Thursday, January 1, 2015

How to raise a jihadi-baby: Horrifying ISIS guide for mothers instructs them to ban TV to 'protect little ears', tell bedtime stories about fighting and give toddlers weapons training with toy guns

How to raise a jihadi-baby: Horrifying ISIS guide for mothers instructs them to ban TV to 'protect little ears', tell bedtime stories about fighting and give toddlers weapons training with toy guns

  • Guide bans singing, dancing, and most sports as being 'largely useless'
  • Instead recommends martial arts, camping and training with toy guns
  • But advises radicals to keep any real weapons 'out of children's reach'
  • Guide surfaces as more images of Islamic State children are revealed
  • Young boys shown with banners, guns and holding a severed head 
A guide for jihadi mothers on how to raise extremist children has surfaced online as influential watchdog warns of the risks posed by a new generation of 'Caliphate cubs' trained for war. 

The sick 'handbook', called Sister's Role in Jihad, recommends showing children jihadi websites, reading tales of jihad at bedtime, and encourages sports such as darts to improve their aim.

It explains that women should start training children 'while they are babies' as waiting until they are toddlers 'may be too late', adding: 'Don't underestimate the lasting effect of what those little ears and eyes take in during the first few years of life!'

The book was highlighted by the U.S-based Middle East Media Research Institute (MEMRI) ahead of a new report condemning how children are being indoctrinated into radical Islam.
Indoctrinated: A guide for extremist mothers which recommends exposing their children to images of jihad from a young age has emerged online (pictured, a young boy holds a severed head in Syria)
Indoctrinated: A guide for extremist mothers which recommends exposing their children to images of jihad from a young age has emerged online (pictured, a young boy holds a severed head in Syria)
Textbook: American researchers believe the guide is being used by ISIS to help indoctrinate children, and was mentioned in the case of a British woman jailed for posting images of her children in ISIS clothing online
Textbook: American researchers believe the guide is being used by ISIS to help indoctrinate children, and was mentioned in the case of a British woman jailed for posting images of her children in ISIS clothing online
Put through the paces: ISIS is often keen to advertise services it offers to children, such as schooling (pictured), in an attempt to get parents to bring their infants when they join up
Put through the paces: ISIS is often keen to advertise services it offers to children, such as schooling (pictured), in an attempt to get parents to bring their infants when they join up

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