What Remains

After ISIS captivity, tens of thousands of Iraqis - many of them children - are caught up in a mental-health crisis unlike any in the world.

Kristina is 12. She misses the ISIS family that enslaved her. Iraq, 2019.

Delivan is 10. He was kidnapped by ISIS in 2014 and freed in March 2019. He’s violent and often beats his mother and brothers. Iraq, 2019.

Sumaya Ahmad is 21. She won’t go outside and thinks about killing herself. Iraq, 2019.

Amina Ammu is 46. She was held captive by ISIS with her two children and a nephew. Iraq, 2019.

Jitan is 14. He was kidnapped in 2014 and now speaks Arabic better than his native Kurdish. Several members of his family are still missing. Iraq, 2019.

Hediya is 9. She spent five years enslaved by ISIS with her sister Kristina. Iraq, 2019.

Musaab is 12. His 18-year-old brother has his back turned. Their father is in jail on suspicion of terrorism. Iraq, 2019.

Muhsin, his daughters Kristina and Hediya were kidnapped by ISIS. Iraq, 2019.

Hediya is 9. She spent five years enslaved by ISIS with her sister Kristina. Iraq, 2019.

A mother with her seven children in Salamiya camp, Iraq, 2019.

Rezan is 11. He was kidnapped by ISIS in 2014 and freed in early 2019.

Enas is 17. She is in therapy for trauma after ISIS drove her family from their village. Iraq, 2019.

Honer is 8. He was kidnapped by ISIS and held for five years, his mother and father are missing. Iraq, 2019.

Noora Ali Abbas is 60, her grandson Harreth is 6. Their son and father is missing. Iraq, 2019.