NEW DELHI: The Islamic State has reportedly released a guide titled “Sister’s Role in Jihad” that instructs women on how to raise a jihadi baby in preparation for war. The guide is being circulated on social media by IS-supporter accounts and was brought to the media’s attention by the U.S-based Middle East Media Research Institute (MEMRI) ahead of a new report condemning how children are being indoctrinated into radical Islam.

Presented in a “dos” and “don’ts” style, the slick guide tells parents, “Don't wait until they are seven to start, for it may be too late by then!” “Don't underestimate the lasting effect of what those little ears and eyes take in during the first few years of life!” the guide instructs, urging parents to start training children while “they are still babies.”

The suggestions included in the guide range from showing children jihadi websites with graphic content and reading them stories about militants’ exploits at bedtime to encouraging them to play with toy guns. The guide does caution, however, that if you own a real gun it must be kept “totally out of young children's reach.”

Training should be fun, the guide suggests, but “fun does not mean music and dancing, as is portrayed by Western children's TV.” TV in fact is encouraged to be banned as “it mostly teaches shamelessness, anarchy, and random violence.”

Instead, the focus should be on sports -- darts to improve their aim, skiing to improve fitness, camping to teach survival skills. Children should practice target shooting with toy guns to help direct their anger, although parents should provide clarity on “who their target should be, and who their target should not be.”

The guide’s release has a propaganda purpose directed at the west, as did the group’s previous attempts to highlight the role of children in its war. In November, disturbing images appeared online depicting children holding decapitated heads and AK-47s under the title “cubs of the Islamic State,” according to media reports.

It also follows other disturbing images and videos, including “school of Jihad” graduates lined up before a stage, listening to a speaker, whilst a row of adults believed to be their parents look on.


Previously, the UN Human Rights Council found that Isis “has established training camps to recruit children into armed roles under the guise of education”.

“At the camps, the children recruited received weapons training and religious education,” the report reads. “The existence of such camps seems to indicate that ISIS systematically provides weapons training for children. Subsequently, they were deployed in active combat during military operations, including suicide-bombing missions.”

According to an UNHRC report, this recruitment and military use of children under the age of 15 constitutes a “war crime.”

Other rights organisations have also condemned the IS’ recruitment of children. Amnesty International accused the group of “robbing an untold number of young people of their childhood.”