A series of emotional and deeply unsettling messages allegedly sent by women linked to ISIS before recent court proceedings are drawing renewed attention to the hidden psychological toll of life inside extremist-controlled environments — and the lasting impact now unfolding inside families across Australia.

According to legal sources and relatives familiar with several ongoing terrorism-related investigations, multiple women who either returned from Syria or remain connected to extremism cases reportedly contacted family members shortly before court appearances with messages described as “desperate,” “emotionally broken,” and disturbingly similar in tone.

What has shocked investigators and relatives alike is that many of the messages allegedly contained the same haunting plea:
a request not to let their children “grow up hating them.”

Authorities have not publicly released all communications connected to the cases, and officials continue withholding some details due to ongoing legal proceedings. However, individuals close to several families say the messages reveal lives shaped by fear, isolation, regret, and psychological collapse far removed from the propaganda image once projected online by ISIS supporters.

Families say the women sounded “nothing like before”

Relatives who received the messages reportedly described the women as emotionally unrecognizable compared to the teenagers and young adults who initially left Australia years earlier.

One family member reportedly said the message they received before a hearing “didn’t sound political anymore — it sounded like someone begging to still be remembered as human.”

According to sources familiar with the cases, several women referenced:

  • fear of losing contact with their children,
  • shame surrounding public exposure,
  • mental trauma from Syria,
  • and anxiety about returning to courtrooms where their lives would be dissected publicly.

Some communications allegedly included apologies to parents and siblings for the damage caused to their families.

Others reportedly focused almost entirely on their children — particularly fears that the next generation would carry the stigma of ISIS long after the women themselves disappeared from public attention.

Australian authorities continue balancing security and rehabilitation concerns

Australia has faced years of political and legal debate surrounding citizens linked to ISIS, particularly women who traveled to Syria during the height of the terror group’s territorial control.

Security agencies have repeatedly warned that even individuals expressing regret may still pose ideological or security concerns. At the same time, human-rights advocates and rehabilitation experts argue that some women were radicalized as teenagers and later became trapped inside coercive and violent environments.

Court proceedings involving returnees have therefore become emotionally and politically charged, forcing authorities to balance:

  • national security concerns,
  • public outrage,
  • child welfare,
  • psychological rehabilitation,
  • and questions of accountability.

Experts who study extremism say the private messages emerging before court hearings often reveal a stark contrast between public ideology and private emotional deterioration.

“What families are hearing now is the collapse of the fantasy,” one extremism researcher said broadly of similar cases. “The propaganda disappears, and what’s left is trauma, fear, and people trying to reconnect with lives they abandoned years ago.”

Children becoming the emotional center of many cases

One of the most disturbing themes investigators and family members reportedly continue seeing is how frequently children appear at the center of the women’s final private pleas before legal proceedings.

Several sources close to the cases said mothers repeatedly asked relatives to:

  • protect their children from media attention,
  • preserve family photographs,
  • explain their past “carefully,”
  • or prevent the children from discovering extremist material online later in life.

Former counterterrorism analysts note that many women returning from former ISIS territory now face a second psychological collapse upon realizing their children may inherit lifelong public stigma connected to terrorism cases.

In some situations, families reportedly remain deeply divided — with certain relatives refusing all contact while others continue attempting emotional reconciliation despite years of anger and fear.

Court appearances reopening painful national questions

The emerging messages have reignited broader debate across Australia about responsibility, radicalization, and whether society should distinguish between ideological commitment and coercion inside extremist systems.

For many Australians, ISIS remains associated with brutality, recruitment propaganda, and the deaths of civilians across multiple countries. Public sympathy for returnees therefore remains extremely limited.

Yet the private communications reportedly surfacing before hearings are complicating the public narrative by revealing women who now appear psychologically shattered rather than ideologically triumphant.

Investigators and legal experts caution that remorse alone does not erase security concerns or criminal responsibility.

Still, for families reading the messages, the most haunting aspect may not be political at all.

It is the repeated realization that behind the headlines, courtrooms, and national-security debates are damaged family relationships — and children growing up connected to a war they never chose.