Recruiting women in Daesh: Mechanisms of attraction (1-2)
Extremist groups have
always been able to attract fighters from different regions regardless of the
social context through various rhetoric and propaganda.
Daesh was able to
attract women as well as men; a report by the Kazakh intelligence that in 2014,
around 50% of Kazakhs who joined Daesh were females.
Hans-Georg Maassen,
the head of the agency, told reporters in Berlin there had been a sharp
increase in the number of young women under 25 leaving Germany to join the
insurgents.
He said that about 100
of the 700 Germans in combat areas were women and about half of those women
were under 25.
Daesh committees
tasked with recruitment were determined to study the negative effects of
suppression and marginalization of women in some communities.
The terrorist
organization adopted a different consideration for women unlike other radical
groups who tend to completely isolate women from the society. Daesh integrated
women in its activities, as some female Daesh members took part in the
organization’s educational and health structures as well as participating in
armed battles.
Daesh appeared more
understandable to certain pressures and marginalization over women in Muslim communities.
Unlike the rest of extremist organizations that rely on religious reasons for
recruitment, Daesh committees take advantage of vulnerabilities of each
individual female, before representing itself as the salvation to their
problems. A Washington Post report said ISIS offers $50 a month to fighters for
each wife.
The organization also
attracted women who failed to prove themselves because of their male-oriented
societies by offering them greater roles in the Daesh community in accordance
with the religious framework of the group.
A report by the Royal
United Services Institute for Defence and Security Studies (RUSI), said the
reasons that drove hundreds of women to journey from Europe to Isis territories
were “complex”. The report found that women and girls are joining ISIS after
being seduced by the terrorist group’s offer of a twisted version of
“empowerment” for Muslims
Daesh took advantage
of some female individual’s frustrations due to economic or social problems;
Belgian Laura Passoni who converted to Islam and moved to Syria after falling
for a man she met in a supermarket said she realized the promises of a better
life made by Islamic State were a lie.
Some Muhajirat (female
migrants) are active on social media and blog about their life in the Islamic
State as a utopian dream in contrast to the narrative served by Western media.
Moreover, some females
also left Europe for Daesh for suffering persecution, especially when it comes
to wearing the Hijab; in other words, the rise of extreme-Right and its
anti-Muslim speeches contributed significantly to this phenomenon. On the other
hand Daesh-affiliated media outlets target the West by taking advantage of its
interventions in Muslim countries to attract women under the banner of
defending Islam against the west.
Also, there is no
doubt that EU countries can be blamed for Daesh’s success in attracting
European girls for not being able to address their societal problems.