Hear the plight of Yazidi Kurds | היום

Hear the plight of Yazidi Kurds

While world leaders and the media are too busy sympathizing with Hamas, jihadists of the Islamic State group ‎‎(formerly known as ISIS) are wiping an entire religion off the face of the earth.‎

The jihadists have trapped up to 40,000 Yazidi Kurds, one of Kurdistan's oldest ‎ethno-religious communities. They were forced to flee to Mount Sinjar or face slaughter by the Islamic State, which is said to have ‎captured 500 Yazidi women and girls as concubines and transported them to Mosul.‎

Irbil-based Rudaw TV has reported that some Yazidis are resorting to eating leaves in ‎a desperate effort to survive.

"People walk the length of the mountain with no food and water and some have resorted to ‎eating leaves off the trees," said Rudaw correspondent Barakat Issa, who is stuck in the ‎mountains. ‎

In another report, Issa said that "the death toll among thousands of Yazidi civilians on Mount Sinjar is rising every minute, with dead bodies lying everywhere among the rocks. The ‎children and elderly who have died are so many that they cannot be counted."

As Yazidis were facing genocide, a Yazidi parliamentarian, Vian Dakhil, broke down in tears ‎on Wednesday as she urged the Iraqi parliament to do something about the unfolding tragedy ‎. ‎

‎"There are Yazidis who now live in Mount Sinjar. We are being slaughtered under the ‎banner of 'La ilaha illa-llah' ['There is no god but Allah']," she said in tears.‎

‎"Seventy children have died so far of thirst and suffocation. Fifty elderly people have died ‎because of deteriorating conditions. We are being slaughtered, annihilated. An entire religion ‎is being wiped off the face of the earth.‎

‎"Five hundred Yazidi boys and men have been slaughtered up to now. Our women are being taken ‎captive and sold on the slave market. A genocide campaign is taking place right now against ‎the Yazidis. Brothers, despite all the political disagreements, we want human solidarity. I ‎speak in the name of humanity. Save us! Save us!"‎

The Yazidis, members of a Kurdish religious community that practices an ancient religion linked ‎to Zoroastrianism and ancient Mesopotamian religions, are exposed to genocide by a cruel ‎wave of Islamization. But this is not the first genocide in their history.‎

The Yazidis count 72 genocidal massacres in their history. Many of these took place under Ottoman rule in the 18th and 19th ‎centuries, and their persecution has continued under the Turkish republic, as well.‎

A motion filed by the pro-Kurdish Peace and Democracy Party stated that out of the ‎‎80,000 Yazidis who lived in Turkey four decades ago, fewer than 400 remain today.‎

‎"The Yazidis have been deprived of their housing rights in Turkey. They had to leave their ‎country due to the persecution and pressure they faced. And after they moved to Europe, ‎even their private registered lands were invaded, and their trees were ripped out. The Yazidi ‎owners of those lands were threatened, and some of their villages were abandoned and ‎became uninhabitable places," the motion said.‎

‎"Yazidis are registered either as Muslims or nonbelievers in official documents and identity ‎papers. Their faith has been neglected, their lands have been forcibly taken away from them ‎and their main source of income, which is agriculture and husbandry, has been eradicated this ‎way."

After 72 campaigns to eliminate the Yazidis from the region, the latest -- 73rd -- attempt is unfolding before the eyes of the whole world. ‎

Their only crime is to be regarded as infidels by the Islamic State jihadists -- in other words, to have ‎been born as they are. They are desperately waiting to be saved in the mountains, where ‎they have been trapped.‎

With no Iraqi forces left to protect Yazidi or Christian minorities in the region, the Kurdish ‎forces remain their only hope. But the Kurds have been left alone in their fight against the Islamic State.‎

Yazidi Kurds are a link between an ancient past and a secular future, and their ‎protection should be a fundamental duty of all human beings.‎

However, there are no massive marches, no world protests, no worldwide coverage or ‎declarations of condemnations against this genocide.‎

Why Muslim countries have been silent about this tragedy seems to be deeply rooted in ‎their supremacist attitude toward non-Muslims or even non-Arabs, especially toward stateless ‎peoples such as the Kurds and Baloch. The Muslim countries first classify, discriminate ‎against, polarize and dehumanize those communities on the basis of nationality, ethnicity or ‎religion, and then persecute or even exterminate them, as is commonly ‎witnessed in the Muslim world. ‎

This could explain why Muslim countries remain insensitive to, if not become actively involved ‎in, the killings of those peoples. ‎

But why the rest of the world remains a silent spectator in the face of this savagery is a riddle ‎beyond comprehension.‎

Isn't it time for the Western governments and leftist organizations to break their unholy ‎alliance with Islamists who have been brutally annihilating the religious and ethnic minorities ‎of the Middle East-‎

The recent deadly attacks against Yazidi Kurds and Christians have shown once again that ‎the ethnic and religious communities in an unstable Iraq are constantly at peril of further atrocities and genocides at the hands of Islamist terrorists.‎

Do these communities not need and deserve a safe home where they will be free from threats ‎and ‎massacres? That home can only be an independent and sovereign Kurdistan.‎

Uzay Bulut is a freelance journalist based in Ankara.

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