Who, What, Why: Who are the Yazidis?
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| Up to 50,000 Yazidis are trapped in the mountains in northwest Iraq | 
Among
 the many victims of the advance of The Islamic State (IS) in the Middle
 East are a group of up to 50,000 Yazidis, who are trapped in the 
mountains in northwest Iraq without food or water. Author Diana Darke 
explains who these mysterious religious adherents are.
Estimating their current numbers is difficult, with figures ranging from 70,000 to 500,000. Feared, vilified and persecuted, there is no doubt the population has dwindled considerably over the course of the past century. Like other minority religions of the region, such as the Druze and the Alawis, it is not possible to convert to Yazidism, only to be born into it.
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| The Yazidis' holiest temple is in Lalesh, situated in a valley 430kms northwest of Baghdad | 
Contributors
  Robert Leutheuser is an independent photographer who has travelled among the Kurdish peoples for the past 14 years. He has spent an increasing amount of time with the Yezidis beginning seven years ago, visiting them in eight countries.
Their own name for themselves is 
Daasin (plural Dawaaseen), which is taken from the name of an old 
Nestorian - the Ancient Church of the East - diocese, for many of their 
beliefs are derived from Christianity. They revere both the Bible and 
the Koran, but much of their own tradition is oral. Due in part to its 
secrecy, there have been misunderstandings that the complex Yazidi faith
 is linked to Zoroastrianism
 with a light/dark duality and even sun worship. Recent scholarship, 
however, has shown that although their shrines are often decorated with 
the sun and that graves point east towards the sunrise, they share many 
elements with Christianity and Islam.
        Children are baptised with consecrated water by a pir 
(priest). At weddings he breaks bread and gives one half to the bride 
and the other to the groom.  The bride, dressed in red, visits Christian
 churches. In December, Yazidis fast for three days, before drinking 
wine with the pir. On 15-20 September there is an annual pilgrimage to 
the tomb of Sheikh Adi at Lalesh north of Mosul, where they carry out 
ritual ablutions in the river. They also practise sacrifice of animals 
and circumcision. Their supreme being is known as Yasdan. He is considered to be on such an elevated level that he cannot be worshipped directly. He is considered a passive force, the Creator of the world, not the preserver. Seven great spirits emanate from him of which the greatest is the Peacock Angel known as Malak Taus - active executor of the divine will. The peacock in early Christianity was a symbol of immortality, because its flesh does not appear to decay. Malak Taus is considered God's alter ego, inseparable from Him, and to that extent Yazidism is monotheistic.
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| Images of Malak Ta'us, or the Peacock Angel, appear on temples | 
  
    Images of Malak Ta'us, or the Peacock Angel, appear on temples, shrines and graves
  
      Yazidis pray to Malak Taus five times a day. His other name is Shaytan, which is Arabic for devil,
 and this has led to the Yazidis being mislabelled as 
"devil-worshippers". The Yazidis believe that souls pass into successive
 bodily forms (transmigration) and that gradual purification is possible
 through continual rebirth, making Hell redundant. The worst possible 
fate for a Yazidi is to be expelled from his community, as this means 
their soul can never progress. Conversion to another religion is, 
therefore, out of the question. In remote areas of southeast Turkey towards the Syrian and Iraqi borders, their once-abandoned villages are starting to come back to life, with new houses being built by the communities themselves. Many Yazidis are returning from exile now that the Turkish government leaves them undisturbed. Despite centuries of persecution the Yazidis have never abandoned their faith, testimony to their remarkable sense of identity and strength of character. If they are driven from Iraq and Syria by IS extremists, the likelihood is that more will settle in southeast Turkey where they are left to live out their beliefs in peace.
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| Temples and shrines, like this one known as Pir Awra, fleck the landscape | 
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| Older people from the isolate Sinjar region still dress in traditional white | 
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| Girls and boys from a Yazidi religious school sing hymns and prayers at Lalesh mple | 
 
  source: BBC
  






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