>> NARRATOR: Aeida was among the
earliest Yazidi women to escape
from ISIS.
She is 21 and was abducted with
her two children near Sinjar
Mountain last summer.
>> (translated): I dream of ISIS
attacking us and I run away.
Sometimes I see them arresting
me.
Some nights, I can't sleep
until the early morning hours
because of the nightmares.
>> NARRATOR: After they overran
the Yazidi towns and villages in
northern Iraq, ISIS turned homes
into prisons for captured women.
>> (translated): I wish I could
forget that building.
We were around 35 girls and
three women.
I was only 21, but I was the
oldest.
They were coming and taking
girls from this building.
We had one guard who was forcing
a nine-year-old girl.
He was forcing her to go with
him into the bathroom.
I couldn't take it, and I had
a fight with the guard.
The guard said, "I'll kill you,"
and I said, "I don't mind dying
for her, don't take the girl."
>> Were they also raping
the nine-year-old?
>> (translated): Of course.
He told me, "It's okay in our
religion to take a nine-year-old
girl."
I said, "Don't tell me this."
I said, "I don't want to hear
it.
I don't want your religion."
>> NARRATOR: The ISIS fighter
told Aeida it was legitimate
to marry girls as young as nine.
>> (translated): I tried my
best, but they just took her,
and it was really sad.
They drugged her.
(coughing)
(crying)
