
Nadia Murad Basee Taha
Yazidi human rights advocate, Nobel Peace Prize laureate, and founder of Nadia's Initiative
of 100 · improving trend · Strong moral/spiritual alignment
Standing
76/100
Raw Score
66/85
Confidence
88%
Evidence
Strong with some institutional self reporting
About
Nadia Murad's public record shows unusually strong social care, integrity of witness, and resilience under extreme pressure, with thinner public observability around private worship and doctrinal detail.
Her work is centered on survivor advocacy, justice, and rebuilding Sinjar, with repeated evidence that she uses influence for vulnerable people rather than for self-protection or image management.
Five Pillars
Pillar scores (0–100%)
Murad's public record is strongest in social care, integrity of witness, and resilience under severe pressure. Belief and worship signals remain positive but more cautiously scored because her devotional life is less public than her advocacy.
Goodness over time
Starts at 100 at birth, natural decay after accountability age, timeline events adjust the trajectory.
17 Criteria Scores
Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes
Core Worldview
Public identity and advocacy are explicitly rooted in preserving the Yazidi faith and people.
Her justice language implies moral accountability, but explicit afterlife language is limited in accessible sources.
She publicly identifies with Yazidi religious tradition and its moral order.
She actively preserves Yazidi religious tradition, though public doctrinal detail is limited.
Accessible public evidence is thin on prophetic-model language in her own framing.
Contribution to Others
Her advocacy consistently includes the Yazidi community and the memory of murdered family members.
Nadia's Initiative supports children's spaces and education in Sinjar.
Her work repeatedly targets displaced survivors and communities left in prolonged precarity.
Her survivor advocacy extends beyond Yazidis to victims of conflict-related sexual violence globally.
Her public efforts are framed around listening to and centering survivor needs.
Anti-trafficking and anti-impunity advocacy sit at the center of her public work.
Personal Discipline
Her religious identity is public, but her personal prayer routine is not well documented.
She leads sustained charitable and reparative work, though private giving discipline is not transparent.
Reliability
Her long-running public witness and institution-building show consistent follow-through.
Stability Under Pressure
Her work stays focused on long-term reconstruction amid chronic underfunding and displacement.
She remained publicly engaged after extreme personal trauma and loss.
Her response to genocide and ongoing conflict pressure is exceptionally steady and brave.
Timeline
Key events and documented turning points
Survived the Kocho massacre, ISIS captivity, and escape
After ISIS attacked Kocho in Sinjar, Murad's mother and six brothers were killed; she was abducted, enslaved, abused, and escaped after roughly three months.
→ She survived and later turned her testimony into a sustained justice campaign for Yazidi survivors.
highTestified to the UN Security Council on trafficking in conflict
Murad addressed the Security Council in its first-ever meeting on human trafficking, publicly describing ISIS abuses against Yazidis.
→ Her testimony helped move survivor evidence into formal international policy and accountability spaces.
highBecame UNODC Goodwill Ambassador for survivors of trafficking
UNODC appointed Murad as Goodwill Ambassador for the Dignity of Survivors of Human Trafficking, the first such appointment for a survivor of atrocities.
→ The role formalized her long-horizon advocacy responsibilities and expanded her platform beyond the Yazidi case alone.
highReceived the Nobel Peace Prize for anti-sexual-violence advocacy
Murad shared the 2018 Nobel Peace Prize with Denis Mukwege for efforts to end sexual violence as a weapon of war and armed conflict.
→ The award amplified her voice, widened public accountability pressure, and increased the reach of her advocacy work.
highLaunched the New Kocho rebuilding project with IOM Iraq and USAID
Nadia's Initiative announced a housing, memorialization, and survivor-support project aimed at helping Kocho families return with dignity and safety.
→ The project translated advocacy into concrete community rebuilding and memorial protection for survivors.
highBacked the Murad Code for survivor-centered documentation
Murad helped launch the Murad Code, a survivor-centered framework for safely gathering and using information about conflict-related sexual violence.
→ She pushed international practice toward consent, safety, and accountability rather than extractive storytelling.
highLaunched the Mother & Justice memorial for survivors
Murad and Nadia's Initiative unveiled a mobile memorial honoring survivors of conflict-related sexual violence and urging justice and accountability.
→ The memorial broadened her advocacy into public remembrance and survivor-centered reparative storytelling.
mediumMet European Parliament leaders to press for justice and return support
Murad met European Parliament leaders in Brussels to press for accountability for the Yazidi genocide, support for survivors, and conditions for displaced Yazidis to return safely.
→ Her advocacy remained active and policy-facing rather than ceremonial, showing continued pressure for survivor-centered action.
mediumPressure Tests
Behavior under crisis or scrutiny
Kocho massacre and captivity
2014Murad endured genocide, enslavement, sexual violence, and the murder of close family members.
Response: She survived, escaped, and later chose public witness despite the stigma and retraumatization involved.
Very strong resilience and moral courage under extreme personal hardship.UN testimony and recurring public witness
2015Murad began publicly recounting atrocities before international institutions and media audiences.
Response: She consistently used that platform to seek justice for others rather than to isolate her story as a personal brand.
Strong integrity and social-care alignment under public pressure.Long rebuilding campaign for Sinjar
2021Years after the genocide, displaced Yazidis still faced insecurity, mass graves, and failed reconstruction.
Response: Murad kept pushing for housing, memorialization, reparations, and policy commitments instead of retreating into symbolic advocacy alone.
Patience in prolonged communal hardship.Progression
crisis years
Carried personal trauma while repeatedly confronting institutions about genocide, slavery, and impunity.
stablecurrent stage
Combines remembrance, policy advocacy, and community rebuilding through Nadia's Initiative.
improvingearly years
Lived a private village life inside the Yazidi community before the ISIS genocide ruptured that path.
stablegrowth years
Transitioned from survivor witness to international advocate and institutional leader.
improvingBehavioral Patterns
Positive
- • Turns testimony into institution-building and survivor services.
- • Keeps the focus on justice, return, and material recovery for affected communities.
- • Shows notable steadiness under grief, pressure, and public scrutiny.
Concerns
- • Public evidence is much thinner on private devotional discipline than on public service.
- • Some recent impact figures rely on Nadia's Initiative self-reporting.
Evidence Quality
9
Strong
3
Medium
0
Weak
Overall: strong_with_some_institutional_self_reporting
This profile measures publicly observable behavior and documented patterns. It does not judge private intention, hidden belief, or salvation.