Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options
A Yazidi family in a temporary shelter in Iraq. (Kevin Clarke)
Politics & SocietyDispatches
Kevin Clarke
Few Yazidi families have been able to escape from temporary shelters in Syria and Iraqi Kurdistan. Their home villages have not been swept for mines and booby traps left behind when ISIS was dislodged.
Politics & SocietyNews
Jim Heintz - Associated PressMark Lewis - Associated Press
A Congolese doctor who treats rape victims and an Iraqi woman who speaks out for those — like herself — who were raped and tortured by the Islamic State group won the Nobel Peace Prize on Friday for their work to end the use of sexual violence as a weapon of war.
Students attend a new kindergarten in Qaraqosh, Iraq. (Kevin Clarke)
Politics & SocietyDispatches
Kevin Clarke
Qaraqosh’s wary residents who fled ISIS have returned to a city in near ruin, but there are signs of renewed life, including a kindergarten sponsored by the Jesuit Refugee Service.
“Mother Mary” gazes serenely down on the traffic fuming and stalling around her in Ankawa, a suburb of Erbil. (Kevin Clarke)
FaithDispatches
Kevin Clarke
Christians in northern Iraq try to rebuild their lives after the defeat of ISIS, but the terror of being driven from their homes is not easily forgotten.
FaithJesuitical
Ashley McKinless
He was a French novice monk in Syria. She was a journalist who wanted to become a nun. Then, they fell in love.
A young Yazidi woman sits with her three children inside a tent for displaced persons in northern Iraq on May 28, 2017. They fled the 2014 ISIS advance in which many Yazidis were killed and others, especially women and children, captured and trafficked by ISIS. (iStock/Joel Carillet)
Politics & SocietyShort Take
Jeff Fortenberry
U.S. Rep. Jeff Fortenberry argues that as beleaguered religious minorities in Iraq hang on for their very survival, the survival of religious pluralism itself is also at stake.