Women's Protection Units
Women's Protection Units
Women's Protection Units | |
---|---|
Kurdish:Yekîneyên Parastina Jin (YPJ) Arabic:وحدات حماية المرأة | |
Active | April 2013–present |
Allegiance | ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Branch | Female service units |
Type | Light infantry (militia) |
Size | 5,000(2017 estimate)[3] |
Part of | Syrian Democratic Forces (since 2015) |
Engagements | Syrian Civil War
|
Website | Official website [46] |
Commanders | |
General Commander[4] | Nesrin Abdullah |
Kobanî commander[5] | Meryem Kobanî |
Aleppo commander[6] | Sewsen Bîrhat |
Leading commander for Raqqa operations[7][8] | Rojda Felat |
The Women's Protection Units or Women's Defense Units (Kurdish: Yekîneyên Parastina Jin, YPJ, pronounced Yuh-Pah-Juh;[9] Arabic: وحدات حماية المرأة, romanized: Waḥdāt Ḥimāyat al-Marʼa; Classical Syriac: ܚܕܝ̈ܘܬܐ ܕܣܘܬܪܐ ܕܢܫ̈ܐ, romanized: Ḥdāywāthā dha-Sutārā dha-Neshē) is an all-female militia actively fighting in Northern Syria.[10] The YPJ is one of the main two armed forces in Rojava, the other being the People's Protection Units (Yekîneyên Parastina Gel, YPG) militia, which includes both men and women.[11] While the YPJ, and the YPG in general, is mainly associated with Kurds, the organization also includes other ethnoreligious groups of Northern Syria.[12]
Women's Protection Units | |
---|---|
Kurdish:Yekîneyên Parastina Jin (YPJ) Arabic:وحدات حماية المرأة | |
Active | April 2013–present |
Allegiance | ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Branch | Female service units |
Type | Light infantry (militia) |
Size | 5,000(2017 estimate)[3] |
Part of | Syrian Democratic Forces (since 2015) |
Engagements | Syrian Civil War
|
Website | Official website [46] |
Commanders | |
General Commander[4] | Nesrin Abdullah |
Kobanî commander[5] | Meryem Kobanî |
Aleppo commander[6] | Sewsen Bîrhat |
Leading commander for Raqqa operations[7][8] | Rojda Felat |
History

YPJ fighter in 2014
YPJ fighter on the Back of a technical

YPJ sniper during the battle for Raqqa

YPJ fighters dressed as civilians
A photo of Abdullah Öcalan
Women have been involved in Syrian Kurdish Resistance fighting since as early as 2011 when the mixed-sex YXG was founded, later to be renamed YPG in 2012.[13] The YPJ was founded as a strictly women's organization on April 3, 2013[13] with the first battalion formed in Jindires.[14] All female fighters who were previously part of the YPG mixed units automatically became members of the YPJ. Initially, there was just one YPJ battalion in each of the three cantons of Rojava, but battalions were quickly established in every neighborhood, expanding the organization.[13]
As of late 2014, the YPJ had over 7,000 (or 10,000, according to TeleSUR) volunteer fighters between the ages of 18 and 40. By November 2016, the number of Arab and Kurdish YPJ fighters had reportedly risen to 20,000. As of March 2017, the group was alleged to have 24,000 members.
In the Syrian Civil War, the YPJ and the YPG have fought against various groups in Northern Syria, including the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) and was involved in the Siege of Kobanî beginning in March 2014, with various Kurdish media agencies reporting that "YPJ troops have become vital in the battle".[10][15] In the Battle of Kobane, prior to receiving the support of Western powers, the YPJ was forced to hold off ISIL attacks using only "vintage Russian Kalashnikovs bought on the black market, handmade grenades, and tanks they put together out of construction vehicles and pick-up trucks."[12] It was not until October 2014 that the United States began coordinating air strikes with the YPJ-YPG fighters on the ground.[12]
Additionally, the YPG, YPJ and the PKK were involved in an August 2014 military operation at Mount Sinjar, where up to as many as 10,000 Yazidis were rescued from genocidal attacks[16] at the hands of ISIL.[12][17] ISIL had taken control of most areas around Mount Sinjar after pushing out the Kurdish Peshmerga forces.[18] Because ISIL views the Yazidis as "a community of devil worshipers"[19] those formerly inhabiting the town of Sinjar were forced to flee into the mountains. This left many Yazidis, including children and the elderly, without food, shelter, or resources.[19] Those still in the town were either massacred by ISIL or forced into sexual enslavement.[20]
YPJ continues to fight alongside YPG as part of the multi-ethnic Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF).[12] The YPJ was involved in battles such as the SDF offensive against the major IS strongholds in Tabqa and Raqqa, serving as the main proxy[23] force (along with the YPG) for the United States.[24] During Operation Olive Branch, the Turkish offensive against Afrin Canton, YPJ units were again heavily involved in the fighting.[25] Guerilla warfare tactics were among the tactics used against Turkey and their allies.
Ideology

YPJ fighter wearing badge featuring Abdullah Öcalan
The YPJ is politically aligned to the PYD, which bases its libertarian socialist philosophy on the writings of Abdullah Öcalan,[26] the leading ideologue in the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), who is imprisoned by the Turkish government. Central to YPJ ideology is the PYD feminist ideological concept of "Jineology".[27]
Dating back to the early 1990s, Öcalan had been advocating that a ‘basic responsibility’ of the Kurdish movement was to liberate women. He argued that gender equality and women's liberation is necessary for Kurdish liberation. The PKK established its first all-female units of guerrillas in 1995, claiming that in order to “break down gender roles solidified by centuries, women had to be on their own.”[27] The YPJ adheres to the same strand of feminist ideology. Having joined the YPJ, women must spend at least a month practicing military tactics and studying the political theories of Öcalan, including Jineology. In any communal decision, regarding the YPJ/YPG or otherwise, it is required that no less than 40% of women participate.[28]
The group has been praised by feminists for confronting traditional gender expectations and redefining the role of women in conflict in the region.[29][29] They play a role in changing the Islamic thinking and societal traditions by taking arms. These women say they are changing their community and society by doing so.[30] The YPJ has attracted considerable international attention as an example of significant achievement for women in a region in which women are systematically disadvantaged.[31][32][33][34][35][36]
Another all-female force in Northern Syria is the Bethnahrain Women's Protection Forces, which was formed as an Assyrian all-female brigade of the Syriac Military Council, seemingly inspired by the example of the YPG. The Al-Bab Military Council, Jabhat al-Akrad and Liwa Thuwar al-Raqqa have also established their own female units.[37][38]
Foreign Volunteers
On March 16, 2018, Anna Campbell became the first British woman to die while fighting as a part of the YPJ. Campbell had left her home in Lewes, East Sussex to go to Rojava and join the YPJ. She was killed in the city of Afrin during a YPJ confrontation with Turkish military forces.[39] Since her enlistment, a number of other British women, such as Rûken Renas, have also signed up to fight with the YPJ.[40]
Hanna Bohman is another YPJ fighter hailing from the western hemisphere, in her case Canada. After nearly dying in a motorcycle incident, Bohman decided to leave her home in Vancouver, Canada to join the YPJ in February 2014.[41]
Additionally, Arab and Yazidi women that the YPJ liberated from ISIS have also begun joining fight against their former oppressors.[42] The YPJ has set up institutions where these women are trained both militarily, as well as in fields such as feminist history and philosophy.[43] The Yazidi population has since created its own self defense force, the YBS, that is trained by and works with the YPJ-YPG.[44]
Supply
The YPJ relies on local communities for supplies and food.[29] The YPJ (along with the YPG) received 27 bundles totaling 24 tons of small arms and ammunition as well as 10 tons of medical supplies from the United States and the Kurdistan Regional Government in Iraqi Kurdistan during the Siege of Kobanî.[45]
See also
Kurdish women
Kurdistan
Rojava conflict
Sinjar Resistance Units
Women in warfare and the military (2000–present)
Kimmie Taylor
Anna Campbell