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action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home4/tailoft4/public_html/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6121The fictionalized Kurdish character Zara has been lauded in reviews for the depth and complexity of her character. Her fictional external would, her rationalization for her behavior, her desire to die to save others, comes from a very non-fictional tragedy. The abduction, rape, and sale into slavery of 6,800 Yazidi women and children in the 2014 Sinjar Massacre.<\/p>\n
Zara\u2019s trauma, because of her fictional kidnapping by the Daesh as she visited her Yazidi cousins, and the vivid portrayal of similar massacres and mass violations of women in the fictional ancient times chapters, led some reviewers to criticize The Matriarch Matrix. The intent of this storyline was to highlight the injustices committed against women not only in 2014, but across humanity\u2019s dark history.<\/p>\n
In The Matriarch Messiah, Zara\u2019s inner wound is finally exposed. The one she loves the most plays the most unconventional therapist helping her seek redemption, forgiveness, and acceptance. Her inner wound stems from not her own kidnapping, but the fate of her Yazidi cousins.<\/p>\n
*****<\/p>\n
To help readers better understand not only the history behind Zara\u2019s fictional wound, but highlight the tragedy of that war, a summary lies below with references for more reading:<\/p>\n
The 2014 Sinjar Massacre: A Tragedy of Sexual Violence and the Yazidi Struggle for Healing<\/strong> The Scale of Abductions and the Fight for Return<\/strong> Trauma and the Battle for Reintegration<\/strong> The Yazidi women who survived captivity and returned home faced profound physical and psychological trauma. Physically, many suffered from chronic pain, injuries, and health complications resulting from abuse and neglect during their captivity. Psychologically, survivors experienced severe conditions such as post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression, anxiety, and dissociation. Nightmares, flashbacks, and feelings of guilt were common, alongside struggles with social rejection and reintegration into their communities.<\/p>\n Psychologically, survivors report severe post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression, and suicidal ideation. A 2021 study by the Journal of Traumatic Stress found that 97% of Yazidi women survivors exhibited PTSD symptoms, and 68% had attempted suicide. Social reintegration is equally fraught. Some families, influenced by patriarchal norms, reject survivors due to misplaced shame, while others struggle to support them amid poverty and displacement. Organizations like Nadia\u2019s Initiative, founded by Nobel laureate Nadia Murad (herself a survivor), provide trauma counseling, economic programs, and advocacy, yet funding and accessibility remain inconsistent.<\/p>\n Historical Parallels: Sexual Violence as a Weapon of War<\/strong> Nanjing Massacre (1937\u20131938): During Japan\u2019s occupation of Nanjing, soldiers raped 20,000\u201380,000 Chinese women, often murdering them afterward. Survivors faced lifelong stigma, with many remaining silent until their deaths.<\/p>\n These examples reveal a grim pattern: sexual violence as a tool of ethnic cleansing, demoralization, and patriarchal domination.<\/p>\n References:<\/strong>
\nIn August 2014, the Islamic State (as my editor had commented, the term DAESH is a less religiously judgmental term) launched a brutal campaign against the Yazidi community in Sinjar, northern Iraq, marking one of the darkest chapters of modern genocide. The attack, aimed at eradicating the ethnoreligious minority, resulted in the massacre of thousands of men, the abduction of approximately 6,800 women and children, and the displacement of over 400,000 Yazidis. While the world has since recognized these atrocities as genocide, the survivors\u2014particularly women and girls subjected to rape, sexual slavery, and torture\u2014continue to grapple with profound trauma. Their journey toward healing remains fraught with systemic challenges, even as thousands remain missing nearly a decade later.<\/p>\n
\nOf the estimated 6,800 Yazidis abducted by DAESH, roughly 3,000 were women and girls forced into sexual slavery. As of late 2023, approximately 2,800 survivors have been rescued or escaped, often through perilous efforts by activists, families, or international organizations. Tragically, around 2,700 remain unaccounted for. Many were trafficked across DAESH-held territories in Iraq and Syria, sold in markets, or given as \u201cgifts\u201d to fighters. While some have been located in refugee camps, detention centers, or households of former DAESH collaborators, recovery efforts are hindered by bureaucracy, lack of resources, and the scattered aftermath of DAESH\u2019s territorial defeat.<\/p>\n
\nSurvivors who return face a labyrinth of psychological, physical, and social scars. Sexual violence was weaponized systematically: girls as young as nine were subjected to repeated rape, forced marriage, and pregnancy. Many endure chronic pain from injuries or sexually transmitted infections, while others bear children conceived through rape\u2014a reality that complicates their acceptance in a conservative community grappling with stigma.<\/p>\n
\nThe Sinjar Massacre is not an isolated horror. Over the past two centuries, mass sexual violence has repeatedly been deployed to terrorize populations:<\/p>\n\n
\nYazidi Women Surviving Daesh: Between Psychological Traumas and the Struggle to Reintegrate to Society – Women Across Frontiers Magazine<\/a><\/p>\n