TIME Magazineさんのインスタグラム写真 - (TIME MagazineInstagram)「When Hanan escaped from Islamic State captivity, there wasn't much to come back to. She and her five children had survived a year in a living nightmare. After her husband finally managed to arrange their rescue in the summer of 2015, they joined him in a dusty camp in Iraq. ISIS still controlled the territory they called home, and they were unsure if they could ever go back. So when Germany offered her the promise of safety and a chance to heal from her trauma, it wasn't a difficult decision. Accepting a place in a groundbreaking program for women and children survivors of ISIS captivity did mean leaving her husband behind in the camp, but she was told he could join her after two years. Hanan, now 34, was one of 1,100 women and children brought to Germany in an unprecedented effort to aid those most affected by ISIS's systematic campaign to kill and enslave the ancient Yazidi religious minority. But German officials never granted visas to any of the women’s husbands, leaving families, including Hanan's, indefinitely torn apart. And like most of the women, she's not undergoing promised trauma therapy. Before she left Iraq, writes @kristenchick, Hanan said she was given a piece of paper with information about what awaited her in Germany. "I wish I could find that paper now," she says, "because the promises they gave us, they didn’t keep all of them." Read more at the link in bio. Photograph by @toriferenc—@instituteartist for TIME」8月25日 7時03分 - time

TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 8月25日 07時03分


When Hanan escaped from Islamic State captivity, there wasn't much to come back to. She and her five children had survived a year in a living nightmare. After her husband finally managed to arrange their rescue in the summer of 2015, they joined him in a dusty camp in Iraq. ISIS still controlled the territory they called home, and they were unsure if they could ever go back. So when Germany offered her the promise of safety and a chance to heal from her trauma, it wasn't a difficult decision. Accepting a place in a groundbreaking program for women and children survivors of ISIS captivity did mean leaving her husband behind in the camp, but she was told he could join her after two years. Hanan, now 34, was one of 1,100 women and children brought to Germany in an unprecedented effort to aid those most affected by ISIS's systematic campaign to kill and enslave the ancient Yazidi religious minority. But German officials never granted visas to any of the women’s husbands, leaving families, including Hanan's, indefinitely torn apart. And like most of the women, she's not undergoing promised trauma therapy. Before she left Iraq, writes @kristenchick, Hanan said she was given a piece of paper with information about what awaited her in Germany. "I wish I could find that paper now," she says, "because the promises they gave us, they didn’t keep all of them." Read more at the link in bio. Photograph by @toriferenc@instituteartist for TIME


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