The children had all been shown videos of beheadings and told by their Islamic State (Isis) trainers that they would perform one someday. First, they had to practice technique. The more than 120 boys were each given a doll and a sword and told to cut off its head.
A 14-year-old among the boys, all abducted from Iraq's Yazidi religious minority, said he couldn't cut it right. He chopped once, twice, three times.
"Then they taught me how to hold the sword, and they told
me how to hit. They told me it was the head of the infidels," the boy,
renamed Yahya by his Isis captors, told journalists last week in
northern Iraq, where he fled after escaping the Isis training camp.When Isis extremists overran Yazidi towns in northern Iraq last year, they butchered older men and enslaved many women and girls. Dozens of young Yazidi boys like Yahya had a different fate: Isis sought to re-educate them. They forced them to convert to Islam from their ancient faith and tried to turn them into jihadi fighters.
In schools and mosques, militants infuse children with extremist doctrine, often turning them against their own parents. Fighters in the street befriend children with toys. Isis training camps churn out the Ashbal, Arabic for "lion cubs", child fighters for the "caliphate" that Isis declared across its territory. The caliphate is a historic form of Islamic rule the group claims to be reviving with its own radical interpretation, though the vast majority of Muslims reject its claims.
"I am terribly worried about future generations," said Abu Hafs Naqshabandi, a Syrian sheikh who runs religious classes for refugees in the Turkish city of Sanliurfa to counter Isis ideology. The indoctrination mainly targets Sunni Muslim children. In Isis-held towns, militants show young people videos at street booths. They hold outdoor events for children, distributing propaganda, soft drinks and lollies.
They tell adults, "We have given up on you, we care about the new generation," said an anti-Isis activist who fled the Syrian city of Raqqa, the extremist group's de facto capital.
With the Yazidis, whom Isis considers heretics ripe for slaughter, the group sought to take another community's youth, erase their past, and replace it with radicalism.
Yahya, his little brother, their mother and hundreds of Yazidis were captured when Isis seized the Iraqi town of Sulagh in August. They were taken to Raqqa, where the brothers and other Yazidi boys aged 8 to 15 were put in the Farouq training camp. They were given Muslim Arabic names to replace their Kurdish names. Yahya asked journalists not to use his real name for his and his family's safety.
He spent nearly five months there, training eight to 10 hours a day, including exercises, weapons drills and Koranic studies.
They told him Yazidis are "dirty" and should be killed, he said. They showed him how to shoot someone from close range. The boys hit each other in some exercises. Yahya punched his 10-year-old brother, knocking out a tooth.
The trainer "said if I didn't do it, he'd shoot me", Yahya said. "They ... told us it would make us tougher. They beat us everywhere."
In an Isis video of Farouq camp, boys in camouflage exercise and shout slogans. An Isis fighter says the boys have studied jihad so "in the coming days God Almighty can put them in the front lines to battle the infidels".
Videos show boys crawling under barbed wire and practising shooting. One kid lies on the ground and fires a machine gun; he's so small the recoil bounces his whole body back. Boys undergoing endurance training stand unmoving as a trainer hits their heads with a pole. Isis claims to have hundreds such camps. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights documented at least 1100 Syrian children under 16 who joined Isis this year. At least 52 were killed in fighting, including eight suicide bombers, it said.
Yahya escaped in early March. Fighters left the camp to carry out an attack, and as remaining guards slept he and his brother slipped away, he said. He urged a friend to come too, but he refused, saying he was a Muslim now and liked Islam.
Yahya's mother was in a house nearby with other abducted Yazidis - he had occasionally been allowed to visit her. So he and his brother went there. They travelled to the Syrian city of Minbaj and stayed with a Russian Isis fighter, Yahya said. He contacted an uncle in Iraq, who negotiated to pay the Russian for the two boys and their mother. A deal struck, they met the uncle in Turkey, then went to the Iraqi Kurdish city of Dohuk.
Now in Dohuk, traces of Yahya and his brother's ordeal show. When his uncle handed Yahya a pistol, the boy deftly assembled and loaded it.
And he will never forget the videos.
"I was scared when I saw that. I knew I wouldn't be able to behead someone like that. Even as an adult."
