AMMAN, Jordan — A Jordanian woman who came close to joining the Islamic State group described a sophisticated 14-month recruitment process by the extremists that she said landed her in a secret compound in Turkey with dozens of other women.

The 25-year-old was eventually persuaded by Jordanian lawmaker Mazen Dalaeen — who earlier this year failed to extract his own son from the grip of Islamic State recruiters — to return to her family.

The case highlights the systematic grooming of potential Islamic State recruits through daily social media exchanges and follow-up on the ground for travel arrangements.

The woman, jobless since earning a bachelor's in psychology in 2011, said Islamic State recruiters exploited her vulnerability. "They used my frustration … promising me a new life with a job and a house," she said in a phone conversation with Dalaeen after her return to Jordan last month.

A recording of the call was given to the Associated Press by Dalaeen, a vocal campaigner against the Islamic State group, also known as ISIS, which controls large areas of Jordan's neighbors Syria and Iraq in a self-declared "caliphate."

The woman also described her experience in a Nov. 18 program on Jordan University's radio station, with her speaking by phone. Dalaeen provided further details in an interview with the AP on Thursday.

The story begins in Ai, the Karak district hometown of the woman and the lawmaker.

The Karak woman's family sought Dalaeen's help after she sneaked off to Turkey in late October.

Dalaeen reached her on social media. He told her leaving home without her father's permission and traveling without a male chaperone violated Islamic principles and that this should make her question claims that ISIS represents the true Islam.

At the time, she was living in a dormitory-style complex in Istanbul for about 50 women from the Arab world who were waiting to travel to ISIS-held areas, she said.

At one point, the Karak woman was able to evade the three female ISIS minders in her dorm and slip out, Dalaeen said.

A few hours later she met with Jordanian diplomats at a hotel in Istanbul before being put on a plane to Jordan.

After her return, details of her recruitment emerged.

The woman said that 14 months ago she was befriended on Facebook by a woman from Raqqa, the unofficial capital of ISIS's "caliphate" in Syria. Other ISIS supporters also contacted her.

Over the next few months, they sent over 200 videos of killing and slaughter, the woman said.

She said she received more than 500 messages urging her to travel to join ISIS. Recruiters also asked her to kill her father or brother because they are infidels and soldiers in the Jordanian security forces, she said.