The genocidal attack of ISIS on the Yezidi community of the Sinjar region in 2014 with its
murder of men and enslavement of women and children has had enormous consequences for Yezidi
communities both in the homelands and in the Diaspora. At the same time many communities are
facing the intrusion of the modern world upon their hitherto very conservative religious
traditions. This book focuses on the tensions between conservatism and the need to adapt to
current circumstances in a religion which so far mostly resisted change. A number of
specialists have been brought together here to offer insights into Yezidis' often unexpected
reactions to the pressures of genocide on the one hand and modernity generally on the other.
It deals with recent trends and developments concerning the Yezidis and is divided into two
parts. The first part contains articles about the IS attack and its impact on Yezidi
communities in the Middle East. The second part focuses on developments in the Yezidi Diaspora
communities. The book will be of interest to specialists on religion especially those working
on the Middle East and on diaspora religion but also to Iranists Kurdologists and scholars of
different disciplines working on the effects of genocide or other brutal attacks on the
worldview of surviving victims or on the influence of modernity on conservative societies.