Though fighting the most-feared members of the militant
Islamic State (IS) group in Syria, hundreds of Arab female fighters are
also battling with the disapproval of their relatives and society.
"I
braved my tribal clan, my father, my mother. Now I'm braving the
enemy," says 21-year-old Batul, who is part of an Arab-Kurdish alliance
battling to capture IS's Syrian stronghold of Raqqa.
She
is one of more than 1,000 Arab women who have joined Kurdish male and
female fighters in the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) alliance,
according to a spokeswoman.
Read more: 'I joined the Afghan army to save lives'
Standing
in the desert some 20 kilometres from Raqqa, Batul speaks passionately
about her decision to fight IS, which holds the nearby village of
Al-Torshan.
"My parents told me, 'Either you put down
your weapons or we disown you'," she says, wearing an ammunition vest
and a floral scarf around her shoulders.
Her parents have not spoken to her since.
Batul, a 21-year-old female Arab fighter among the Syrian Democratic Forces, talks to a comrade of hers. ─AFP
Batul comes from the Al-Sharabiyeh tribe, one of the best-known of the Arab tribes of northeast Syria.
Her
family views her as a rebel, who removed the headscarf worn by many
Muslim women and refused her father's orders to pray in front of him.
But
she is proud of the decision she took two years ago to join the Kurdish
Women's Protection Units, more commonly known as YPJ, which is an
all-female Kurdish military organisation and a key component of the SDF
alliance.
"I joined the YPJ to liberate my homeland, but also to free women from slavery," she says.
"We must no longer remain cloistered behind four walls."
Continued, here.
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