How ISIS Is Using Marriage as a Trap
Since the fall, ISIS has stepped up its social media campaign (especially
in English and French) directed at luring young Western women and teens to be
their wives. The recruiting and matchmaking is most often spearheaded by women
residing in the Islamic State.
What many people
don't realize is that men within most Arab countries do not have access to
women before marriage. For the most part, there is no dating, no premarital sex
and no fooling around. But marriage remains a costly endeavor, and most men
don't or can't get married until their thirties. In fact, more than 50 percent of men aged 25-29 remain unmarried
because of the high cost. This has resulted in all kinds of stop-gap measures
that confuse researchers who study gender and sexuality. It appears to have
also resulted in more men engaging in same-sex practices.
"One way to ensure that
the fighters do not leave is to create anchors to ensure they will stay: a job,
a house, a wife and a child."
ISIS has emerged as
the perfect solution to the so-called "marriage crisis." In addition
to being promised a salary, male foreign fighters considering joining the
Islamic State are also promised a wife -- and perhaps more than one. This goes
a long way towards explaining why so many men from the region are flocking to ISIS. While Belgium has a disproportionate number of
foreign fighters and the media focuses on those leaving from North America and
Europe, the vast majority of foreign fighters are more local and from
the region.
ISIS is an
attractive option for men who are unemployed or underemployed and are highly
motivated to find a spouse. The group will also rank the women, considering the
foreign women and converts to be especially valuable. And it will reward these
women to the most prized recruits. On top of this, ISIS
has hundreds of Yazidi and Shia sex slaves.
But ISIS worries about loss of troops and defection. One way
to ensure that the fighters do not leave is to create anchors to ensure they
will stay: a job, a house, a wife and a child. ISIS
has instituted a payment system wherein you are paid a stipend for every child
you have in the Islamic State.
"Female recruits are
promised a wonderful husband and a free house with top-of-the-line appliances,
such as a fridge, microwave and even a milkshake machine."
On the female
recruitment side, women like Umm Layth (Aqsa Mahmood) use Twitter accounts
solely dedicated to jihadi matchmaking. They promise the girls a wonderful life
and say all of their needs will be taken care of. They are promised a wonderful
husband and a free house with top-of-the-line appliances, such as a fridge,
microwave and even a milkshake machine. Most importantly, they are told that
their husband will care for them and that if he dies, she will instantly be
transformed into a hero -- the wife of a martyr. ISIS has even reportedly established
a marriage bureau in Raqqa,
Syria to
register potential spouses.
The female
recruiters are adept at lowering the girls' guard and putting them at ease.
Through a series of online interactions, the recruiters will establish rapport,
build trust and create an environment of secrecy and exclusion of other friends
and family members.
Women and very
young girls have been disappearing throughout Europe, North America and Australia
following the siren's call by women such as Umm Ubaydah and Umm Haritha. Most
recently, a 23-year-old woman from Edmonton,
Canada was
recruited online by a female recruiter when she tried to take a course about
the Qur'an. Instead, the young woman's sister said she
learned how to get to Raqqa.
"ISIS
pays members for every child they have, creating a new brainwashed generation
to ensure the longevity of the group, even as men are killed in battle."
The disconnect
between what the women think their life will be like and what their life will
actually be like is best exemplified by a recent report called "Becoming Mulan" [the Disney character], by the
Institute for Strategic Dialogue. The report takes its title from an October
2014 tweet by Umm Ubaydah. "I wonder if I can pull a Mulan and enter the
battlefield," she tweeted. Both Umm Ubaydah and Umm Layth posted online
their desire to be martyrs or active in the battle. But women do not have this
option when joining the Islamic State.
In January 2015, ISIS released a guide for women in the Islamic State. The
document was intended for women residing in the Gulf
countries, especially Saudi
Arabia. While the document explained that
women could make more of a difference in ISIS than they could in their home
countries, it made clear that women's roles would be limited to the household:
to cleaning, cooking and childcare.
ISIS wives are encouraged to get pregnant quickly and have many children.
This functions as an anchor for the men but also as a way of growing the
Islamic State. Babies and children ensure that there is a new generation ready
to be trained, brainwashed and able to ensure the longevity of the group, even
if the men are killed in battle.
"These young girls are being preyed upon and should be allowed to return to their families rather than be criminalized."
Understanding how ISIS is using women will go a long way towards devising counter messages to prevent young teens from leaving home for Turkey and Syria. Knowing what awaits them and what ISIS hides in Arabic and does not reveal to Western women, might give the girls pause or plant the preliminary seeds of doubt that will discourage their departure. But also understanding that young girls are being preyed upon may allow for more creative ways of allowing some of them to return if they can get out rather than criminalizing their actions and not allowing them to reunite with their families.
We have seen a few such successes. For example, three girls en route from Denver to Syria were found and stopped at Frankfurt airport. But this story had a happy ending only because the families reached out to the FBI when the children went missing, and the FBI in turn did not turn them into suspects. The girls returned to Denver, unharmed and without any charges. Preventing the girls from leaving is the first priority but getting them back safely should be the second.
Source:http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mia-bloom/isis-marriage-trap_b_6773576.html?ncid=newsltushpmg00000003
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