1394-03-24 12:31
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تصاویر/ زنان شجاعی که داعشی ها را به جهنم می فرستند !

برای یک داعشی یکی از بدترین اتفاقاتی که ممکن است در طی جنگ بیفتد، تنها کشته شدن نیست، بلکه کشته شدن به دست یک زن است! اعضای داعش باور دارند که اگر چنین اتفاقی برای آنها بیفتد، مستقیما به جهنم می روند. بنابراین زنان کرد تاکنون جمعی از این جنایتکاران را به جهنم فرستاده اند.

به گزارش گلستان ما به نقل از شفقنا، در آگوست 2014 گروهک داعش منطقه سینجار عراق را تصرف کرد و در آنجا اقدام به شکنجه، دستگیری و کشتن جمعیت ایزدی های این منطقه کرد که اقلیتی قدیمی و کرد هستند. سربازان زن کرد با انجام عملیات های پاتک و ضدحمله، توانستند هزاران ایزدی را که در کوه سینجار به دام داعش افتاده بودند، نجات دهند. از آن زمان زنان مبارزات خود را علیه نظامیان رادیکال در کوبانی سوریه گسترش دادند.

بسیاری از این زنان کرد شاخه زنان نظامی YPG را تشکیل دادند که همراه با حزب پ ک ک و پیشمرگه ها علیه داعش مبارزه می کنند و طی سال های گذشته کمک های انسان دوستانه برای جمعیت های محلی فراهم کرده اند.

حدود 7 هزار تا 10 هزار زن در این گروه های نظامی مشغول به فعالیتند و اکثریت آنها 18 تا 25 سال سن دارند.

مجموعه تصاویری از زندگی این زنان مبارز در گالری آمده است.

تعدادی از این عکس ها توسط نیوشا توکلیان عکاس ایرانی گرفته شده است.

منبع: all that is interesting

18 year-old YPJ fighter Saria Zilan from Amuda, Syria: "I fought with ISIS in Serikani. I captured one of them and wanted to kill him, but my comrades did not let me. He kept staring at the ground and would not look at me, because he said it was forbidden by his religion to look at a woman." Newsha Tavakolian for TIME "It's been one year and four months since I joined YPJ. When I saw Martyr Deli on TV after ISIS beheaded her, I went to her burial ceremony the next day in Amuda. I saw Deli's mother sobbing madly. Right there I swore to myself to avenge her death. I joined YPJ the day after. In the past, women had various roles in the society. but all those roles were taken from them. We are here now to take back the role of women in society. I grew up in a country, where I was not allowed to speak my mother tongue of Kurdish. I was not allowed to have a Kurdish name. If you were a pro-Kurdish activist, they'd arrest you and put you in jail. But since the Rojava revolution, we have been getting back our rights. We were not allowed to speak our language before, and now ISIS wants to wipe us off completely from the Earth. I fought with ISIS in Serikani. I captured one of them and wanted to kill him, but my comrades did not let me do so. He kept staring at the ground and would not look at me, because he said it was forbidden by his religion to look at a woman. I have changed a lot. My way of thinking about the world has changed since I joined YPJ. Maybe some people wonder why we're doing this. But when they get to know us better, they will understand why. We are emotional people."

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Three YPJ fighters sit in an armed vehicle at their base in eastern Syria, days after returning from the front. Newsha Tavakolian for TIME

16 year-old YPJ fighter Barkhodan Kochar from Darbasi, Syria. "The war influenced me a lot. Before joining YPJ, whenever I asked my family about politics, they'd say 'that's not your business, you're just a girl'. But when I saw how the women of YPJ gave their lives for what they believed in, I knew that I wanted to be one of them." Newsha Tavakolian for TIME "I joined YPJ in 2014, because I wanted to defend my homeland. The war influenced me a lot. Before joining YPJ, whenever I asked my family about politics, they'd say 'that's not your business, you're just a girl'. But when I saw how the women of YPJ gave their lives for what they believed in, I knew that I wanted to be one of them. I feel much more empowered as a woman now. As a 16-year-old girl, I think that I have a very important role in my country and I will keep on fighting until the last drop of my blood is shed."

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In Western Kurdistan, the Syrian autonomous region Kurds call Rojava, young people are taught the ideology of the PYD (the Democratic Union Party of Syria), an affiliate of PKK (Kirdistan Workers' Party). Many of these young people will soon be drafted into YPJ and YPG armies to fight ISIS. Newsha Tavakolian for TIME

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YPJ members, including some who were wounded fighting against ISIS in Kobani, Syria, at the all-women Asayesh Security Base in Derek, Syria. Newsha Tavakolian for TIME

A picture of 17 year-old Cicek Derek, who died in the besieged city of Kobani, Syria, where her fellow fighters were unable to retrieve her body. Newsha Tavakolian for TIME

Rojin, the sister of 17 year-old YPJ fighter Cicek Derek who died fighting in Kobani, Syria. "When my mother told Cicek, please stay with your mother', she answered 'I left to fight for all the mothers of the world. I cannot stay here." Newsha Tavakolian for TIME "My sister was very naive and sensitive when she left us. But four years later, when she came back to bury the body of her friend who had been killed in Kobane, she was smart and tough and I could see lots of self-confidence in her eyes. When my mother told her 'please don't go back, stay with your mother', she answered 'I left to fight for all the mothers of the world. I cannot stay here'. When she came back for her friend's burial, she briefly visited the house. She kept taking pictures in every corner and with all of us, as if it was her the last party of her life."

A billboard showing fallen YPJ solders,reading, “With you we live on and life continues.” Newsha Tavakolian for TIME

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in Syria, graves of YPJ members who were killed fighting ISIS. In the foreground, female fighters are buried together. Newsha Tavakolian for TIME

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