TIME Magazineさんのインスタグラム写真 - (TIME MagazineInstagram)「Thikran Kamiran, now 19, described the moment ISIS arrived in his large northern village in #Iraq and tricked his grandfather, the village leader, into gathering everyone in the school courtyard, allegedly for safe passage out if they chose not to convert to Islam. Fighters led the Yezidi men and older boys away, supposedly carrying them to safety at nearby Sinjar mountain. Thikran, then 15, was with his mother and sister when they heard gunfire. Everyone knew their husbands, brothers and sons had just been killed. The fighters saved Thikran’s grandfather for last, letting him realize he’d led his people into a trap, before shooting him too. That’s the day Thikran learned to hide his anger and fear. He was taken with his mother and sister to an ISIS stronghold and sent to an Islamist school to study the Quran. “We converted to Islam and told them ‘We will obey you,’” he told TIME. “I made that sacrifice to protect myself and my family.” He doesn’t feel guilty for playing along, he says; he “feels nothing,” a frequent answer from many of the boys. Burying anger, pain and fear was a survival skill. Reactivating emotion means facing grief over loved ones killed, guilt over anyone they may have killed or whatever else they did to remain alive. So they stay numb. Read more, and see more pictures, at the link in bio. Photograph by @newshatavakolian—@magnumphotos for TIME」5月31日 1時14分 - time

TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 5月31日 01時14分


Thikran Kamiran, now 19, described the moment ISIS arrived in his large northern village in #Iraq and tricked his grandfather, the village leader, into gathering everyone in the school courtyard, allegedly for safe passage out if they chose not to convert to Islam. Fighters led the Yezidi men and older boys away, supposedly carrying them to safety at nearby Sinjar mountain. Thikran, then 15, was with his mother and sister when they heard gunfire. Everyone knew their husbands, brothers and sons had just been killed. The fighters saved Thikran’s grandfather for last, letting him realize he’d led his people into a trap, before shooting him too. That’s the day Thikran learned to hide his anger and fear. He was taken with his mother and sister to an ISIS stronghold and sent to an Islamist school to study the Quran. “We converted to Islam and told them ‘We will obey you,’” he told TIME. “I made that sacrifice to protect myself and my family.” He doesn’t feel guilty for playing along, he says; he “feels nothing,” a frequent answer from many of the boys. Burying anger, pain and fear was a survival skill. Reactivating emotion means facing grief over loved ones killed, guilt over anyone they may have killed or whatever else they did to remain alive. So they stay numb. Read more, and see more pictures, at the link in bio. Photograph by @newshatavakolian@Magnum Photos for TIME


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