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To: Hojczyk

Is Yazidi a country in Africa? If not they’d be better off calling Putin.


6 posted on 08/07/2014 9:59:19 AM PDT by McGruff (How's that Hopey Changey Thingy workin out for ya?)
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To: McGruff
Astounding plea By Yazidi MP in Iraq Parliament for them to intervene to those in the mountains...heart wretching yet makes her plea clear.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HdIEm1s6yhY

41 posted on 08/07/2014 11:21:03 AM PDT by caww
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To: McGruff

Yazidi

Yazidis are monotheists, believing in one God, who created the world and entrusted it into the care of a Heptad of seven Holy Beings, often known as Angels or heft sirr (the Seven Mysteries).....Yazidism is not an off-shoot of another religion (such as Christianity or Islam), but shows influence from the many religions of the middle-east. Core Yazidi cosmology has a pre-Zoroastrian Iranian origin, but Yazidism also includes elements of ancient nature-worship, as well as influences from Christianity, Gnosticism, Zoroastrianism, Islam and Judaism.

In 2014 with the territorial gains of the Sunni extremist militants known as the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) there was much upheaval in the Iraqi Yazidi population.

In early August the town of Sinjar was nearly deserted as Kurdish Peshmerga forces were no longer able to keep ISIL from advancing. ISIL had previously declared the Yazidi to be devil worshippers and had taken the two nearby small oil fields and the town of Zumar as part of a plan to try and seize Mosul’s hydroelectric dam.

In Sinjar, ISIL destroyed a Shiite shrine and demanded that the remaining population convert to their version of Islam, pay jizya (a religious tax) or be executed..... Up to 200,000 people (including an estimated 40,000 Yazidi fled the city before it was captured by ISIL giving rise to fears of a humanitarian tragedy.

Alongside the local Yazidis fleeing Sinjar were Yazidis (and Shiites) who fled to the city a month earlier when ISIL captured the town of Tal Afar....Most of the population fleeing Sinjar retreated by trekking up nearby mountains with the ultimate goal of reaching Dohuk in Iraqi Kurdistan ...(normally a five hour drive by car).

Concerns for elderly and those of fragile health were expressed by the refugees who told reporters of their lack of water...... Reports coming from Sinjar stated that sick or elderly Yazidi who could not make the trek were being executed by ISIL.

Yazidi parliamentarian Haji Ghandour told reporters that “In our history, we have suffered 72 massacres. We are worried Sinjar could be a 73rd.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yazidi


43 posted on 08/07/2014 11:41:27 AM PDT by caww
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