Battling ISIS: Alberta woman recalls treating wounded, freeing sex slaves in Syria - Action News
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Battling ISIS: Alberta woman recalls treating wounded, freeing sex slaves in Syria

Shaelynn Jabs, 21, is back in Alberta after fighting and treating wounded soldiers during the lengthy operation to drive ISIS out of Raqqa, Syria.

'Now they have the opportunity to live a better, freer life.'

Shaelynn Jabs, 21, took part in the operation to drive ISIS out of Raqqa, Syria in October.

When the self-proclaimed capital of ISIS fell in Syria, Shaelynn Jabs couldn't celebrate. Too many fellow soldiers had died.

But nearly two months later sherecallsthe feeling of liberation as women on Raqqa's pulverized streets ripped black veils from their faces.

"This is what everyone died and fought for," Jabs told CBC News in an exclusive interview, from her home inDrayton Valley, Alta, 130 kilometres southwest of Edmonton. "Now they have the opportunity to live a better, freer life."

It wasn't the first time Jabs, 21, had left the safety of her Alberta home for the Syrian battlefield.

Undeterred by her lack of military experience, she first learned about combat medicine online.

In October 2015, Jabs joined theKurdish People's Protection Unit (YPG), and itsfemale counterpart, the YPJ, until a bomb blast ruptured hereardrum and forced a brief return home.

Her most recent 16-month tour has also left its mark.

'Split seconds are what it takes to save their life'

7 years ago
Duration 1:41
Albertan Shaelynn Jabs describes her experiences fighting ISIS in Syria.

In her Drayton Valley home last week, Jabs limped as she looked for work and responded to frequent messages from Kurdish friends checking in. A maroon Harley Davidson toque protected the ear she's lost partial hearing in again. Vision in one eye is blurry.

"Old injuries adding up," shrugged Jabs, who has outlasted abullet that ricochetedinto herabdomen, shrapnel embedded in her leg and two deadly vehicle rollovers.

Her army fatigues now replaced by black jeans and shirt, a tug of her collar revealed a freshly inked compass with the coordinates of Raqqa.

During the four-and-a-half month Raqqa operation, 793 fighters were killed, according to the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF).

As more comrades died, Kurdish "replacement soldiers" kept getting younger, recalled Jabs. Often they had just lost a parent or sibling,

"I've been through a lot of operations but none were as bloody asRaqqa," Jabs said.

Public Safety Canada does not comment directly about individuals who volunteer overseas to join the fight against ISIS. But authorities advise against any travel to Iraq or Syria.
This was the second tour for Jabs who first joined Kurdish forces at 19. (Shaelynn Jabs)

Ambushed

By August, the Kurdish-ledSDFforces, backed by U.S. and Britishairpower, had made significant gains. That made what happened next for Jabs even more surprising.

First came the crackling of distant gunfire.

She and fellow soldiers were chatting, laughing and going over drills at amakeshift triage centre a bloodstained converted storefront with a few mattresses and a wall lined with supplies'

At first, Jabs thought it was an evening training exercise. But they soon realized they were under attack from all sides.

Militants who had crawled up through the tunnels were targeting their field hospital andbase.

From the triage centre, 15 members set out to fight off the militants. All were killed by machine gun fire and rocket propelled grenades, saidJabs.
Jabs took part in three major operations on her recent 16-month tour ending with the battle of Raqqa. (Shaelynn Jabs)

For the next seven days the injured kept coming. At night, Jabs and her team worked by the light ofheadlamps.

When it was over, they reclaimed their territory. But another 20 or so comrades had died.

"They gave up everything, literally sacrificed everything, so other people could have a chance," said Jabs.

"Every household has at least two or three martyrs. Every house, every family knows what it's like to lose at war."
Jabs posted about her combat experiences on Facebook. (Shaelynn Jabs/Facebook)

As the SDF re-took cities, villages and towns, Jabs shared gut-wrenching, reflective andlighthearted posts on Facebook. Then months would go by without a word, as anxious loved ones waited for her next post. At one point,a fake martyr photo surfacedonline suggesting she had died.

Other images circulated too. In her Drayton Valley kitchen, Jabs smiled as she acknowlededa photo praising her heroism had been slightly altered by a supporter.Gone is the cigarette hanging from her lips the original photo.

It reads: 'Canadian YPG Heroine Jabs. Combat medic in Raqqa. She has a heart as big as the ocean. A great woman."

Videos published by the YPGfeature Jabs in combat and more recently in action as a senior medic.
An image circulated on social media praising Jabs for her service. (Alessio Tamponi)

The goal for Jabs and her team was to keep patients alive long enough to make the 30-minute drive to the field hospital, she said. Many first needed rescuing.

Usually the call for help came from the radio with screams and gunfire in the background. Then Jabs and her team would jumpinto their Humvee, heading straight for the line of fire.

Rescue under sniper fire

On one such rescue, Jabs rememberedducking her head out from behind a wall where she and a colleague had taken cover. She surveyed theroad where soldiers had been hit daily by a sniper tuckedinto a building half a football field away.

A bleeding soldier was steps in front of her. There was no cover. Machine gun bullets spit up sand as they whizzed by.

As the sniper reloaded, she and her comrade ran for it. They dragged the man off the road.Jabs got to work on the bullet lodged in his chest.

"You just get used to it," said Jabs. "You don't think about it. It's like I could get shot, but there's lots of times I could get shot. It's just like any other day."

Staying alive required resourcefulness whensupplies ran out. For splints, Jabs used rifles or boards snapped from crumblingbuildings.

Curtains, headbands and belts all made good tourniquets.

Often with minutes between life and death, Jabs said she had to decide whowould gether attention based on their best chance of survival.

"You're deciding which friend to save," said Jabs. "Sometimes the people that you're treating are the people you just had breakfast with that morning."
Jabs treated patients for a few weeks at a storefront converted into a makeshift triage centre. (Shaelynn Jabs)

Inacity laden withmines and unexploded mortar, staying aliverequired constant vigilance.Fleeing militants wired booby traps to the simplest of items, said Jabs. Money, TVs or a box of cakes could all be deadly.

On oneoccasion, it was food that lured three comrades into a store while Jabs was sitting outside.

The blast of metal shards ripped into the face of a17-year-old standing just two feet away. She patched him up but isn't sure if he made it.

They gave up everything, literally sacrificed everything, so other people could have a chance- ShaelynnJabs

"That's the hardest part is never knowing," said Jabs, describinga visitto the hospital where she ran into former patients who had survived. "Your heart just bursts with joy because (they) made it."

One order was particularly difficult to carry out. Jabs extracted a bullet from the calf of a young man thought to be an ISIS leader with valuable intelligence.

It appeared even harder for the patient, who hurled insults her way.

"They hate women so much that even a woman treating them, saving their life, angers them," Jabs said.

Freeing sex slaves

All around her were reminders both hopeful and cruel that kepther going, Jabs said.

She recalled her unit's discoveryof a black building covered in white arabic writing that appeared to be a local brothel for trafficked women and girls forced into sexual slavery.

Fleeing ISIS fighters had left a few of them behind.
Jabs said they discovered sex slaves in a building that looked similar to this one. (Shaelynn Jabs)

In one tiny, windowless cell, Jabs said she and her comrades found a skeletal teenager curled up on a bed lying in her own feces.

Initially mistaking themale liberators for rapists, the girl lashed out. Her wrist bones jutted out at grotesque angles.

Jabs said she later told them her wrists were repeatedly broken from being held down and raped.

"And she had to do this for soldier after soldier after soldier," saidJabs. "She'd been there for two years in the same cell never left."

Abused, raped and tortured women were sent to areas where women protect women, said Jabs.

Under the care of the Molijan, which translates into House of Women,they would be rehabilitated and integrated into one of the Kurdish communes across a large swath of Syria.
Shaelynn Jabs with a YPJ comrade who gave stray puppies a new home at their compound. (Shaelynn Jabs)

Attitudes toward women have changed sharply in recent years thanks to the influence of the Kurdish forces, said Jabs.Once blamed and even killed for the cruelties inflicted upon them, thewellbeing of these female victims is now the priority.

"It's the first thing they think of and that's what makes me so proud," Jabssaid.

The women ofJinwar

For some, life begins anew in Jinwar a village set up for and inhabited solely by women recovering from sexual exploitation.

On one visit, Jabs said she joined hundreds celebrating the construction of another stone and clay home, one of a dozen that houseabout 12 women each.
Jabs said she joined hundreds to celebrate the construction of another home by the women in the village of Jinwar. (Women of Jinwar)

"All these women who were stuck in their houses their entire life were trained and taught how to build their own houses, how to do the work that everyone (had previously) said 'No, this is a man's work,' " saidJabs.

"And just looking at these women this is why I came here, this is exactly why I came here."

Back in Alberta, caring for her Kurdish friends continues.

In coordination with a doctor in Syria, Jabsplans to raise money to purchasea 3D printer and materials to make prosthetics "so they can live the lives that they fought for," she said.

Back in Alberta Jabs plans to raise money for a 3D printer to make prosthetics for fellow soldiers.

andrea.huncar@cbc.ca
@andreahuncar