Syndicated News
Hearing on ISIS's Atrocities Against Women and Religious Minorities
Bookmark and Share

CHICAGO -- U.S. Senator Mark Kirk (R-Ill.) hosted a U.S. Senate Human Rights Caucus Field Hearing to discuss ISIS's growing threats to security and human dignity in the Middle East. Witnesses included Sandra Raheem, an Iraqi Assyrian Christian asylum-seeker; Dr. Khalil Marrar, Assistant Professor at Governors State University; Reine Hanna, Director of the Assyrian National Council of Illinois; and Mar Gewargis Younan, Diocesan Bishop at the Ancient Church of the East. Co-founded with U.S. Senator Chris Coons (D-Del.), the Senate Human Rights Caucus works to raise awareness and take action against egregious human rights violations throughout the world. "ISIS controls more money, fighters and land than al-Qaeda did on 9/11 and is committing mass atrocities against women, children, and ethnic and religious minorities in the Middle East," Senator Kirk said. "Members of Chicago's Assyrian-American community and Illinois' Middle East expert community highlighted how these barbaric terrorists pose grave threats not just overseas, but right here in Chicago." During the Field Hearing, Dr. Khalil Marrar explained why ISIS may target Chicago. "Where they really want to hit is what they call high value targets or significant value targets," Marrar said. "Chicago, Illinois, is not just a major financial hub and a transportation hub," he added, but also "a soft target" and "the hometown of President Obama." This summer, a pro-ISIS Twitter user posted a photograph featuring a handwritten threat to Chicago, dated June 20th, with the city's Old Republic Building in the background. Bishop Younan reported that "ISIS drove millions of innocent men, women and children from their homes," adding: "They were given three options: convert to Islam, pay a jizya tax [for non-Muslims], or leave their homes with nothing but the clothes on their back. No matter which option they chose, the outcome was always the same. ISIS would torture, maim and behead all that were in their reach." Sandra Raheem testified that ISIS's advances forced her family to flee their hometown and take refuge in an Iraqi morgue. "Upon reaching where the morgue was, they met with other refugees, and they had no food, no water, minimal clothing, minimal shelter," Raheem said with translation by Bishop Younan. "A large portion of the elderly population actually passed," she added. "Many of the children became very sick and many died because of unsanitary conditions and lack of basic necessities to survive." Reine Hanna recounted meeting directly with many of ISIS's female victims. "Our clients include a woman whose cousin was raped for refusing to convert to Islam," she said, "an elderly woman who could do nothing but stand by as an 8-year-old girl was taken from her village and abducted, liberal Muslim women who have been threatened for not wearing the traditional hijab, and a bereaved mother whose children have been missing since the rise of ISIS in Iraq." Senator Kirk noted the Assyrian-American community can help the federal government given that many of the community's members have strong language skills and personal ties to territories threatened by ISIS occupation. Background In early October, the United Nations released a report detailing ISIS's horrific human rights violations in Iraq. ISIS's violence has displaced over 2 million Iraqis, and the terrorist movement captured and killed more than 1,500 Iraqi troops stationed at the former U.S. Camp Speicher military base. In August, ISIS reportedly kidnapped nearly 500 women and girls, selling them as sex slaves or giving them to terrorist fighters as a reward. The U.S. Senate Human Rights Caucus was formed in the spirit of the Congressional Human Rights Caucus, which former Congressmen Tom Lantos (D-Calif.) and John Porter (R-Ill.) created in 1983. Later re-named the Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission, its members have been working to defend and advocate for internationally recognized human rights in a nonpartisan manner for more than 30 years. In this vein, the Senate Human Rights Caucus will continue the Commission's legacy by highlighting and defending key human rights issues throughout the world. In bringing congressional-level attention to global human rights issues that the public may be unaware of, the Caucus will be able to provide a voice to the voiceless and work to provide a lifeline to those suffering at the hand of repressive regimes. The Senate Human Rights Caucus held its first hearing on September 10, 2014, in Washington, D.C., entitled "A Region at Risk: ISIS's Barbaric Tactics in Iraq & Syria." Senators Kirk and Coons heard similar testimonies as those provided today, including from Assistant Secretary of State for Democracy, Human Rights and Labor Tom Malinowski, who detailed ISIS's horrific tactics and objectives and called for their ultimate defeat. Witness Biographies Reine Hanna, an Assyrian-American from Skokie, Ill., is currently working as a paralegal at an immigration firm in the Chicagoland area. She is the director of various Assyrian organizations, including the Assyrian National Council of Illinois and the Assyria Foundation. Dr. Khalil Marrar is a professor at Governors State University and previously belonged to the faculty of DePaul University. He has taught courses in history, religion and political science. While specializing in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, his research interests include international relations, American culture, foreign policy, political organizations and terrorism. He has served in editorial positions at the Arab Studies Quarterly and the Association of Arab-American University Graduates. Sandra Raheem is an Iraqi national who applied for asylum in the United States due to the ISIS threat against her hometown. She is an Assyrian Christian whose family fled their home after many families in their town were forced by ISIS to pay a tax called a jizya. Many families were killed, even if the tax was paid. Sandra's family was forced to abandon their home and temporarily live in a morgue with no access to food or water while fleeing ISIS. Bishop Mar Gewargis Younan was born in Baghdad, Iraq, in 1980 -- at the start of the Iran/Iraq war. Due to the growing turmoil and his father's refusal to become a Baath Party member, his family was forced to leave Iraq when he was only 40 days old. He was raised in Chicago. His Grace received his education on Church liturgy and Sacraments, with a focus on the Assyrian/Aramaic language in Chicago. He served as a Deacon at Saint Odisho Church in Chicago for 20 years, and was ordained a priest in 2012. In June 2014, His Grace was elevated to the rank of Bishop for the Chicago Diocese of the Ancient Church of the East. He obtained a Bachelor of Science in Management degree from Northeastern Illinois University.



Type your comment and click
or register to post a comment.
* required field
User ID*
enter user ID or e-mail to recover login credentials
Password*