Sexual jihad
Alleged practice of jihadi women / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sexual jihad (Arabic: جهاد النكاح, romanized: jihad al-nikah) refers to the alleged practice in which women sympathetic to Jihadist extremism travel to war zones such as Syria and voluntarily offer themselves to be "married" to jihadist militants, often repeatedly and in temporary marriages, serving sexual comfort roles to help boost the fighters' morale.[1][2]
This article is about the alleged practice of women volunteering to marry Jihadi extremists militants. It is not to be confused with Love Jihad, a conspiracy theory about converting Indian non-Muslims to Islam.
Publicity first arose in 2013, and the veracity of the practice became the subject of a greater debate in September 2013 after the Interior Minister of the 98.45% Muslim nation of Tunisia made a public statement identifying it as a significant issue.[3][4][5] Critics dismissed claims of "sexual jihad" as unfounded and political propaganda.[6]