ZAKHO, IRAQ—A little more than a week ago, 23-year-old Assad Haig’s life took a nightmarish turn.

Islamic State (IS) militants captured 63 of his relatives, members of the persecuted Yazidi community, when the extremist fighters overran the northern Iraqi town of Sinjar.

Just a week before, Haig’s dozens of relatives in Sinjar had been free. “My mother called and said IS were coming into the city,” Haig recalled of that morning.

Haig, who works in the Kurdish capital of Erbil, but comes from Sinjar, struggled to hold back tears and clasped his hands together in an attempt to keep them from shaking. “I begged them to leave everything and just run, but it was hard with so many kids. My little sister Rama, she is just 3, and Iyhab is only 5.”

Haig tried to call his mother back repeatedly. When someone finally answered it was a male voice on the line.

“We took them all. They belong to us now,” the man said before the line went dead.

Only two of Haig’s family members managed to evade capture — his father, who fled to Mount Sinjar, and his 84-year-old grandmother, who was left behind by the militants in the family home.

Details of the Islamic State takeover of Sinjar just over a week ago are still sketchy. Those who escaped said captives were given two options: convert to Islam, or die. Others reported mass executions of men, while women and children were taken prisoner.

Since then, Haig has been on a life-threatening mission to find his family. Last week, he located his grandmother who had crawled for two days to safety.

The grandmother gave only her first name, Aissan, for this report.

Here’s her story:

When the militants began loading her family onto trucks, Aissan said she begged to go with them.

“’No! You are an old woman,’ they told me,” Aissan said. “’You aren’t good to anyone anymore.’”

She said she tried to climb on to the back of the truck with hands and feet crippled by arthritis but was pushed off.

The next day, she said, the militants returned to her home and tried to force her to convert to Islam. When she refused, she said they gave her one night to change her mind — she would have to wear a burqa and recite words signifying conversion to Islam the next day or face death.

She called Haig and told him she would rather die.

The Yazidis’ religion predates Islam and Christianity. The Islamic State’s hunt for Yazidis is just the latest in centuries of persecution of the group, whom the extremists have wrongly branded as devil worshippers.

Haig drove from Erbil to Sinjar to try to rescue her, only to be turned away by Kurdish forces at the final checkpoint.

That’s when Aissan decided to flee for safety to Mount Sinjar.

Crawling on her hands and knees for almost two days, she made it to the foot of the mountain, where other fleeing families assisted her into the infamous Sinjar Mountain range. Finally, she was rescued by Syrian Kurdish forces and taken to Syria, where she called her relieved grandson, Haig.

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When the Kurdish forces asked her if she had any family left to take care of her, she proudly said, “Yes, I have my grandson and he’s coming to get me.”

Haig made the perilous overland journey from Iraq into northern Syria to be reunited with his grandmother.

It’s a bittersweet reunion as the fate of their other family members remains unknown. For Haig, Aissan, and others fleeing the wrath of the Islamic State in Iraq, the ordeal is far from over.

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