Showing posts with label Kurdistan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kurdistan. Show all posts

Sunday, November 12, 2017

A Jihad Grows in Florida and This Week's Top Opinions - Breaking Israel News

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Nov. 11, 2017

A Jihad Grows in Florida

By Daniel Greenfield
Vicente Adolfo Solano, a 53-year-old Honduran living in Miami, seemed like an unlikely candidate to join ISIS.

The Enemies of Kurdistan are the Enemies of the US

By Sarah N. Stern
And their enemies are also the enemies of the State of Israel.
 

  
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Is the Arab World Beginning to See Reason?

By Dr. Mordechai Kedar
Only states that take tribal codes into account are capable of dealing successfully and over the long term with the ideology of Islamic terror and remain functioning nations.
 

The Iran-Hamas-Hezbollah Connection

By Khaled Abu Toameh
Indications show that Iran and Hezbollah are planning to extend their control to the Gaza Strip.
 

Our Taxpayer Funded Saddam

By Daniel Greenfield
A tree may grow in Brooklyn, but a Saddam Hussein memorial has grown in Qalqilya.
 
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The Other 100th Anniversary

By Jonathan Feldstein
Beersheba was one of the most astonishing and inspiring victories in a seemingly endless war with more than its share of bloody debacles.
 

On Teaching and Being Controversial

By Rabbi Dr. Nathan Lopes Cardozo
We do not deny that there is an important place for academic studies as it relates to Judaism, but that requires the scholar to have great humility and a sincere openness to Judaism’s unique religious meaning.
 
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Thursday, October 26, 2017

What You Need to Know About the Current Conflict in Kurdistan - CBN News Chris Mitchell

Jonathan Spyer with CBN News
Jonathan Spyer with CBN News
What You Need to Know About the Current Conflict in Kurdistan
10-26-2017
CBN News Chris Mitchell
After the fall of Kirkuk, thousands of Kurds demonstrated outside the U.S. Consulate in Erbil. They protested the lack of U.S. Response to the Iraqi army and Shiite militias military campaign against the Kurdish government. It could be one of the most important conflicts in the world today, the current fighting between the Kurdish Regional Government (KRG) and the Iraqi government.  It might seem confusing and the stakes might seem unclear but it's very important to understand the dynamics going on; the principal players; why this conflict could lead to a much greater regional war and what it means to Israel.
Here's an interview CBN News did with Jonathan Spyer, the Director of the Rubin Center at the Interdisciplinary Center at Herzliya (IDC).  Spyer explains why this current situation is so significant and why the United States plays the pivotal role in this Middle East game of thrones.  
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Sunday, October 30, 2016

The Spiritual Battle that Could Decide the Fate of the Mideast - CBN News Chris Mitchell


The Spiritual Battle that Could Decide the Fate of the Mideast
10-28-2016
 CBN News   Chris Mitchell


ERBIL, Kurdistan – Officials say the current military effort to kick ISIS out of Mosul could take months. While that's happening on the ground, a growing prayer movement contending for the spiritual fate of the Middle East is spreading throughout the region.
At several houses of prayer, Christians are praying for God's plan to be fulfilled in perhaps the most volatile place on earth.
"We're just seeing an increase of hours of prayer meetings both from believers, local believers, (and) also people outside praying for the Middle East and coming here to pray as well," Fabian Greche, co-founder of the Mesopotamia House of Prayer in northern Iraq, told CBN News.
In the Bible, it is known as Assyria.
Greche says they're praying for the fulfillment of Isaiah 19:23-25: "In that day, Israel will be one of three, with Egypt and Assyria – a blessing in the midst of the land, whom the Lord of Hosts shall bless, saying, 'Blessed is Egypt my people and Assyria the work of my hands and Israel my inheritance.'"
"So in order for that to happen (in) this region in the Middle East – all Muslim countries to be a blessing on the earth – we need to become a habitation of the presence of God," Greche explained. "And in order to be a habitation for the presence of God, God is building the altar of prayer and worship, and this is exactly what we are seeing in these prayer meetings."
With so much carnage in the region, the fulfillment of these verses may seem farfetched. Greche says in light of all the bad news, it's important to know where to look.
"We are to look to Jesus, to look at God's promises in His Word, so we would be influenced by Him and not by what happens around us in this world," he said. "We easily get affected by darkness around us. It affects us but if we look at Jesus and at His Word, we see that God wants to pour out His Spirit.
"He's coming back for a Bride and he will have one in the Middle East," he continued. "And so we need to simply look to Jesus, not be influenced by bad news, and hear good reports of what Jesus is doing. It stirs our hearts. And gives us hope to believe for more."
This week, the Mesopotamia House of Prayer is hosting believers from 15 countries for 100 hours of continuous prayer and worship for the Middle East.

Thursday, November 5, 2015

Freed Yezidi Teen Tells Of Life As ISIS Sex Slave - II&ET

Freed Yezidi Teen Tells Of Life As ISIS Sex Slave - II&ET

E RBIL, Kurdistan Region – A young Kurdish Yezidi woman who became pregnant while being held as a sex slave of the so-called Islamic State, or ISIS, for more than three months tells her story.
The woman, 15, is originally from Shingal. Her name has been changed to Hind in this account to preserve her safety. She was abducted when ISIS fighters overran the Yezidi’s ancestral homeland.

“On August 3 at 2am, the war started in Shingal. The fight lasted until 9am and then the Yezidis and Peshmerga were defeated. I left with my brother’s wife to my uncle’s house. I had my little sisters with me and my aunts had their daughters, and we managed to find a car. My father and mother along with my uncle walked to the mountain. Those who walked towards the mountain managed to escape but those who took a car were stuck and ISIS caught them,” she told Rudaw.

Hind said she distrusted some local Arabs and suspected they had waited for this moment to attack the Yezidis.

She said most of the families who failed to escape were caught on the Syrian border and then taken to a camp in Khansor.

Hind had said she and two of her sisters were taken to Baaj and then transferred to Tal Afar. After Tal Afar, they were taken to Badoosh prison where they stayed for 25 days

“They took us again to Tal Afar and we stayed in a school. They separated the families with the young girls. We were around 700 girls,” she said.

She said she stayed at a three-storey house in Mosul and one day one an ISIS emir came and took her and one of her friends.
“At 3am he raped me. That ugly monster,” she told Rudaw. “For more than three months, I cried myself from the morning until the night.”
Hind and her friends never lost hope. They tried to escape but they were caught by the militants and taken to base where hundreds of other Yezidi girls were held as hostage.
“My friend and I were taken to a basement and stayed there for one week with no water and food,” she said.
Hind and her friend were continuously transferred between places. She said they were even taken to Syria and then returned to the basement.
“I still live in fear and have nightmares every night,” she said.
“The first one who raped me was tall and had a long beard. He was originally from Syria,” she told Rudaw.
Hind said she was sold once for $200 and once given as a gift from one ISIS fighter to another.
Finally, she was forced to marry an ISIS member who eventually took her to a Christian house.
“We managed to find a cell phone and gave the phone to my friends and they charged it. I talked with my family and they helped us find a smuggler who was secretly working to buy the girls who were in ISIS captivity,” she said.
“At 3am, my friends and I jumped from the second floor. A car arrived and took us to a house in Mosul. We stayed there for three days. Another smuggler came to take us to Jazira near Mosul,” she said.
Hind managed to return back to the Kurdistan region in November 2014. Four of her siblings are still held by ISIS.
“I would look them in the eye and ask, ‘Why are you doing this? Don’t you fear God?’ I told them, ‘We are the same age as your daughters. There is no mercy in your hearts. You hit me. You rape me’.”
She said the ISIS fighters would say, “Islam allows it and we will do it.”
“They forced me to read Quran and pray in front of them. And I had no choice but to obey,”
Hind said most ISIS members are foreigners and some spoke English. She said some were from Egypt, Afghanistan, Pakistan, the United Kingdom, the United States, China and other countries. She said the foreigners mostly stayed in Syria and did not come to Iraq.
During her captivity, she noticed that the militants were eager to pray and fast. She said they frequently mentioned heaven.
Hind said that some ISIS members drank alcohol, but only in secret because it is not allowed in Islam.
Hind said some of the foreign women who joined ISIS were very happy. She said a woman from the UK told her, “ISIS is very good. They provide us with everything: money, houses and guards.”
Hind said went to school and learned how to read and write, but after what ISIS did to her she remembers nothing.
“I was raped by three different ISIS members with different nationalities. I had no idea I was pregnant. I felt sick all the time and one day I started to bleed. I was taken to the doctor and they told me I was pregnant. I lost the child because the child was threatening my life,” said the woman.
“I am just happy that I did not carry an ISIS child into this world,” she said.
Hind was also left heartbroken and ashamed.
“Before ISIS attack, I was in love with a guy. After I returned, he told me that he is not interested in me anymore because I was raped,” she said.
Hind said that she has no desire to get married.
Hind now lives at a camp with her family in Erbil.
“Life at the camp is very hard, “ she said.
“Soon, I will leave to Europe and will never come back, even if this place becomes a heaven on earth.”