UN BAJID KANDALA REFUGEE CAMP, Northern Iraq -- It looks like a scene out of the Bible -- a modern-day exodus.
Tens of thousands of Yazidis made the 100-mile trek from Mt. Sinjar all the way to the United Nations refugee camp on the northern border.
For some, it was a two-, three- or even four-day journey. Most of them came with just the clothes on their back.
Out of the multitude, each one has a story.
When ISIS, the Islamic State, attacked Sinjar,home to most of the Yazidis, Guli Udayda -- a name that means "God giveth" -- said it felt like the end of the world.
"When they [ISIS terrorists] came, they caught some people and kidnapped beautiful girls and took them away," Udayda told CBN News. "We escaped. The ones that stayed ISIS killed."
Full Story at: http://www.cbn.com/cbnnews/world/2014/August/Fleeing-Yazidis-Face-Uncertain-Future/
Tens of thousands of Yazidis made the 100-mile trek from Mt. Sinjar all the way to the United Nations refugee camp on the northern border.
For some, it was a two-, three- or even four-day journey. Most of them came with just the clothes on their back.
Out of the multitude, each one has a story.
When ISIS, the Islamic State, attacked Sinjar,home to most of the Yazidis, Guli Udayda -- a name that means "God giveth" -- said it felt like the end of the world.
"When they [ISIS terrorists] came, they caught some people and kidnapped beautiful girls and took them away," Udayda told CBN News. "We escaped. The ones that stayed ISIS killed."
Full Story at: http://www.cbn.com/cbnnews/world/2014/August/Fleeing-Yazidis-Face-Uncertain-Future/