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Australians Helped The Yazidis In The 1920s - And Can Do So Again

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  • Australians Helped The Yazidis In The 1920s - And Can Do So Again

    AUSTRALIANS HELPED THE YAZIDIS IN THE 1920S - AND CAN DO SO AGAIN

    Some eight decades ago, Australian relief workers helped the Yazidi
    community. We now have to send a clear message: we will still not
    turn our backs on the suffering and the displaced

    Judith Crispin and Vicken Babkenian theguardian.com, Wednesday 20
    August 2014 03.02 BST

    Displaced families from Iraq's Yazidi minority settle in a refugee
    camp. Photograph: Cihan/Barcroft Media

    A humanitarian catastrophe is unfolding in Iraq. The United Nations
    estimates that more than half a million Yazidi and Christian
    refugeeshave fled the crisis at Mount Sinjar to seek refuge in
    Kurdistan's capital.

    Despite recent American claims that the siege of Mount Sinjar in
    northern Iraq has been broken, Yazidi leaders and UN humanitarian
    officials have confirmed today that tens of thousands of Yazidis remain
    stranded on the southern side of the mountain - where US helicopters
    cannot land. Iraqi MP Ms Dakhil estimates the number of Yazidis still
    trapped in the vicinity of Mount Sinjar at around 40,000.

    American planes have dropped enough food on Mount Sinjar for around
    8,000 people. "The crisis on Mount Sinjar is by no means over," said
    David Swanson, the spokesman for the UN co-ordinator of humanitarian
    affairs in northern Iraq, interviewed by telephone from Dohuk, in
    northern Iraq. "Although many people managed to escape from the north
    side, there are still thousands of others up there, under conditions of
    extreme heat, dehydration and imminent threat of attack. The situation
    is far from solved."

    Although airdrops have provided some desperately needed medical
    supplies and food, much of the promised international humanitarian
    aid has failed to materialise. Without immediate help hundreds, if
    not thousands, of people will die on Mount Sinjar and as refugees en
    route to Kurdistan.

    In the wake of Australia's response to the 2004 Tsunami, defence
    force chief general (now governor general) Peter Cosgrove remarked
    that values such as "compassion and generosity" are part of our
    "nation's national character".

    Indeed, Australia's first world war experience in the Middle East was
    not just defined by military heroism but of humanitarianism. In early
    1918, Anzac light horsemen and cameelers helped rescue thousands
    of destitute Armenian refugees when they captured Palestine. In a
    touching display of humanity amid the horrors of war, lieutenant
    colonel Arthur J Mills of the 4th (Anzac) Battalion, Imperial Camel
    Corps, carried a four year old Armenian girl sleeping in his arms,
    on his camel, to safety.

    Another spectacular rescue effort was spearheaded by Australian Colonel
    Stanley G Savige. As a member of the elite Dunsterforce, Savige and
    his colleagues defended a column of some 80,000 Armenian and Assyrian
    refugees fleeing the invading Ottoman Army in Mesopotamia during the
    summer of 1918. Savige was awarded the Distinguished Service Order
    for his role in the rescue effort.

    Back home, with the support of many prominent Australian political,
    civic, religious and business leaders an Armenian relief fund was
    established in 1915. The relief effort culminated in an Australian
    run orphanage in Lebanon for 1,700 Armenian orphan victims of the
    great war. The institution was described at the time as "thoroughly
    Australian as if it stood in one of the streets of Melbourne
    or Sydney", and one "which the people of this country may feel
    justifiable pride".

    Many prominent Australian women were at the forefront of the relief
    effort. They included Australian Red Cross leader, Eleanor Mackinnon,
    and Sydney feminist Edith Glanville. During the great war, Glanville
    was involved in patriotic duty as secretary of the Australian soldier's
    comforts fund. Her son Leigh of the 1st Battalion of the AIF was
    killed at Gallipoli on 25 April 1915, and it was because of this
    tragic event she became interested in humanitarianism and world peace.

    In the late 1920s, Glanville travelled several times to the Middle
    East as a relief worker. During her travels, she became perhaps the
    first Australian woman to visit the Yazide community of Iraq. In
    a welcoming message to her, the leader of the Yazidis stated "The
    English are our friends", for they had "stopped the persecution of my
    people". Edith found the Yazidis to be "very hospitable, and apparently
    peaceful and industrious, and as they certainly are amongst the most
    picturesque figures in this land of ancient faiths and forgotten
    beginnings". Glanville visited their holiest site, Lalesh temple,
    situated in a valley in Nineveh Province. She was told that only one
    other western woman had visited it.

    Glanville returned to the Middle East again in the early 1930s to
    provide relief to the Christian Assyrians who had fled persecution from
    Iraq into Syria. Her work on their behalf won her many privileges. The
    French high commissioner in Syria gave her special permission to
    aid the Assyrian refugees in getting settled, the only "Britisher"
    allowed to do so. She attended meetings at the League of Nations four
    times pleading for assistance on their behalf.

    Some eight decades later, the Middle East continues to be the scene of
    a major humanitarian disaster. Between Mount Sinjar and Kurdistan,
    families who have already witnessed atrocities beyond all human
    comprehension are in desperate need of food, shelter and medical
    supplies. With world newspapers now claiming the crisis is over,
    it is increasingly unlikely that governments will provide the help
    they need. It falls, then, to the community to act where governments
    will not - to send a clear message that the Australian people will
    not turn their backs on the suffering and the displaced.

    Manning Clark House is calling for urgent funds to buy food and
    medical supplies to keep Yazidi families alive while they are rescued
    from Mount Sinjar and make their way to Kurdistan. Support is also
    needed for refugees in Erbil and other Kurdish centres. Genocide is
    looming for minority populations in the Middle East, particularly
    the Yazidis. Their call for help needs to be answered.

    While Australia celebrates 100 years since Anzac, we would do well
    to remember that part of our nation's legacy is to help victims of war.

    If you would like to support the Yazidi Relief Fund, please visit
    theManning Clark House's website

    http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/aug/20/australians-helped-the-yazidis-in-the-1920s-and-can-do-so-again

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