Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
International

ISIS, ISIL, Daesh: A Primer On Why The Terrorist Group's Name Keeps Changing

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Nov, 2015 12:20 PM
    WASHINGTON — The U.S. government has increasingly been using "Daesh" as its preferred name for the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, the murderous militant group also known as ISIS, ISIL and the Islamic State. Some facts:
     
    — Abu-Musab al-Zarqawi travelled to Afghanistan near the end of the clash with the Soviets, met Osama bin Laden, and in his native Jordan later founded a group called Unity and Jihad. 
     
    It became Al-Qaida in Iraq, after he pledged loyalty to bin Laden's group during the war against U.S. forces there. It split with al-Qaida over tactics and strategy after al-Zarqawi's death, adopting a new name that translated as the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham. It later shortened its name to "Islamic State."
     
     
    — Al-Sham is a historic Islamic term for the land bordering the eastern Mediterranean. The closest traditional English equivalent for al-Sham is "the Levant" — hence the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), U.S. President Barack Obama's preferred term.
     
    — Most of the group's opponents in the Arab world use a version of "Daesh." The Spanish government followed suit last year. The French use it consistently. U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry explained last year why he preferred the term. Obama's started too, although he mainly uses ISIL.
     
     
    — Daesh is an acronym that sounds closer to the Arabic name — and like an insult. It resembles the Arabic word "daes," which refers to something that stomps, or crushes. It strips the group of its self-proclaimed importance. It's the term preferred by Arabs who oppose the group.
     
    —The Associated Press reported that ISIL hates the name so much that it threatened to cut out the tongue of Iraqis who used it after it invaded Mosul last year. A core part of its mythology is that it is the modern-day heir to the original Muslim caliphates, which requires being seen as "Islamic," and a "state."
     
    ISIL Vs. Daesh: Why The U.S. Ambassador Changed How He Refers To Militant Group
     
     
    WASHINGTON — The U.S. ambassador to Canada is using yet another name — "Daesh" — for the multi-monikered terrorist group known variously as the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) and the Islamic State.
     
    Politicians are increasingly using the D-word for two simple reasons: to strip the group of its credibility and to steer away from the Islam-versus-the-West dynamic it apparently craves.
     
    "I'm using the term 'Daesh' now, instead of ISIL," Bruce Heyman said in an interview.
     
    "I think it's unfair to refer to Islam, and it's totally inappropriate to think of it as a state — so anything calling it the 'Islamic State' is wrong."
     
     
    Heyman used the Arabic acronym in a speech Tuesday to a Toronto conference on Canadian business opportunities in the U.S., which began with a moment of silence in honour of the victims of last week's Paris attacks.
     
    The wording might even strike some as trivial, given the bloodshed. But the evolution of the group's name offers a window into its history, its place in the Arab world and the bewilderment it has provoked in the West.
     
    Arabs who oppose the group customarily use a version of Daesh, as do European politicians and U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, among others. Although he usually prefers ISIL, President Barack Obama used the term a few times at this week's G20 summit in Turkey.
     
    The group apparently hates it so much it threatened to cut out the tongues of those who use it, The Associated Press reported last year when the group seized the Iraq city of Mosul.
     
     
    That's because it sounds like an insult, resembling the Arabic word "daes," which refers to something that stomps, or crushes. It's considerably less important-sounding than "Islamic State," which Egyptian religious authorities have pleaded for western journalists to stop using.
     
    The group's core mythology relies on being perceived as both Islamic and a state, and the modern-day heir to the original 1,400-year-old caliphates.
     
    The group began with Abu-Musab al-Zarqawi, the Jordanian jihadist who travelled to Afghanistan on the tail end of the war with the Soviets. He met Osama bin Laden there. He later founded a group called Unity and Jihad, which became Al-Qaida in Iraq when he pledged loyalty to bin Laden's group during the war against U.S. forces there.
     
    It split with al-Qaida after al-Zarqawi's death. The group adopted its more recent names from the Arabic, "Dawlah al-Islamiyah fi 'l-'Iraq wa-sh-Sham," as it seized territory in Syria and Iraq.
     
     
    Confusion over the ISIS-versus-ISIL acronym stems from that last part — al-Sham.
     
    That's a historic Islamic term for the land bordering the eastern Mediterranean, including Syria. Al-Sham stems from the words for, "left hand." That's opposed to Yemen, which stems from, "right hand." In the centre? The holy land of Mecca.
     
    The closest traditional English equivalent for al-Sham is "the Levant," hence the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, or ISIL.  
     
    In a recent blog post, Alice Guthrie, an Arabic translator living in England, advocated for the use of Daesh earlier this year, and criticized the world's English-language media for doing a poor job explaining the term.
     
    "At the secular level, satire is a crucial weapon in the fight against these maniacs," Guthrie writes.
     
     
    "So the insult picked up on by Daesh is not just that the name makes them sound little, silly, and powerless, but that it implies they are monsters, and that they are made-up."

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Fired For Taking A Break, Indian-American Nurse Sues Employer

    Fired For Taking A Break, Indian-American Nurse Sues Employer
    An Indian-American nurse has filed a pregnancy discrimination lawsuit against her employer, because she was fired for taking a break as she was suffering from nausea, a media report said.

    Fired For Taking A Break, Indian-American Nurse Sues Employer

    VW Scandal Widens, Hitting Shares, As Carmaker Says Other Kinds Of Emissions Also Understated

    VW Scandal Widens, Hitting Shares, As Carmaker Says Other Kinds Of Emissions Also Understated
    Investors and regulators put more pressure on Volkswagen on Wednesday after the company said it had understated the carbon dioxide emissions for 800,000 cars, widening its scandal over cheating on U.S. engine tests.

    VW Scandal Widens, Hitting Shares, As Carmaker Says Other Kinds Of Emissions Also Understated

    British Seeks To Give Police More Access To Citizens' Internet Activity Under New Snooping Law

    British Seeks To Give Police More Access To Citizens' Internet Activity Under New Snooping Law
    The draft Investigatory Powers Bill is intended to replace a patchwork of laws, some dating from the Web's infancy, and set the limits of surveillance in the digital age.

    British Seeks To Give Police More Access To Citizens' Internet Activity Under New Snooping Law

    This 17-Year-Old Is An Author, Has 2 Degrees, Flies Planes And Works With NASA

    This 17-Year-Old Is An Author, Has 2 Degrees, Flies Planes And Works With NASA
    Moshe Kai Cavalin has two university degrees, but he’s too young to vote. He flies airplanes, but he’s too young to drive a car alone.

    This 17-Year-Old Is An Author, Has 2 Degrees, Flies Planes And Works With NASA

    Four Held For Robberies In Indian Residents' Homes In US

    Four Held For Robberies In Indian Residents' Homes In US
    Four men were arrested in the US for committing burglaries in the houses of people of Indian and Asian origin, a media report said.

    Four Held For Robberies In Indian Residents' Homes In US

    US Jury Still Debating On Assault On Indian Grandfather

    US Jury Still Debating On Assault On Indian Grandfather
    A new US federal jury will continue its deliberations Tuesday in the case against an Alabama police officer charged with slamming an Indian grandfather to the ground while taking a walk last February.

    US Jury Still Debating On Assault On Indian Grandfather