A nun who has seen the worst of the worst from ISIS terrorists says the United States could, if desired, work with allies to put a stop to the group's widespread savagery.
"There have been 12,000 kidnapped at the hands of ISIS – Yazidi alone," said Sister Hatune Dogan, the founder of Warburg, Germany-based Sister Hatune Foundation, a worldwide relief organization that has been honored by the German government for its dedication to human rights.
"What is going on there, what I was hearing, is the highest barbarism on Earth in the history until today," said Dogan, according to the Christian Post.
TRENDING: St. Patrick's role on the 'external hard drive'
She spoke of the ISIS mission – to convert – and maintained Islam was hardly a religion of peace.
"The mission ... of ISIS is to convert the world completely to the Islamic religion and bring them to Dar Al Salaam, as they call it," she said, to CBN News. "And Islam is not peace, please. Whoever says ISIS has no connection to Islam or something like this ... he's a liar. ISIS is Islam. Islam is ISIS."
And a final thought: "America today has the power that they can stop this disaster on the Earth with other Western countries. We know that in Islam, there is no democracy. Islam and democracy are opposite, like black and white," she said.
As WND reported, the Orthodox Christian nun brought a word of warning to Americans in a visit to Minnesota in 2014, where she spoke to several church groups.
ISIS is nothing new, she said, just the re-emergence of Islam’s dark side.
“ISIS is not fanatic. ISIS is not more terrible. ISIS is real Muslim believers who like to follow the Quran and Muhammad,” said Dogan.
Dogan was born in Turkey, but her family fled to Germany to escape persecution of their Syrian Orthodox Christian faith. She now travels to scores of different countries, including Muslim-dominated nations, to help the poor and needy.