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Why There Are So Many Women Among Kurds Fighting Daesh

© AFP 2023 / Delil SouleimanFemale fighters from the Kurdish People Protection Unit (YPG) take a break on the front line in the northeastern Syrian city of Hasakeh on September 4, 2015.
Female fighters from the Kurdish People Protection Unit (YPG) take a break on the front line in the northeastern Syrian city of Hasakeh on September 4, 2015. - Sputnik International
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Mainstream media has been using photographs of Syrian Kurdish female fighters, who are fighting Daesh jihadists on the ground, as a means of exploitative entertainment. In doing so, the meaning of the Kurds’ fight for freedom is being subverted for profit.

Ivan Nikolaev — Women fighting alongside men against radical Islamism clearly demonstrate the alternative ideology necessary for the ultimate defeat of Daesh, in addition to the bombs pounding Syria and Iraq.

In order to get a deeper understanding of the Rojava (“The West,” as Syrian Kurds refer to the lands they inhabit) Amazons, it is necessary to understand their ideology.

In the oversimplified and essentially incorrect view popular with Western media, the women of Rojava joined the men in fighting for freedom because their homes, families, and lives were threatened by Daesh terrorists.

Фото опубликовано Beth Pulman (@biffatron) Дек 16 2015 в 3:24 PST

The active engagement of women not only in military, but also in all walks of life in Rojava is embedded into the ideology of the influential Syrian Kurdish party, the Democratic Union Party (PYD).

Based on democratic confederalist principles elaborated by Abdullah Ocalan, the founding father of the notorious Kurdish Worker’s Party (PKK) in Turkey, the PYD introduced self-governing structures across the three territories in which they live along the Turkish border they call the Kobani, Jazira and Afrin cantons.

The social contract, or the Constitution, adopted across the three Rojava cantons in early 2014, during the infamous Kobani siege by Daesh, guarantees freedom of expression, stimulates self-governance and the direct process of democracy. Gender equality goes naturally with the proclamation.

This would sound like common demagogy, especially when the mostly traditional distribution of gender roles in this part of the world are taken into account. However, the standoff, to the death, by the locals with the Daesh mujahedeen without international assistance, and at a time when the self-governance of Rojava was being created, speaks for itself.

If not for the inspiring ideology of freedom mobilizing the Rojavan people of all nationalities and religions, the decisive battle of Kobani could have ended very differently.

It is important to note that the society of Rojava is markedly polyethnic, and each national and religious group, whether Arab, Assyrian, Aramean, Armenian, Chechen or Turkoman — along with the Kurd majority — have representation at all levels across the self-governing territories. Moreover, all groups possess the right and ability to teach and use their own languages, as numerous international reports suggest.

One such report is a joint statement by an international academic delegation of prominent ethnologists and scholars who visited the de-facto autonomous region in December 2014.

“In Rojava, we believe, genuinely democratic structures have indeed been established,” the online statement reads. “Not only is the system of government accountable to the people, but it springs out of new structures that make direct democracy possible: popular assemblies and democratic councils. Women participate on an equal footing with men at every level and are now able to organize in autonomous councils, assemblies, and committees to address their specific concerns. The women of Rojava we met embodied empowerment, self-confidence, and pride.”

The legitimate Syrian government of Bashar Assad has agreed not to confront Rojava, while the three self-declared cantons acknowledge their inclusion in the Syrian republic. As a result, Rojavans are not regarded as separatists, and are no threat to Damascus or Syrian sovereignty.

The secular ideology of Rojava is a working example of the peaceful coexistence of different religions and ethnic groups in the Middle East. A brilliant addition to anti-Daesh coalition efforts, the female fighters of Rojava can be regarded as a visible symbol of the struggle for a decisive victory over the intolerance, bigotry and radicalism inculcated by Daesh, al-Nusra and their like.

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