Lt. Col. Lukman Ibrahim, speaking to
Al-Monitor, said the militia needs weapons and aid, and would like
Israeli assistance so it can fight Islamic State, or ISIS. He said the
Yazidis support Israel and fight similar enemies.
Israel has yet to respond to the Yazidi request.
The militia, with 12,000 members, was
organized in August to defend against ISIS, which has persecuted and
killed the minority since capturing Yazidi cities last year. Most of the
fighters are untrained.
“We appeal to the Israeli government and its
leader to step in and help this nation, which loves the Jewish people,”
Ibrahim was quoted as saying by Al-Monitor. “We would be most grateful
for the establishment of military ties — for instance, the training of
fighters and the formation of joint teams. We are well aware of the
circumstances the Israelis are in, and of the suffering they have
endured at the hands of the Arabs ever since the establishment of their
state. We, too, are suffering on account of them.”
A Yazidi doctor who lives in Germany said that Yazidis and Jews can also find common ground in both being victims of genocide.
“What happened to us is the biggest genocide
since the Holocaust of the Jews in Europe,” said Dr. Mirza Dinnay, a
pediatrician, told Al-Monitor. “In the Holocaust, the goal was to
annihilate an entire people, the Jews. IS has a similar plan — to
exterminate an entire people, the Yazidis.”
‘We are being slaughtered’
The Yazidi commander’s call echoed the pleas of a Yazidi father in Jerusalem, whose family was trapped by IS on Mt. Sinjar over the summer.
“I ask, in my name, and in the name of the
Yazidis, that Israel and Europe help us against the Islamic State,” he
said to the Times of Israel in August. “I ask that the State of Israel
protect us from the Islamists, tens of thousands of people, my family
alone is 20 people. Put it on Facebook, put it on YouTube.”
“I wish Netanyahu would let us live here,” he added. “I wish he would give the Yazidi some land.”
Yazidis are monotheists who follow an ancient
syncretic Kurdish religion influenced by Zoroastrianism, Islam,
Christianity, and Judaism. They number around 500,000, mostly in
northern Iraq, Turkey, and Syria. Yazidis revere an archangel, Malek
Taus (the Peacock Angel), whom they believe God entrusted to run the
world after he refused to bow down to Adam.
Local Muslims, however, call them devil
worshipers, because according to the Islamic version of the story, the
angel who refused to bow down to Adam, Iblis, was cast down to hell,
where he became Satan. Yazidis have long been persecuted by Muslims, and
are often looked down on as uneducated and dirty. They do not let their
children marry Muslims, and their society has seen high-profile honor
killings of girls accused of pursuing relationships with Muslims.
The Yazidis’ tense history with Muslims makes
them a prime target for the Islamic State. In August, IS issued an
ultimatum to tens of thousands of people from the Yazidi community to
convert to Islam, pay a religious fine and flee their homes, or face
death. The UN mission in Iraq, known as UNAMI, said as many as 200,000
civilians, mostly Yazidis, fled to Mt. Sinjar, but were surrounded by
militants and endangered. At least 40 children from those displaced from
Sinjar were killed in the violence, UNICEF said.
During a parliamentary session in August, a
Yazidi lawmaker broke down in tears as she urged the government and the
international community to save her people from being massacred or
starved into extinction.
“We are being slaughtered; our entire religion
is being wiped off the face of the earth. I am begging you, in the name
of humanity,” said Vian Dakhil.
Ties between Israel and the Kurds in general
run deep. A Mossad officer named Sagi Chori was sent to help his close
friend, the late iconic Kurdish leader Mulla Mustafa Barzani, manage the
Kurds’ battles against the Iraqi army in the 1960s. (The partnership
has been well-documented in Kurdish and Israeli media.) And reports of
Israel training Kurdish commandos continue to surface. Nationalist Kurds
tend to see Israel as a role model for an independent Kurdistan, a
small nation surrounded by enemies and bolstered by a strategic
partnership with the United States.
Israel has long developed alliances with
non-Arab countries on the periphery of the Middle East. Today, that
policy rests on partnerships with Cyprus, Greece, Bulgaria, and
Caucasian and central Asian countries. Kurdistan fits perfectly into
that framework.
If Kurds gain independence, they will likely
open full diplomatic relations with Israel. “The Kurds are the only
nation in the region that has not been filled with hatred toward Israel
and America,” said Selam Saadi, chief editor of Kurdish news site
Rudaw. “The way Kurds see the world is different from Arabs… Generally,
Islamists are more powerful in the Arab world, they think that Islamic
Sharia is the solution. However, the majority of Kurds believe in a
European style of government. The problem is they don’t know how to get
there. They don’t have experience.”
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