Being a proud Atheist, and a freedom loving INFIDEL AKA "KUFFAR", WE are threatened by the primitive pidgeon chested jihad boys in the medieval east.
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I have always been interested in the Middle
East, specifically the Syrian conflict. In early summer 2014, as part of
my master’s dissertation, I went to Lebanon to work with the United
Nations. I was still there when the Islamic State group, commonly known
as ISIS, struck Iraq.
As many in the United States now know, ISIS is an extremist group. Its roots are in a small group of Jordanian jihadis
who went to Taliban Afghanistan in 1999 and who were in Iraq waiting
for the Americans when the invasion came in 2003. ISIS has been through
numerous mutations both in structure and name, and it was nearly
destroyed by the U.S. “surge” in Iraq after 2007. But since the U.S.
pullout of Iraq and the beginning of the Syrian uprising in 2011, ISIS
has found a fertile environment for expansion and has set up a
proto-state in areas of eastern and northern Syria and western and
central Iraq. ISIS adheres to a version of Islamism that marks even
other Islamists as unbelievers who can be killed. It claims to be
restoring Islam to the time of its advent with the prophet Muhammad in
the seventh century. In ISIS’ telling, it is Islam, and all other versions are defective and impure.
My
job at the time was to assess health-care facilities for Syrian
refugees. The focus of my project was whether vulnerable groups—namely
women, children, and the elderly—were being given adequate care.
Alongside
my formal mandate, I was able to witness the conditions and
difficulties of the Syrian refugees by visiting the informal tent
settlements. Lebanon will not allow camps on its territory, as it sees
this as granting refugees a right of residence that will make the
Syrians’ presence permanent.
Many Syrians had been displaced from their
homes with little more than the clothes they were wearing. Speaking to
the aid workers who had spent time with refugees, I became aware that
many of the women had been exposed to sexual and other forms of violence
in Syria. And, unlike many others, their ordeal had not ended in exile.
Since
that time, I have continued to watch the Syrian conflict from afar,
working as an analyst of the war and its various developments. But I’ve
always kept one eye on the women caught in the midst of a fight that is
largely being prosecuted by men.
The women
victimized by ISIS have faced unimaginable horror, and they need our
acknowledgement and our help. This is their story—the story that I and
others have witnessed firsthand.
Hell on Earth
After
ISIS invaded Iraq from Syria and conquered the central and western
areas of the country in the summer of 2014, it massacred the men and
enslaved the women of the Yazidis, an ancient non-Islamic sect that ISIS
refers to as “devil-worshippers.”
One Yazidi woman who escaped from ISIS’ captivity recalled
pleading with an Islamic State fighter to cease raping a child. “He
destroyed her body,” the woman said. “I said to him, ‘She’s just a
little girl,’ and he answered, ‘No. She’s not a little girl. She’s a
slave. . . . And having sex with her pleases God.’” In the theology of
ISIS, raping a “female slave who hasn’t reached puberty" is specifically condoned. ISIS has also clearly stated that raping Christian and Jewish women captured in battle is perfectly legitimate.
In
August 2014, ISIS moved into the Yazidi areas in Sinjar. When, almost
immediately after, stories began circulating on social media and from
other sources in ISIS-held districts of Iraq that Yazidis were being
enslaved and sold at open markets with a religious license for rape,
speculation prevailed.
Could this really be true? Previous stories, such as ISIS subjecting every woman in Mosul to genital mutilation, had proven false;
it seemed that this fantastical report would also be disproven. Even
some of ISIS’ online supporters were taken aback by this.
Pro-ISIS commentators argued that nothing so ridiculous as the
restoration of slavery could possibly have happened; it was obviously
black propaganda from their enemies.
Then came the October 2014 issue of Dabiq,
ISIS’ English-language magazine. In an article entitled “The Revival of
Slavery: Before The Hour” (“the hour” referring to the apocalypse), Dabiq states: “The Islamic State dealt with this group [Yazidis] . . . how mushrikeen [polytheists] should be dealt with.”
“Their women could be enslaved,” Dabiq
continued. “The enslaved Yazidi families are now sold by the Islamic
State soldiers as the mushrikeen were sold by the Companions [of
Muhammad]. . . . Many well-known rulings are observed, including the
prohibition of separating a mother from her young children.”
ISIS
has used the enslavement of Yazidi women to recruit more foreign
fighters. Casual sex, Western-style, does not exist in the Islamic
world, and even prostitution isn’t easily accessible. With the youth
unemployment rates of the Muslim world, many men do not have the money
for a brothel. But ISIS promises young men guaranteed access to sex and
religious permission to do exactly as they wish.
Slavery in Modern Times
Sex slavery has been completely normalized in ISIS-held areas. According to an investigative report in the New York Times, “the
trade in Yazidi women and girls has created a persistent
infrastructure, with a network of warehouses where the victims are held,
viewing rooms where they are inspected and marketed, and a dedicated
fleet of buses used to transport them.”
Individual
Yazidi slaves are held in homes. When the U.S. struck down an Islamic
State commander during a raid in eastern Syria in May, they found his
wife and a Yazidi slave in his home. Other slaves are kept in public
brothels.
“Men would come to buy girls [at slave
markets] to rape them. . . . Once they took the girls out, they would
rape them and bring them back to exchange for new girls. The girls’ ages
ranged from 8 to 30 years,” a Yazidi girl who managed to escape ISIS is
recorded as saying in an intensely detailed report by Human Rights Watch.
ISIS’ conviction
that what it is doing is permitted by God is corroborated by all those
who have managed to escape. One 12-year-old Yazidi girl who escaped from
ISIS described
being bound and repeatedly raped by an Islamic State fighter. He prayed
before and after he sexually attacked her. “He said that by raping me,
he is drawing closer to God,” she said.
The mass
rape of Yazidi women affects even those captives who were not raped.
While still in captivity, Yazidi women are under constant terror that
they will be raped. If they manage to get released, they then live under
the suspicion by others that they have been raped, which in an honor
culture can get them killed by friends and relatives. Yazidi clerics
have spoken against honor killings, and this seems to have had some
effect in halting the practice, but the stigma and its social
consequences remain.
In ISIS’ Path, Muslim Women Don’t Fare Much Better
While
disparities between men and women remain in much of the third world,
nowhere has a governing authority undertaken such a systematic and
flagrant attempt to abolish the very notion of women’s rights as ISIS
has.
For Sunni women, ISIS still greatly restricts their rights and social mobility. Its ideal is for them to be covered with the hijab, kept behind closed doors, and sedentary, according to a leaked document from an ISIS ideologue translated by Charlie Winter, a researcher with the Quilliam Foundation. An ISIS propagandist in Libya encouraged women to immigrate to ISIS-held zones by writing: “Come
to the land where no man will ever see your face.” Female emancipation,
according to this outlook, means being erased from public view,
assuming the role of mother and obedient wife, and supporting the men
fighting a violent jihad by attending to the domestic scene.
ISIS
seeks to construct an ideal society of carefully stratified,
hypertraditional male–female dynamics that it believes will lead to the
protection of women. No longer will women be commodities. In an ISIS
dystopia, women are safe from the danger of “tempting” men into raping
them.
The reality, of course, is very different.
Fear
under ISIS’ rule is pervasive and causes stress and anxiety to all
living there. This is especially acute for women, who risk kidnapping,
rape, and murder—sometimes under a pseudo-legal process, sometimes not.
For non-Muslim women, ISIS rule means persecution and no legal
protection at best. For Yazidi women, it means enslavement and mass
rape. For all women under ISIS rule, sexual violence is a major risk
across the board.
Women have been stoned to death
in ISIS-held areas. As with ISIS’ lurid murders of men that it claims
are homosexual, politics and personal score–settling can cost a woman
her life, as under any system of arbitrary government. There is often no
legal recourse for women in such a situation.
Moreover, in cases of
adultery and other “crimes,” a woman’s testimony in court is worth less
than a man’s. And the standard of evidence is not exactly forensic.
Another
serious problem other women face is the exploitation of desperate
Syrian refugees in camps and informal tent settlements. Wealthy
foreigners, especially from the Gulf, essentially purchase wives. Some
of them are minors and are kept, often very temporarily, in arrangements
that can hardly be called consensual.
ISIS is
not the only actor using sexual violence against Syrians: The Assad
regime has used rape as a weapon of war on a scale that at the very
least matches, but probably exceeds, what ISIS has done. Sexual torture,
such as the insertion of rats into the vaginas of captives, has been reported from regime prisons. The regime was also using rape against male children, usually in front of their families, in the earliest months of a peaceful uprising.
‘ISIS Can Roll Back Decades of Advances in Women’s Rights Almost Instantaneously’
A
lot of strategies for countering ISIS’ message focus on showing how
aberrant it is within the world of Islam. But the fact that ISIS is
practically alone in saying that the Islamic warrant for slavery should
be executed in the present day is not a point against it; it revels in
the fact that it is alone in its interpretation of the faith. The ISIS
interpretation is one that often relies on dredging up obscure and
ancient pieces of jurisprudence that Islamic practice, if not exactly
Islamic theory, has abandoned.
Despite its
horrifying treatment of women, some Sunni women, many of them
Westerners, have joined ISIS’ media and propaganda departments and acted
as recruiters. The most notorious is Sally Ann Jones,
a British woman now calling herself Umm Hussain al-Britani, whose
husband, Junaid Hussain, another Brit, was ISIS’ most important hacker
and one of its main recruiters until he was killed in a drone strike.
Western
women have also been important in al-Khansa Brigade. The exact nature
of al-Khansa is unclear; it is not a formal agency of “the State” but
rather “a sort of jihadist Women’s Institute, engaging in a broad range
of activities,” Winter writes. At least one of these activities is
running a network of informants to help ISIS neutralize threats to its
rule. Women are thus not only victims but also enforcers of the ISIS
doctrine.
In theory, Christians and even Jews—despite ISIS’ furious anti-Semitism—have a level of protection as Ahl al-Kitāb
(“People of the Book”). ISIS says that Christian and Jewish women have
the option, which the Yazidis do not, of avoiding enslavement by paying
the jizya. This is the poll tax traditionally levied on
non-Muslim monotheists by a Muslim government to guarantee their
protection. Even so, Christian communities under ISIS rule have found
themselves subject to extreme persecution and attempts at forcible
conversion.
Supporters and those exempt from
slavery are not the primary concern, though. For the vast majority of
women—those victimized, threatened by, and cruelly demeaned by ISIS—the
need for change is urgent.
For the women able to
flee ISIS-held areas, the primary needs are medical services, especially
treatment of injuries caused by sexual violence, testing for disease,
and psychosocial support to deal with stress and trauma. Over the longer
term, these women need to be reintegrated into society and will need
help to regain their independence through training and employment. It is
fair to say that both efforts are presently underdeveloped.
In
the West, the movement for female legal equality has succeeded.
Progress toward practical equality in opportunity, employment, and other
matters is steady, even with remaining problems and occasional
setbacks. What ISIS has shown is that this is not inevitable; those who
are motivated and determined—and there is no motivation like the mandate
of heaven—can roll back decades of advances in women’s rights almost
instantaneously.
What can be done? Western women
can offer solidarity to ISIS’ female victims by keeping their struggle
in the public eye. There have been efforts to purchase the freedom of
Yazidi women kept as slaves by ISIS; an organized program along these
lines might prove fruitful. People can donate; the groups providing
services for the refugees are chronically short of funding and any
effort to shore up their financial stability would help Syria’s and
Iraq’s women. Ultimately, however, the only certain way to liberate the
women held captive by ISIS is to incur the downfall of its
pseudo-government—and Western women can play a large part in making the
case for Western action on that front.
The Organization of Islamic Cooperation and its Role in Enforcing Islamic Law
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The gravity of the existential threat we face from Islamic Jihad is truly of epic proportions. It is essentially a battle pitting free-civilized man against a totalitarian barbarian. What is at stake is the struggle for our very soul - namely who we are and what we represent. The lives that were sacrificed for individual rights and freedoms that we've come to cherish are being chiseled away from right under our noses by the stealth jihadists. And many of us are in denial and totally clueless.
The left's appeasement and pandering to evil is nothing new. What makes their utopian delusions so infuriating and unpardonable is that it is not only they who will have to pay the consequences, and deservedly, so, they are thwarting and undermining our best efforts at resistance and are thus dragging us down in the process as well.
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