Iraq's Yezidi Celebrate New Year
Iraq's Yezidi Celebrate New Year
The Yezidi of northern Iraq ushered in a New Year as the sun set on April 14. The ancient religion's Chwar Shema Sur, or Red Wednesday, celebration kicked off with traditional music, dancing and the colouring of eggs. An estimated 450,000 Yezidi live in the northern Iraq provinces of Duhok and Nineveh, according to the Yezidi Supreme Spiritual Council, and in the past they have faced fierce persecution for their beliefs.
An ancient admixture of Christianity, Islam and Zoroasterism, the Yezidi religion accepts no converts and looks down on marriage outside the faith. They believe in the purity of Earth's four elements - earth, wind, water and fire - and greet the New Year by lighting candles, torches and oil-burning lamps.