Iraqi minority religious leader calls for US support

Team Infidel

Forum Spin Doctor
Media: AFP
Byline:
Date: 10 October 2006


by Paul Schemm

LALESH, Iraq, Oct 10, 2006 (AFP) - The leader of Iraq's embattled Yazidi
religion called for continued support from the US-led coalition Tuesday,
saying his half-million-strong community is threatened by Islamic
extremists.

"We as a minority need the great powers' help and support," the Yazidis'
Baba Sheikh, Khurto Hajji Ismail, told AFP during the religion's most
important festival.

"If no coalition forces were here, we would suffer from persecution and
oppression," he added.

The Yazidis are in the midst of their Eid al-Jamaa or Feast of Assembly, an
annual festival at their holy temple in Lalesh, just 60 kilometres (less
than 40 miles) northwest of Iraq's main northern city of Mosul, a bastion
of Sunni insurgents.

While Al-Qaeda, Ansar al-Sunna and other Sunni extremist groups in Mosul
have carried out assassinations against Iraqis of all religions, the
Yazidis say their community is singled out because it is neither Christian
nor Muslim.

"The Islamic groups are a major threat to us, especially extremists like
Al-Qaeda and the other terrorists," said Ismail, even as Yazidis from
Georgia, Germany, Turkey and elsewhere flocked to Iraq for the annual
festival.

In addition to God, the Yazidis worship Malak Taus, the chief of the angels
who takes the form of a blue peacock.

In other religions this figure has been equated with Lucifer and earned the
Yazidis a reputation -- wrong in their view -- as devil worshippers.

"We are caught between the borders of the Kurdish and Arab areas and
sometimes the Sunni tribes threaten our villages and ask us to leave," the
sheikh said.

Hundreds of Yazidi families have fled Mosul in the past two years leaving
little more than a half dozen now.

Most have found safety in the Kurdish Autonomous Region in the country's
north where security is much better than the rest of the Iraq.

Yazidis speak Kurdish and are granted full religious freedom under the
regional government in which they also hold two ministerial posts.

Ismail, however, maintains that minor officials resent them and prevent
their villages from receiving adequate services.

"The government does protect us and provides some services, but there are
some officials from the Kurdish parties that treat us badly," he said.

The sheikh and his council even announced that the ceremonies for Eid
al-Jamaa would not be held this year because of the security risk.

But at the village of Lalesh itself, which is filled with tombs of Yazidi
holy men and contains two sacred springs, throngs of devotees in their best
clothes continued to make pilgrimage during the seven days of the festival.

Most seemed sure that the clerics would still hold the sacred ceremonies
marking the climax of the festival, regardless of their public statements,
but all were aware of the threats outside.

"We are afraid of Islam," said Shirwan al-Fakir, whose family is charged
with taking care of the main temple. He paused. "Not all, just the
terrorists, because someone told them that the Yazidis are a problem."
 
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