Angelina Jolie's Powerful New Films Tell The Stories Of Women Captured By ISIS

Angelina Jolie's Powerful New Films Tell The Stories Of Women Captured By ISIS
US actress and UNHCR ambassador Angelina Jolie delivers a speech during a visit to a camp for displaced Iraqis in Khanke, a few kilometres (miles) from the Turkish border in Iraq's Dohuk province, on January 25, 2015. Run by authorities from the three-province autonomous Kurdish region of north Iraq with the help of the United Nations refugee agency, the UNHCR, Khanke aims to house 18,000 people, said the agency's Liena Veide. AFP PHOTO/SAFIN HAMED (Photo credit should read SAFIN HAMED/AFP/Getty Images)
US actress and UNHCR ambassador Angelina Jolie delivers a speech during a visit to a camp for displaced Iraqis in Khanke, a few kilometres (miles) from the Turkish border in Iraq's Dohuk province, on January 25, 2015. Run by authorities from the three-province autonomous Kurdish region of north Iraq with the help of the United Nations refugee agency, the UNHCR, Khanke aims to house 18,000 people, said the agency's Liena Veide. AFP PHOTO/SAFIN HAMED (Photo credit should read SAFIN HAMED/AFP/Getty Images)

Amusha, a 58-year-old woman from Iraq's Yazidi minority, last saw her daughter being driven away by militants of the Islamic State group. The fighters attacked Amusha's village last year, killed the men and rounded up the women. "They brought buses and packed them with young, beautiful girls," Amusha said of that day, adding that she believes her daughter was brought to the Islamic State's headquarters in Syria and sold as a slave.

Amusha told her story in one of two new short films produced by Angelina Jolie, the actress and special envoy for the United Nations' high commissioner for refugees. Jolie made the films during her visit to a Kurdish refugee camp in northern Iraq last month. They were published on The Guardian website on Tuesday to coincide with the opening of an academic center at the London School of Econonmics to combat violence against women in war zones.

Jolie's documentaries tell the stories of some of the women captured by the Islamic State group as well as their families. They provide a devastating glimpse of the horror endured by over 2 million Iraqis who fled their homes during the onslaught.

Jolie's second film tells the story of Sabreen, who was captured by the militants alongside her younger sister, Dilvian.

Sabreen said she still has nightmares about the torture she endured at the hands of the militants during four months in captivity in the group's Syrian stronghold of Raqqa. Her young sister said she was forced to watch as the extremists tortured Sabreen. "I was crying and begging him to stop but he wouldn't listen," Dilvian said.

During her visit to the camp, Jolie urged the international community to do more to help those displaced by the conflict in Syria and Iraq.

"Many of these innocent people have been uprooted multiple times as they seek safety amidst shifting front lines," she said. "The people I met today need to know that we will be with them."

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