
Years after their son left the U.S. to hitch ISIS, a Minnesota couple realized they’d two younger grandsons trapped in a Syrian desert camp. They have been decided to rescue them.
Dion MBD for NPR/NPR
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Dion MBD for NPR/NPR
Years after their son left the U.S. to hitch ISIS, a Minnesota couple realized they’d two younger grandsons trapped in a Syrian desert camp. They have been decided to rescue them.
Dion MBD for NPR/NPR
When ISIS was at its top, its ranks included a number of hundred People. They have been typically younger males radicalized on-line by savvy advertising that promised free housing and the possibility to fulfill a spouse.
When the Islamic State collapsed, a few of them ended up in large detention camps in Syria, and the U.S. has been attempting to convey them residence.
NPR’s Sacha Pfeiffer stories on one American household dealing with the aftermath of the kid they misplaced, and the kids they discovered.
What occurred to the households of the People who joined ISIS? Not simply the households they left behind within the U.S., however the ones they shaped abroad?
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This episode was produced by Monika Evstatieva and Kathryn Fink.
It was edited by Barrie Hardymon Robert Little; Analysis by Barbara Van Woerkom; translation by Linah Mohammad and Fatma Tanis and audio engineering by Robert Rodriguez.