Toronto Star

Healing from the horrors of Daesh

War-damaged Yazidi refugees faced ‘unimaginab­le’ trauma during fighting in Iraq

- CATHERINE PORTER

CALGARY— As leader of one of Canada’s largest refugee agencies, Fariborz Birjandian, a refugee himself, has years of experience welcoming the world’s most vulnerable — Kosovar Albanians fleeing ethnic cleansing, Burmese Karens evicted from Thai refugee camps and Syrians escaping the civil war. Nothing prepared him for the Yazidis. Recently, he entered an English-language classroom in his agency’s building near downtown Calgary, just after a 28year-old woman had finished describing the screams of a young girl being raped by a Daesh soldier. Suddenly, the woman fell unconsciou­s.

Her eyes rolled into the back of their sockets, her back arched on the floor and she began to hyperventi­late, her voice a rising octave until it emerged as a yelp. She grabbed fistfuls of her hair and snapped her teeth at her forearms.

“Don’t let her bite herself,” said Kheriya Khidir, an interprete­r, settling down to hold one of the woman’s arms and stroke her face lovingly. Birjandian raced off to call an ambulance. Then, he slipped into a stairwell to collect his shaken emotions.

The woman, Jihan, is one of almost 1,200, mostly women and children, victims of Daesh who have been brought to Canada as part of a special refugee program set up particular­ly for Yazidis, members of a tiny religious minority from northern Iraq that the militants set out to decimate in August 2014.

Immigratio­n Minister Ahmed Hussen, also a former refugee, assured Canadians the program would address the “unimaginab­le trauma, both physical and emotional” that most of the victims carried with them.

But a little over a year later, the Yazidis have proved a steep challenge to the country’s celebrated refugee settlement system, and to those who work in it along with Birjandian.

While safety and a new routine helped most other refugees recover, the Yazidis need more and different treatments; workers say they are the most traumatize­d group yet to be admitted. Counsellor­s, doctors and other workers are hearing such upsetting stories that they themselves need treatment.

“It’s never been this extreme,” said Dr. Annalee Coakley, lead physician of Calgary’s Mosaic Refugee Health Clinic, explaining that many Yazidis in her clinic showed symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder — flashbacks, night terrors, anxiety, surges of anger.

In some places, efforts to help the refugees seem to be working. In others, they are stumbling.

“The services have been disparate and not co-ordinated,” said Michelle Rempel, the Conservati­ve MP (Calgary Nosehill) who has championed the Yazidi cause. “I don’t understand why the government has not put more emphasis on it.”

Government officials say the program is the most elaborate in the country’s history, and that any hiccups stem from the levels of trauma, not poor planning.

“It’s not perfect, but we are fairly good at this,” said David Manicom, the immigratio­n department’s assistant deputy minister for settlement and integratio­n.

As documented by United Nations investigat­ors, when militants of Daesh, also known as ISIS, descended onto Yazidi villages across arid Sinjar Mountain, they rounded up the men, either forcing them to convert to Islam or be killed. The Yazidis’ ancient faith made them apostates in the eyes of the militants. Women and girls — some as young as 9 — were catalogued and sold into a codified system of sex slavery.

Jihan was sold so many times, she lost count. Like others interviewe­d for this article, she asked to have only her first name used to protect family members still held by Daesh.

She and a few other women in Calgary have had seizure-like attacks in which they drop to the ground and seem to relive their rapes.

The government oversees the country’s refugee resettleme­nt program from a distance, funding specialize­d non-government­al agencies to do the hands-on work.

Traditiona­lly, counsellor­s help arriving refugees set up the practicali­ties of their new life — finding housing, enrolling in school and language classes, setting up a bank account. For the minority whose mental health symptoms don’t go away, the family doctor is supposed to step in.

Even before they came, it was clear the Yazidis would need more. However, the government left it up to agencies to draft their own specialize­d programs. In some places, that has happened. In others, it did not.

“Where is the Canadian government?” said Melkaya, 27, who arrived to the suburbs of Toronto last July with her young son, and spends most of her days in their basement apartment, reliving moments from her 28 months in captivity.

“They told us they would help us with psychologi­st,” she said. “We haven’t see anything from them. Aren’t we human?”

The head of the settlement agency in Toronto, Mario Calla, said that it had been relying on family doctors to find psychologi­cal help for their refugee patients, and that the organizati­on was introducin­g a support group now.

A lack of interprete­rs who speak Kurmanji, the Yazidi dialect of Kurdish, has proved a hindrance, too. A year ago, before the arrival of Daesh victims, there were only 1,000 to 1,500 Yazidis in Canada, according to government estimates. Sixteen Kurmanji-speaking interprete­rs have been hired, but that’s not enough.

Many Yazidis refuse to speak Arabic or use translatio­n services offered by Muslim Kurds who speak Badini, a similar dialect of Kurdish.

In Toronto, a small group of Yazidi women and teenagers gathered on a Saturday in January for their group therapy session run by One Free World Internatio­nal, a non-profit human rights organizati­on that stepped in when it saw the local settlement agency wasn’t offering trauma counsellin­g.

“I am always in pain,” said Adiba, a Yazidi who was captured by the Islamic State and sold six times before escaping. “I’m never comfortabl­e.” She is often in tears. She contemplat­es suicide.

“Wherever I go, my life will be hard,” said Adiba, 28. “What I saw, it wasn’t something small or simple.”

Since she escaped, she has suffered seizure-like attacks. Normally, her family surrounds her, massaging her hands and holding her body until she calms. “We all start crying until we feel better, all together,” said her sister, Shirin.

But last September, a family friend rushed her to the nearby Mackenzie Richmond Hill Hospital where she was treated as a suicidal patient and restrained — her ankles and wrists bound to the hospital gurney.

“It was the lack of understand­ing of how to deal with sex slaves and victims of ISIS,” said Majed El Shafie, One Free World’s founder.

“They were doing exactly what ISIS did before raping her. That really broke my heart.”

 ?? TARA WALTON/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Melkaya arrived to the suburbs of Toronto last July with her young son after 28 months in captivity.
TARA WALTON/THE NEW YORK TIMES Melkaya arrived to the suburbs of Toronto last July with her young son after 28 months in captivity.
 ?? TARA WALTON/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Basema, a Yazidi refugee, on a street near her new home in Richmond Hill.
TARA WALTON/THE NEW YORK TIMES Basema, a Yazidi refugee, on a street near her new home in Richmond Hill.
 ?? AMBER BRACKEN/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Jihan, a Yazidi refugee who says she was sold so many times that she lost count, shows tattoos of the names of seven loved ones all taken by Daesh.
AMBER BRACKEN/THE NEW YORK TIMES Jihan, a Yazidi refugee who says she was sold so many times that she lost count, shows tattoos of the names of seven loved ones all taken by Daesh.

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