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  • [This talk contains mature content]

  • When I was 14,

  • my parents intended to marry me off to a man of their choosing.

  • I refused.

  • That choice to defy my family shaped everything in my life

  • and set me on the path to become who I am today.

  • But it was very painful at times and continues to be so.

  • My parents were raised in traditional, uneducated Moroccan families

  • where a girl's main value is measured by her virginity.

  • They emigrated to Belgium,

  • and I was born, raised and educated there.

  • I did not accept their view of the world.

  • When I said no to them,

  • I paid for it dearly in terms of physical and emotional abuse.

  • But eventually, I escaped from their home

  • and became a federal police detective

  • who could help protect the rights of others.

  • My specialty was investigating cases in counterterrorism,

  • child abduction and homicide.

  • I loved that work,

  • and it was extremely fulfilling.

  • With my Muslim background, Arabic language skills

  • and an interest in working internationally,

  • I decided to seek new challenges.

  • After decades of being a police officer,

  • I was recruited to become an investigator of sexual and gender-based violence

  • as a member of the Justice Rapid Response and UN Women roster.

  • Justice Rapid Response is an organization

  • for criminal investigations of mass atrocities.

  • They run on both public and private funding

  • and provide evidence and reports to more than 100 participating countries.

  • Many countries in conflict are often unable to provide a just process

  • to those who have been victims of mass violence.

  • To respond to that,

  • Justice Rapid Response was created in partnership with UN Women.

  • Together,

  • Justice Rapid Response and UN Women recruited, trained and certified

  • more than 250 professionals

  • with a specific expertise in sexual and gender-based violence,

  • like me.

  • Our investigations are carried out under international law,

  • and our findings eventually become evidence to prosecute war criminals.

  • This mechanism provides hope to victims

  • that justice and accountability may someday be found

  • in the wake of war and conflict.

  • Let me tell you about the most challenging work I have ever done.

  • This was in Iraq.

  • Since the rise of the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, or ISIS,

  • this group has systematically attacked and tortured

  • many religious minorities and ethnicities,

  • such as the Christians,

  • the Shia Turkmen, Shia Muslims, Shia Shabaks and the Yazidis.

  • The persecution of the Yazidis has been especially horrific.

  • On the 3rd and 15th of August 2014,

  • ISIS attacked approximately 20 villages and towns in Sinjar, Iraq.

  • They executed all the males over the age of 14,

  • including the elderly and disabled.

  • They divided up the women and girls,

  • raped them

  • and sold them into sexual and domestic slavery.

  • One month later,

  • a UN Human Rights Council resolution led to the fact-finding mission on Iraq

  • to investigate and document alleged violations and abuses

  • committed by ISIS and associated groups.

  • I was sent to investigate the atrocities committed against the Yazidis,

  • with a focus on sexual and gender-based crimes.

  • The Yazidis are a Kurdish-speaking ethnoreligious community

  • based in Northern Iraq.

  • Their belief system incorporates aspects of Judaism, Christianity,

  • Islam and Zoroastrianism.

  • For hundreds of years,

  • Muslims and Christians who do not understand their beliefs

  • have condemned the Yazidis as devil worshippers.

  • ISIS thought of them in this way and vowed to destroy them.

  • OK, let's do an experimental thought here.

  • I want you to think about your worst sexual experience

  • and recall it in detail.

  • Now turn to the person to your right

  • and describe that experience.

  • (Laughter)

  • I know it's difficult, eh?

  • (Laughter)

  • But, of course, I don't expect you to do that.

  • You would all be uncomfortable and embarrassed.

  • And so imagine an 11-year-old girl in the Middle East

  • who was not educated about sexuality,

  • who was taken from her comfort zone,

  • her family,

  • who witnessed the execution of her father and brothers,

  • having to describe in detail

  • the rape that she faced in a culture where talking about sexuality is taboo.

  • Her only way of recovering her honor is to hide the crime,

  • believe she was married against her will,

  • or deny the events out of shame and fear of being rejected.

  • I interviewed a girl who I will call "Ayda."

  • She was purchased by an ISIS leader, or emir,

  • together with 13 other girls aged between 11 and 18 years old.

  • Amongst the group were her three nieces and two cousins.

  • The 14 girls were taken to a house full of ISIS fighters.

  • An imam was present who made it clear that their religion was wrong,

  • and the only good path was to accept Islam and marry a Muslim man.

  • The emir wrote the names of the girls on 14 small pieces of paper.

  • Two ISIS fighters would pick a piece of paper each.

  • They would call out the name written on the paper,

  • and those girls were forcibly taken into another room.

  • While the emir and the imam heard the two girls screaming

  • as they were being raped,

  • they began laughing.

  • Both were telling the other girls

  • that the two girls should enjoy the experience instead of screaming.

  • After a while, the girls were brought back into the room.

  • They were in shock and were bleeding.

  • They confirmed that they had been married and suffered a lot of pain.

  • It is important to consider the fact that they had been raised

  • to believe in sexual intercourse with one man in their lifetime:

  • their husband.

  • The only connection that they could make in their shocked state

  • is to define their rape as marriage.

  • Before the next two girls were taken to be raped,

  • Ayda made a terrifying decision.

  • As the oldest of the group, she convinced the emir

  • to let them use the bathroom in order to wash themselves before marriage.

  • Ayda had been told by one of the girls

  • that she noticed rat poison in the bathroom.

  • The 14 girls decided to end their suffering

  • by drinking the poison.

  • Before the poison took full effect,

  • they were discovered by ISIS and taken to the hospital,

  • where they survived.

  • ISIS decided to separate the girls

  • and sell them individually.

  • Ayda was taken to another house and brutally raped

  • after she attempted again to kill herself with her headscarf.

  • She was beaten and raped every two days.

  • After four months in captivity,

  • Ayda found the courage to escape.

  • She never saw the other 13 girls again.

  • I interviewed Ayda multiple times.

  • She was willing to speak to me because she had heard from other victims

  • that there was a woman from the UN who understood her complicated culture.

  • I looked into her eyes

  • and listened deeply to the stories of her darkest hours.

  • We established a personal connection that continues to this day.

  • My upbringing made it easy for me to understand her extreme sense of shame

  • and her fear of being rejected.

  • These types of investigations are not only about gathering information and evidence,

  • but they're also about victim support.

  • The bonds I established with the victims

  • strengthens their confidence and willingness to seek justice.

  • As she considered her escape,

  • Ayda, like all Yazidi survivors,

  • faced a dilemma:

  • Should she continue to suffer the abuse of her captors,

  • or would it be better to return home,

  • where she would face shame, rejection

  • and possibly honor killing?

  • I know all too well the pain of being rejected

  • by my Moroccan community in Belgium,

  • and I did not want this to happen to the Yazidi community.

  • So a group of concerned entities,

  • including the UN, NGOs, politicians and members of the Yazidi community

  • approached a religious leader,

  • Baba Sheikh.

  • After many meetings,

  • he realized that these girls had not disrespected their religion

  • by being forcibly converted to Islam

  • and married to ISIS fighters.

  • Instead, they have been abducted, raped and sexually enslaved.

  • I am happy to report that, after our meetings,

  • Baba Sheikh announced publicly

  • that the survivors should be treated as victims

  • and embraced by the community.

  • This message was heard throughout the community

  • and eventually reached the survivors being held captive by ISIS.

  • After his declaration of support,

  • the survivors were motivated to escape from ISIS

  • as Ayda has done,

  • and many young Yazidi women took the bold step

  • and returned home to their communities.

  • Baba Sheikh's public pronouncement

  • saved the lives of many young Yazidi women,

  • both in captivity and after their escape.

  • Sadly, not all religious leaders agreed to talk with us.

  • Some victims had far worse outcomes than the Yazidis.

  • For example, only 43 of the 500-600 victims

  • from the Shia Turkmen community

  • were able to return home after escaping ISIS.

  • Some of them were advised by their family

  • to stay with ISIS

  • or commit suicide in order to save the honor of the family.

  • Germany established a project to support survivors of ISIS

  • by providing psychosocial support and housing for 1,100 women and children,

  • including Ayda.

  • I visited Ayda several times during my work.

  • I am so proud of her and the other victims.

  • The progress they have made is remarkable.

  • It is really moving to see how many of them,

  • despite their struggles,

  • have benefited from this program.

  • The program includes individual and group counseling,

  • art therapy, music therapy,

  • sport activities,

  • language courses,

  • school and other integration efforts.

  • What I observed was that removing the victims

  • from an area of conflict to a country at peace

  • had a positive impact on all of them.

  • This project caught the attention of other countries,

  • and they were interested to help more Yazidis.

  • The Yazidi women and girls still call and text me

  • to tell me about their grades at school,

  • fun trips they've taken,

  • or to inform me about their future dreams,

  • like writing a book about what they have faced with ISIS.

  • Sometimes they are sad

  • and feel the need to talk again about the events.

  • I'm not a psychologist,

  • and I have faced secondary PTSD from their horrific stories.

  • But I keep encouraging them to talk,

  • and I keep listening,

  • because I do not want them to feel alone in their suffering.

  • Through these anecdotes,

  • I see a bigger picture emerging.

  • These women and girls are healing.

  • They are no longer afraid to seek justice.

  • Without hope there can be no justice,

  • and without justice there can be no hope.

  • Every 3rd and 15th of August, it's my remembrance day,

  • and I reach out to the Yazidis to let them know that I'm thinking about them.

  • They're always happy when I do that.

  • It's an emotional day for them.

  • This past August, I spoke with Ayda.

  • She was so happy to announce

  • that one of her nieces who was abducted with her

  • was finally released out of ISIS hands in Syria

  • and returned to Iraq.

  • Can you believe that?

  • After four years?

  • Today, her biggest wish is for her whole family,

  • now located across three continents,

  • to be reunited.

  • And I hope they will.

  • When I think about the survivors I work with,

  • I remember the words of an Egyptian doctor, writer

  • and human rights activist,

  • Nawal El Saadawi.

  • In her book, "Woman at Point Zero,"

  • she wrote, "Life is very hard,

  • and the only people who really live

  • are those who are harder than life itself."

  • These victims have been through unimaginable pain.

  • But with a little help,

  • they show how resilient they are.

  • Each has their own perspective on what kind of justice she seeks,

  • and I believe deeply

  • that a credible justice process is key

  • to how she reclaims her dignity

  • and finds closure with her trauma.

  • Justice is not only about punishing the perpetrator.

  • It's about victims feeling that crimes committed against them

  • have been recorded and recognized by the rule of law.

  • For me, it has been the experience of a lifetime

  • to work with these survivors.

  • Because I share their sorrow,

  • their language and their culture,

  • we connect on the deepest human level.

  • This itself is an act of healing:

  • to be heard, to be seen,

  • to be given compassion instead of condemnation.

  • When we get so close to people in pain,

  • it creates pain for the investigators, too.

  • My work is challenging, heartbreaking and trauma-inducing.

  • But let me tell you why I do it.

  • When I meet the survivors of these mass atrocities,

  • when I hold their hands and look in their eyes,

  • it does not erase my own pain,

  • but it does make it almost worthwhile.

  • And there's nothing I would rather be doing.

  • When I see these brave survivors

  • struggling to connect again to their own self-worth,

  • to their families, to their place in a society that values them,

  • it is an honor to bear witness;

  • it is a privilege to seek justice.

  • And that is healing, too --

  • for all of us.

  • Thank you.

  • (Applause)

[This talk contains mature content]

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TED】ラビアーア・エル・ガラニ:ISISを生き抜いた女性たちへの希望と正義 (Hope and justice for women who've survived ISIS|ラビアーア・エル・ガラニ) (【TED】Rabiaa El Garani: Hope and justice for women who've survived ISIS (Hope and justice for women who've survived ISIS | Rabiaa El Garani))

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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