Hope and justice for women whove survived ISIS Rabiaa El Garani

[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)