexual slavery. 186,000 children have been displaced.
Donatella Rivera, Amnesty International Senior Crisis Response Advisor, says "Many of those held as sexual slaves are children - girls 14, 15 or even younger. ISIS fighters are using rape as a weapon in attacks amounting to war crimes and crimes against humanity." Yezidi women and girls have been forcibly married, sold, or given as "gifts" to ISIS fighters and supporters, and are often forced to convert to ISIS doctrine. Many girls have committed suicide.
Yezidi boys are held at military training camps in Raqqa, Syria, the "capital" of the spurious ISIS "caliphate," and at Tal Afar, in Iraq's Mosul province. It is estimated that 600-700 children are still missing. Boys between the ages of eight and 15 are given military training and forced to watch decapitations: "This is your initiation into jihad," one boy was told. "You are an Islamic State boy now."
According to Francesca Pizzutelli, also writing for Amnesty International, more than two million Iraqis were displaced during 2014. 950,000 are now in the KRG. Most are Yezidis from the Sinjar region.
The KRG built camps, hosting 430,000 displaced people. The camps are in poor condition, lacking weatherized tents, and including washing and toilet facilities that "do not meet minimum standards for humanitarian response," according to Amnesty International.
Despite the mounting horrors, the Yezidis are not without their supporters. Rabbi Abraham Cooper, writing in The Huffington Post under the title " 'Never Again' Should Include Endangered Yazidis," made a powerful case for common ground with Yezidi suffering. On April 15-16, 2015 -- Yom Ha-Shoah, the Day of Holocaust Remembrance -- his declaration appeared: "But more than any other group," Rabbi Cooper wrote, "it is the plight of the Yazidis that evokes the memory of Nazi brutality: That of a victim stripped of everything: rights, possessions, clothing, relatives, food, liberty, and the ultimate indignity of the loss of voice."
Mirza Ismail
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A Yezidi artist, Ammar Salim, evokes the tragedies and outrages suffered by his people. He lives in a small apartment after fleeing his home in Bashiqa for sanctuary in the KRG. He draws inspiration from the atrocities committed by IS. His work has attracted attention and has led to death threats: "I receive threats via Facebook. They sent me a message: 'If you do not burn the painting, we will kill you. We know where to find you.'"
Another Yezidi artist, film maker Nawzad Shekhany, created "The Black Massacre," a short documentary highlighting the suffering of the Yezidi people.
In the West we live comfortable lives, and we give lip service to humanitarian sentiments. Yet, the world is getting smaller and genocidal campaigns are happening now - and not only to Yezidis. Groups such as the ISIS must no longer be allowed to use God as a cover for their evil.
Stephen Schwartz, a fellow at the Middle East Forum, is executive director of the Center for Islamic Pluralism in Washington, DC. Christopher Bilardi is an expert on the Yezidi faith and an associate member of the Center for Islamic Pluralism.
Source: http://www.meforum.org/5313/yezidi-genocide
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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