NO WEB/NO APPS - Exclusive. (Text available) Former ISIS sex slave Nadia Murad, 25, poses for pictures next to a pink scooter in a street in Stuttgart City, Germany on October 23, 2017. She likes to take long walks outdoors and listen to music. She now lives together with her elder sister Dimal and their conversations often drift back to when they will be able to go home. On August 3, 2014, ISIS swept into Sinjar, the Yazidi homeland, and committed genocide. Militants surrounded the village of Kocho, on the southern edge of Sinjar. They marched families to the local school, where they separated the men from the women and children. The men were executed. Women and girls were taken into slavery. One of them was Nadia Murad, who, along with other young Yazidi women, was transported to Mosul, in northern Iraq. She was beaten and raped, then passed as human bounty among the militants. After enduring months of horrific abuse she escaped and arrived in a refugee camp in Iraqi Kurdistan. A year later, she flew to Germany as part of a special program launched by the German state of Baden-Wurttemberg to offer refuge to survivors of ISIS violence, nearly all of them Yazidi women and children. Nadia became a powerful voice for her people all over the world and has been nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize. Photo by Alfred Yaghobzadeh/ABACAPRESS.COM