Yazidis are an ethnically Kurdish community who mainly live in Nineveh province in northern Iraq, in Syria, and in southeast Turkey. They speak a shared Kurdish dialect (Kurmanji) and practice Yazidism, a closed religion dating back the Sumerian period. Yazidis worship “Xwede,” the only God, who created the world and sent seven angels to protect it. They have been accused by other religions of worshiping the devil and have suffered from genocidal attacks throughout their history. The recent ISIS genocide brings previous episodes of destruction and holocaust to their minds, along with feelings of guilt and shame (2, 3).
During the summer of 2014, ISIS occupied Iraqi and Syrian territories with the aim of establishing a caliphate (4). ISIS subjugated the Nineveh governorate in northern Iraq and, on Aug. 3, 2014, launched a coordinated attack on Sinjar city and surrounding towns and villages, forcing Yazidis to seek refuge on Mount Sinjar. Those who could not flee in time were either killed or kidnapped (5). Since then, several hundred thousand Yazidis have been transferred from Mount Sinjar to several camps near Dohuk city (Figure 1). For Yazidis, guilt, shame, and comorbid depression are frequent, but a determined, long-standing ethnic pride has been a source of strength as they suffer yet another episode in their history of genocide (6, 7).
Acknowledgments
The authors thank the Jesuit Refugee Service, especially Father Joseph Cassar and Sister Irene Guia, for permitting them to share this information and to provide the opportunity to work with Yazidi refugees in the Dohuk mental health and psychosocial support project.
References
1.
American Psychiatric Association: Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 5th ed (DSM-5). Washington, DC, American Psychiatric Association, 2013
Szakonyi D: Ethnic mobilization in post-Soviet Georgia: the case of the Yezidi-Kurds. Journal on Ethnopolitics and Minority Issues in Europe 2007; 6:1–19
Cetorelli V, Sasson I, Shabila N, et al: Mortality and kidnapping estimates for the Yazidi population in the area of Mount Sinjar, Iraq, in August 2014: a retrospective household survey. PLoS Med 2017; 14:e1002297
Ceri V, Özlü-Erkilic Z, Özer Ü, et al: Psychiatric symptoms and disorders among Yazidi children and adolescents immediately after forced migration following ISIS attacks. Neuropsychiatr 2016; 30:145–150
From the Department of Psychiatry, Saint Joseph University; the Department of Psychiatry, Hotel Dieu de France, Beirut, Lebanon; and the Jesuit Refugee Service, Dohuk, Iraq.
From the Department of Psychiatry, Saint Joseph University; the Department of Psychiatry, Hotel Dieu de France, Beirut, Lebanon; and the Jesuit Refugee Service, Dohuk, Iraq.
From the Department of Psychiatry, Saint Joseph University; the Department of Psychiatry, Hotel Dieu de France, Beirut, Lebanon; and the Jesuit Refugee Service, Dohuk, Iraq.
The authors report no financial relationships with commercial interests.
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