Re: Article below
 
Sent by Juan Cole in his e-mail newsletter today.
 
Granted, Cole seems blissfully unaware of other examples of ISIL-type
violence against women perpetrated by other Muslims, but at least he
is reporting what is going on in Iraq in the here-and-now.
Don't expect the mass media to do any such thing except maybe
-maybe-  in some perfunctory manner in 12 words or less.
 
After you have the chance to read the story, think about this fact of  
history:
This sort of thing, indeed it was almost identical except for the massive  
scale,
was done in India from about 1000 AD until the modern era and even 
was repeated in what is now Bangla Desh during the 1970s at the time
when Bangla Desh was still part of Pakistan and was occupied by
soldiers from today's Pakistan,  Thousands of minority religion  women
were raped and made into sex slaves in those years, nearly all of the  women
being Hindus, Buddhists, and Christians. Then, as now, the mass media  did 
not
report the story except in the abstract, with no mention of the fact  that
this was Muslim war strategy.
 
A few years ago I did major research into the genocide in India  committed
by Muslims.  From 1000 AD until well into the 19th century this  continued
along with massive destruction of Hindu temples all over the country,  plus
Buddhist shrines including, at the time, possibly the largest  university
in the world, Nalanda University, which also was Buddhist.
 
No-one knows for sure but a reasonable estimate is that 70 million  people
were killed in that era, but some experts say the grand total may be  more
like 100 million, with tens of millions forced to convert to Islam  and
another 70 million or so forced into slavery, about half of them
women  who became sex slaves for Muslims. 
 
All of this was official state policy of various Islamic regimes even  if 
some
rulers were not as bad as others. However, even Akhbar, for some  years, 
before he effectively quit Islam and founded (in a de facto sense)  his own 
religion,
practiced this form of warfare.
 
What is happening in Iraq now, under the Islamic State, simply is a  
repetition
of "classic" Muslim war fighting strategy.  Far from being an  aberration
it is traditional and based directly on injunctions in the Koran,
a book that American proponents of Islam never seem to have read.
 
Anyone who tries to tell me this is not "true Islam" doesn't know what  he
is talking about and is simply trying to reinterpret Islam to conform  to
a Western ideology that is humane and moral. However, killing in  the name
of Allah , as well as various forms of enforced slavery, are intrinsic  to 
Islam
and it is grossly dishonest not to say so. Of the 120 or so jihad verses  in
the Koran about 75 are explicit about physical violence or  enslavement.
 
I was a Baha'i for 13 years and one reason why I quit was because it  is 
dishonest 
about exactly this kind of thing. When I began to learn the facts,  which  
came to my
attention because I eventually became a professional historian,
for all the good in the Baha'i Faith, this was completely  unacceptable.
 
It is way past time to speak the truth about Islam and to demand
that people in the media and politics and religion stop lying about  Islam.
 
 
Billy
 
 
---------------------------------------------------
 
 
 
_Sexual violence as a war strategy in  Iraq_ 
(http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/juancole/ymbn/~3/JgVUs5JC9EI/sexual-violence-strategy.html?utm_source=feedb
urner&utm_medium=email)   
Posted:  14 Aug 2014 09:34 PM PDT 
 
By Nazand Begikhani via Your Middle East<PQ>“These are strategic theories  
of rape in wartime which have been deliberately practiced by IS jihadists in 
 Syria and now in Iraq,” writes Dr Nazand Begikh  
In the last few days, while the world has been overwhelmed by the flow of  
information about atrocities committed by Islamic State (IS) jihadists, 
public  officials and local media channels have confirmed that hundreds of 
Yezidi and  Christian women have been abducted, some of them buried alive and 
others  subjected to rape and sexual slavery.  
On 2 August, the IS attacked Sinjar and its surrounding areas, inhabited 
for  more than 4000 years by peaceful Yezidi community, who practice a faith  
reminiscent of Zoroastrianism. Later in the week, the attacks were extended 
to  other areas in the Nineveh plain, including Qaraqosh, Iraq’s Christian 
capital.  The jihadists have murdered thousands of civilians, buried some 
alive in mass  graves, burnt their homes, pillaged and destroyed their holy 
shrines, prompting  a mass exodus. 
We have seen long columns of women, men and children fleeing their 
homeland,  trapped in barren Sinjar Mount without basic necessities and vital 
supplies and  facing death. Many children have already died; on the second day 
of 
the  invasion, UNICEF reported that the children died as a “direct 
consequence of  violence, displacement and dehydration”. 
Despite airdrops of humanitarian aid, the number dying continues to 
increase.  Disturbing images of these crimes have been posted through social 
media. 
We have  become witnesses to these atrocities, but an equally horrendous 
crime has gone  largely unreported by the international and mainstream media: 
the abduction of  women, their rape and sexual slavery. 
According to an Iraqi lawmaker of Yezidi origin Vian Dakhil, who addressed  
the Iraqi parliament last week, with tears in her eyes, “IS militants have  
abducted five hundred Yezidis women”. Later the Iraqi Human Rights Ministry 
 indicated that families of the captives had contacted them to report the  
abduction of their womenfolk. 
Erbil-based media network Rudaw was one of the few local media channels 
that  quoted eyewitnesses who survived the attack saying “hundreds of women 
were  kidnapped and transferred by IS jihadists to an unknown place in Mosul”. 
The whereabouts of the kidnapped women became known when the head of the  
Women’s Rights Commission at the Kurdistan Region’s Parliament, Evar 
Ibrahim,  confirmed on Tuesday 6 August that “the number of kidnapped Yezidi 
women 
had  reached five hundreds, and they were transferred to a sports hall 
opposite to  the Nineveh Palace Hotel in Western Mosul”. She added that the 
women 
were kept  in “distressing conditions”. Later, when Qaraqosh was invaded 
by jihadists,  local media channels reported that Christian women had also 
been taken  captive. 
What has happened to those women? According to media reports, some were  
buried alive. On 6 August, a spokesman for the Iraqi Red Cross, Muhammad  
al-Khuza’ee, stated that the Yezidi and Christian women “were taken as spoils 
of  war and exposed at a market for sale”. The women were reportedly 
subjected to  sexual assault, gang rape and sexual slavery. By all definitions, 
these are  highly militarized forms of crimes.
Don’t miss out on great stories! 
It is not the first time that women have been subjected to such treatment 
by  militia groups. In wartime circumstances, even when the army of the state 
is  involved, women are not only taken as “spoils of war”, as the media 
put it, but  their bodies have been used as a terrain of war. As so often 
happens in ethnic  and sectarian conflicts they are raped and subjected to 
sexual slavery by their  attackers as part of ethnic cleansing strategy. The 
ultimate aim of such acts is  to weaken the integrity of the community. 
In the case of the Yezidis, a coherent community that numbers an estimated  
500,000, these forms of violence are used to subjugate the entire 
community,  inculcate fear, undermine community and family structures, 
deliberately 
pollute  the bloodline of the population, as well as to contribute to bonding 
of the  perpetrators through the common act of rape. These are strategic 
theories of  rape in wartime which have been deliberately practiced by IS 
jihadists in Syria  and now in Iraq. 
Although members of the IS organization come from different backgrounds 
with  different cultures, experiences and histories, which might influence or 
even  inhibit the behaviour of each individual, the group’s repertoire 
indicates that  these patterns of sexual violence have been developed as part 
of 
the strategic  aims of the IS. What is more, because in the Syrian and Iraqi 
societies, like  most of the Middle East, women are generally perceived as 
carers and reproducers  of their community, the jihadists seek to strengthen 
their control, split up and  destabilise unified groups and stigmatize the 
women through abduction and  rape. 
This strategy sends a message to and instils fear among the other ethnic 
and  religious minorities they seek to conquer. In the last few days, many 
parents,  mainly men, who fled their homeland prior to the attack in Makhmur 
and Khzar,  near Erbil, have been in a moral panic. They told me their main 
fear concerned  the female members of the family. They didn’t want them to be 
captured by IS  militants, “who will gang rape them”. One man repeatedly 
told me he did not mind  being killed himself, but was frightened by the idea 
of his daughters and his  wife being taken by IS jihadists. There have been 
reports of families throwing  their children from the mountain to protect 
them from falling into the hands of  the jihadists. 
The despicable acts of the jihadists have many other consequences, not 
least  the psychological and emotional damage which have to be overcome if the  
survivors are to heal and reintegrate into normal life. In the context of 
the  Middle East in general and Iraqi as well as Kurdish communities in 
particular,  the survivors face more dramatic consequences, because women’s 
bodies 
and  sexuality embody family/collective honour. They risk murder at the 
hands of male  members of their family and the community to preserve the group’
s collective  honour. If the women fall pregnant, their babies also risk 
death. Such violence,  especially rape, can also be detrimental to perpetrating 
communities in the  longer term; the anger desire for revenge it generates 
can last for  generations. 
All military conflicts involve principles of violence and are destructive,  
but capture of women, rape and sexual slavery are one of the most 
destructive  aspects. Abduction and sexual violence in conflict are crimes 
against 
humanity  and have been recognised by the UN Security Council as a threat to 
world peace  and security. Recognition came when the UN adopted Resolution 
1820 in June 2008.  These crimes are not committed against individual women, 
but are used as a  tactic of war and that requires international mobilization 
at state and  organizational levels. 
Such a mobilization should take numerous forms, including: immediate and  
effective intervention to stop the crimes; recognition by media channels and  
state agencies that women’s lives and their bodies are unacknowledged 
casualties  of war; interventions to change the general culture and attitudes 
towards women  and sexuality with public awareness programmes about 
consequences for individual  and community health of sexual and gender-based 
violence. 
Finally, an end to  impunity, with individuals as well as militia 
organizations and their leaders  being held fully accountable for their crimes 
and 
punished accordingly. 
Dr Nazand Begikhani is a Senior Research Fellow at the Centre for Gender 
and  Violence Research, University of Bristol. She is also an international 
advisor  on higher education and gender, and winner of the Emma Humphrey’s 
Prize (2000)  for her activities and campaigns against honor  crimes.

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