Jumat, 31 Oktober 2014

Clean Drinking Water Urgently Needed in Lebanon

A refugee woman returns with empty bottles after discovering the wells are dry.
A small school in Lebanon’s Bekaa Valley has provided Bedouin children with a Christian education since the early 1960s. It sits near the Syrian border, a border that thousands of Syrian refugees crossed when war broke out three years ago. Many of these refugees pitched their tents around the Bedouin school.
The 120 Bedouin children who attended the school were soon joined by 300 Syrian refugees, children whom the 14 teachers simply could not turn away. The school was already filled to capacity, so they began a new schedule, educating the Bedouin children in the morning and the Syrian children in the afternoons. The six classrooms became dormitories at night.
School is about to start up again, but this year, there is no water. Poor rainfall in Lebanon, the worst in the past 60 years, has created a drought. Used by thousands of refugees, the two wells outside the school are dry.
Severe drought in Lebanon has depleted water supplies.
Dirty puddles from dried creek beds serve as drinking water for the refugees. “No wonder the children are all sick,” reports a ministry leader assisted by Christian Aid Mission. “We have the manpower to drill a new well, but we need to rent the equipment to dig down 100 yards.”
The total cost for a new well, including materials and equipment rental, is $14,000.
Your gift toward the cost of this well will enable gospel workers and teachers at the Christian school to provide tangible evidence of God’s love to refugees who have lost everything. Please help us supply them with clean, fresh water.
“And if anyone gives even a cup of cold water to one of these little ones who is my disciple, truly I tell you, that person will certainly not lose their reward.” (Matthew 10:42 NIV)

Missionaries Native to Burma Face Daunting Challenges

Missionaries Native to Burma Face Daunting Challenges


September 18, 2014
Burmese missionaries pray for people in the Sagaing Region of Burma.
The Naga people of northwestern Burma (Myanmar) live in remote areas where Buddhism and worship of spirits with malicious characteristics are prevalent. Even for a native of the nearest town, reaching these people means finding one’s way across the massive Chindwin River and winding through formidable mountain forests.
Reaching them spiritually can be even more daunting, but local Burmese ministries that Christian Aid Mission assists have been sharing their lives in Christ with villagers in the Naga hills bordering India since 1959. A local missions director said that by God's grace they have planted six churches in six villages, with a current total of about 180 souls.
“Those are very small villages,” he said. “But there are a lot of villages to win for Christ. They are ripe, but the workers are few. Please pray with us to send more missionaries into our mission fields.”
In March the leader took one of his missionaries to the Naga hills villages in the Kalaymyo, Sagaing Region, to conduct an evangelistic outreach with a local missionary he already had there in the field. After two days, including a 12-hour Jeep ride through the forests and twice ferrying across the river, they arrived at the village of Sinty. The director had not been able to talk to the local missionary before their trip. Once they arrived, he learned that it was a very busy time for the villagers and most of them would not be able to attend evangelistic meetings.
“We were down-hearted, but we decided to do our best to conduct a mass evangelistic meeting and to lead at least one soul to Christ,” the missions director said. “I paid for the gas, and a motorcyclist went to the nearby villages to inform the people about the evangelistic meeting.”
The first day 39 people showed up. The next day, more than 60 people from nearby villages came, and on the final day 45 attended, including Christians from six homes in the village.
“But God and His Holy Spirit were present, and in the evening of the last day nine people accepted Jesus Christ as their personal savior, and they were baptized in the waters of the Chindwin River!” explained the missions director.
"At the meeting that night, the Lord filled the worshippers’ hearts with joy, as they praised and thanked Him".
The local indigenous missionary is working with the nine new Christians, who are growing into solid disciples. The missionary had already established a small church in the village with Naga families from the six homes. “Before they became Christians, all of them were worshipping evil spirits and Buddha,” noted the director, and the nine new believers have charged it with a renewed spirit."
The church could also use another kind of energy. They can worship only during the day. It is too dark in the evening. “If you can pray for a solar panel and battery for them, that would be helpful.” requested the director.
A youthful audience listens to the gospel in a village of Burma.
Six villages need a solar panel and battery at a cost of $500 each, or $3,000.
Descended from Tibeto-Burman ethnic races, most of the estimated 2 million Naga people live in India, though there are about 100,000 in Burma. They have a long history of living in isolation in mountainous areas 3,000 to 4,000 feet above sea level.
About 80 percent of the country’s population practices Buddhism, which in Burma includes spiritist, occult and superstitious beliefs that pre-date Buddhism, according to Operation World. Buddhist notions are deeply imbedded in animist beliefs in Burma. Evangelical Christians make up 5 percent of the country’s population.
Besides Sinti, the other villages where his missionaries have planted churches in the Naga hills of Burma are Khanti, Long Sauh Gyi, Long Sauh Lay, Pin Thawng and A Thet Seih, according to the director, who gave thanks for Christian Aid Mission supporters.
“We thank God for you and pray that the Lord will ‘supply and multiply your seed for sowing and increase the harvest of your righteousness,’” he said. “Please pray for the churches to grow in their spiritual life and their lifestyle in order to win their own people to Christ. In fact, we need to do a lot of development programs for them in order to develop their daily lives as well.”
Use the form below to contribute online. Or call 434-977-5650 to contribute by phone. If you prefer to mail your gift, please mail to Christian Aid Mission, P.O. Box 9037, Charlottesville, VA 22906. Please use Gift Code: 715MFM. Thank you!

Syrian Refugee Children Find Hope, Solace at School in Lebanon

Syrian Refugee Children Find Hope, Solace at School in Lebanon


September 18, 2014
Thousands of Syrian refugee children are growing up without an education.
Raafat, a 14-year-old Syrian refugee in Lebanon, joins a steady stream of children walking circumspectly toward a cinderblock school building on the outskirts of their tent settlement. Some of the children, never cracking a smile, look like they are bearing the weight of the world.
The two-story building is not much more than a stone’s throw from some of the makeshift shelters. Here Raafat and one of his younger brothers can leave the squalor and sorrow of camp life behind and focus on more uplifting subjects, such as geography or poetry.
Like the other students, he is two or three years behind in his studies – another tragic consequence of the war in Syria. Still, he considers himself one of the lucky ones among the more than 400 refugee children. He has a mom and a dad; many of the kids lost at least one parent before their families fled Syria.
Of the five siblings in Raafat’s family, only two are going to school. His older sister stays at home to help their mother, and his 15-year-old brother dropped out of school and found a job to help support the family. He earns $26 a week.
“I love learning, and when I grow up I want to go back to my country to become a math teacher and help other children learn,” said Raafat, his face lighting up.

Moved with compassion

Hafiz*, the school’s director, is a Bedouin chief and follower of Jesus Christ. In the 1950s, his grandfather prayed that one day there would be a school for the many uneducated children of herdsmen in their tribe.
The school is a hub for food distribution to the Syrian refugees.
Hafiz’s father fulfilled that dream in 1961, when he started a school in a tent in Lebanon’s picturesque Bekaa Valley, near the Syrian border. A Christian Aid Mission-assisted ministry in Lebanon began partnering with the school in 1998, supplying books, heating fuel, transportation for students and salaries for teachers. They also opened a Christian camp in the mountains that more than 70 Bedouin children attend every summer.
With the outbreak of war in Syria in March 2011, the small Bedouin school suddenly found itself encircled by a tent city of refugees who fled across the border. While Bedouin youngsters were learning to read and do simple arithmetic, Syrian children within sight of the school’s windows played in the dirt. That was more than the Bedouin chief and the Lebanese ministry leader, Ammad*, could bear.
“Like the Bedouins, the Syrian refugees are marginalized people, second-class citizens,” Ammad said. “We knew we had to jump in and help.”
The school gives the refugee children enough of a foundation so they can at least read and write, he said, “and we are able to share the gospel with them and their families.”
As 120 Bedouin children quickly filled the facility’s six classrooms to near capacity, the school divided the day into two shifts – Bedouin kids in the morning and Syrians in the afternoon. But Syrian children kept coming. About 420 now attend, and Ammad estimates double that number have been turned away for lack of space.
Just 14 instructors, themselves Syrian refugees, do their best to educate the children without the convenience of books, classroom materials, or even a salary. Aminah* teaches math at the school. Before the war, she was an accountant at a travel agency in Syria and her husband worked for Pepsi Cola. They fled to Lebanon with their two young sons over a year ago.
Teaching without training or salary, she says she can see a “90 percent improvement” in the lives of students she has taught during the last five months.
“That makes it worthwhile,” she said.

Love of Jesus

Some of the Syrian children have been subjected to the unspeakable horror of seeing their parents slaughtered. Girls have been raped. Their houses have been shelled or burned. Hunger is a constant companion.
School provides stability in the lives of children whose world is turned upside down.
The school, by contrast, is the first place they hear the words, “Jesus loves you.”
Working with local believers, the Lebanese ministry conducts outreach to both children and their families. Sometimes the children introduce their parents to Christ.
“Many parents like that their children are now less aggressive,” Ammad said. “They don’t hit anymore. They are more caring and loving toward others. They ask us, ‘What did you do to our kids?’ I tell them, ‘We just give them the love of Jesus.’”
Bible camps in the summer, where children hear a clear presentation of the gospel, have been particularly fruitful. Ammad estimates about two-thirds of the children who attend camp decide to follow Jesus.
As part of his ministry’s evangelistic outreach, Ammad said Lebanese Christians, many of them converts from Islam, do visitation and follow-up with families in the refugee camps. They pray with them, share the gospel, and connect them with area house churches.
Offering an eight-week Bible study that presents a biblical foundation, the ministry works with nine house groups of about a dozen people each. Essentially all of those who go through the study become Christians. The ministry gives participants New Testaments, spiritual counseling and puts them in contact with several churches.
“They do not advertise the groups. It is all by word-of-mouth,” said Ammad. “So every two months this one program sends 100 new believers to the churches. This demonstrates the hunger for the Lord among the Syrian refugees.”
Last year a Syrian mother brought her 7-year-old son and 9-year-old daughter to the ministry; she fell to her knees as she pleaded for someone to take care of her children.
“We prayed with her and helped her children,” said Ammad. “The children go to the Bedouin school. Their mom started going to one of the house groups and has become a believer. They are all doing great.”
The humanitarian needs are challenging, but seeing the spiritual growth is beautiful, Ammad said.
“We need as much help as possible to continue to reach as many kids as we can.”
The cost to cover books, school materials, and snacks for one child per month is about $40. The ministry would also like to provide a living allowance to the school’s teachers. The total cost to operate the school, including salaries for teachers, student supplies, and maintenance and upkeep of the building, exceeds $10,000 per month. Any amount is appreciated, as this school provides a lifeline and an anchor of hope for traumatized Syrian children.
*(names changed)
Use the form below to contribute online. Or call 434-977-5650 to contribute by phone. If you prefer to mail your gift, please mail to Christian Aid Mission, P.O. Box 9037, Charlottesville, VA 22906. Please use Gift Code: 412COL. Thank you!

Helping to Feed the Poor


Widows, orphans and the elderly in Zimbabwe regularly experience the love of Christ through Thy Kingdom Come Ministries’ food program. A local ministry worker recently told of cooking for 100 orphans – all of them HIV-positive – and visiting the bedridden mother of children whose father had died. “We visited their mother …We gave her some of the food we had cooked for her children,” the worker said. “We also prayed for the mother and will be visiting them.” Many have come to know Jesus through this outreach

You help bring freedom to the most oppressed

You help bring freedom to the most oppressed

devil worshiper baptizedHenry, in Uganda baptized a former devil-worshiper. "He and his clan regularly made sacrifices to the devil and he was often called upon to bewitch others."
A similar devil worshiper tells his story:
"With that early molestation, the devil had an open door to my life. I had multiple demonic attacks. He always told me that if I don’t serve him he was going to kill me. Someone may wonder how all this could happen but the truth was, by that time I could communicate to the spiritual world.
I had constant ulcers and a back ache that never left but I could not be free from the demands of the one I served."
When one of Henry's leaders shared the power of Christ with the young man, he was ready for a new life and was completely set free. His baptism marked the beginning of that freedom along with a desire to share his new life with others.

Your partnership is changing lives! Thank you!

Blessings and Love,
Roger & Brooks

Evangelist in Remote Outpost in India Morphs into Much Needed Doctor

Evangelist in Remote Outpost in India Morphs into Much Needed Doctor


October 2, 2014
Pastor Sukeswar Nayak needs medical supplies not readily available in his remote ministry outpost.
In a remote village in eastern India, a pastor who became a missionary in his own nation has also become the doctor to hundreds of families.
Tribal people from the Pokari area in Kandhamal District, Odisha (formerly Orissa) State, 60 kilometers (37 miles) from the nearest government hospital in Balliguda, line up from morning to evening for Sukeswar Nayak to treat them. He provides treatment for illnesses as serious as dysentery, sickle cell anemia and tuberculosis.
“Many come to me for medical service. Sometimes I do not find time to eat and take sufficient rest,” Nayak said.
Thus Nayak has a visceral understanding of Jesus’ words, “My food is to do the will of Him who sent me and to finish His work” (John 4:34), but he’s more concerned about the comfort of the people he serves.
“I have a small house, so there is not sufficient accommodation for the people to sit and wait,” he said. “I cannot provide them any food if they stay longer.”
Though not educated as a physician, Nayak is the only person trained to provide basic medical care for the area people, which include tribal animists as well as Christians. A U.S. missionary doctor who is devoted full-time to training evangelists in medical care provided Nayak six months of instruction over the course of three years.
Another 15 evangelists from Kandhamal District also received the medical training. The director of the indigenous mission overseeing the medical evangelists said Nayak is serving more than 1,000 families.
“We are glad to know that many seriously ill patients who cannot go to the hospital due to the distance are getting treated by him,” the director said. “Praise God.”
Nayak may be overworked, but he is encouraged when he sees body and soul healed.
“I do ask them to go to the government hospitals if the disease is beyond my capacity to deal with it,” he said. “But I am thrilled to see that many patients who return from the government medical hospital without being healed get healed through my service, by God’s grace and intervention.”
Besides addressing common maladies, such as colds, scabies, and diarrhea, Nayak has treated people for malaria, pneumonia and anemia. He does not rely on medicine alone for healing.
“Late at night when parents bring their sick children for help – they are poor and cannot afford to take them to the government hospitals – then I pray to God before giving any medicine,” he said. “Then I give medicine based on examining the sick, and God heals that child miraculously.”
The mission director said Nayak and the other evangelists providing medical care in Kandhamal District need more supplies.
“They need a supply of drugs for these diseases – vitamins, antibiotics, analgesic, and ointments for eye infections and ear infections, so that they can help the poor and needy with much joy,” he said. “With this they can reach many villages with the gospel. Each of these evangelists has very thrilling experiences with this ministry as people are being healed miraculously.”
Nayak’s son, Bisnu Nayak, also works as a pastor, missionary and doctor for two other villages. Based in Gadgaballi village, he takes care of 200 families, including Hindus and Christians.
Another missionary doctor, Bipra Nayak, serves in Pangali village, providing medical assistance to 150 families. In Gotangi village, Sanjit Nayak treats 100 families. In both cases, the indigenous missionaries treat both Hindus and Christians.
Tribal people line up from dawn to dusk to receive medical care from the pastor.
India is more than 74 percent Hindu, according to Operation World, with Odisha State 94 percent Hindu, though that figure includes many tribal people with animistic beliefs and practices. After the murder of an area Hindu leader in 2008, Kandhamal District was the site of anti-Christian violence that killed more than 100 Christians and displaced more than 50,000.
Nayak said that his wife and church help to sustain him spiritually.
“The local church where I am pastor is my spiritual base for medical service,” he said. “The enemy is always there to discourage me, but as I pray and trust Jesus, He delivers me from the enemy.”
“The Lord in His plan has raised this man to take care of His children in times of need,” the mission director added. “God is saving many from dying due to this small enterprise in the name of Jesus.”
Use the form below to contribute online. Or call 434-977-5650 to contribute by phone. If you prefer to mail your gift, please mail to Christian Aid Mission, P.O. Box 9037, Charlottesville, VA 22906. Please use Gift Code: 640LYN. Thank you!

In His Steps in Peru


Indigenous missionaries trek through northern Peru’s varied landscape, bringing the message of Christ’s salvation as well as clothes, shoes and school supplies for impoverished children. “Many tribal children cried with joy when they received their clothes and shoes,” said the director of the Peru-based New Life Evangelistic Ministry. The ministry also has a radio station that reaches areas its indigenous missionaries cannot. The director said one man showed up at their office from a village called Chapala asking questions about Christianity. “One of our ministry missionaries talked with him and shared the plan of salvation through Jesus Christ,” he said. “That day he received Jesus as his personal Savior. We prayed for him and gave him a Bible.”

ISIS Crisis Creates Unprecedented Opportunity to Share Christ in Iraq

ISIS Crisis Creates Unprecedented Opportunity to Share Christ in Iraq


October 9, 2014
The cruelty of the Islamic State (ISIS) has led to unprecedented receptivity to the message of Christ in Iraq.
Working in northern Iraq’s Kurdish region day and night to help meet the needs of people displaced by the threats and violence of the Islamic State (ISIS) in Mosul and other areas, members of an Iraqi ministry team recently came into contact with a colonel from the Kurdish forces battling ISIS.
The colonel was serving as a division commander of the Peshmerga, the Kurdistan Regional Government’s armed forces, which have helped to slow the incursion of ISIS in its brutal push to establish a caliphate imposing a strict version of Sunni Islam. With the aid of U.S. airstrikes, the Peshmerga have also slowly retaken some territory. They are helping to secure the Kurdish capital of Erbil, where the ministry team assisted by Christian Aid Mission is supplying displaced people with food, clothing, beds and medicine.
The colonel had a few questions for the team members: What was the reason for offering all this aid? What was the motivation, what was the source of it?
“We spoke with him explicitly, explaining everything to him, saying that Christ taught us to love and express our love to the people in a practical way,” said the team director, who informed the officer that all relief items had been donated or purchased locally.
The Peshmerga colonel, whose name is withheld for security reasons, was quick to respond.
“You see the Arabs around you in the Gulf states, which claim to be religious Muslims, have not sent us anything but terrorists,” he told the ministry team members. “But you who follow Christ send love and peace and goodness to people every day.”
The conversation continued at length, the ministry team director said.
“After we had a long talk with him about Christ, he bowed and prayed, asking Christ into his life,” the director said. “And he said, ‘Today I am the happiest person – I’ve had the privilege of making this decision,’ and he received a copy of the Bible.”
The colonel’s experience was just one of many taking place in Iraq. In cities of refuge like Erbil for people displaced from their homes in other parts of Iraq, people are turning to Christ at a stunning pace. Tent churches are springing up in the makeshift camps. Under normal circumstances, mission strategies focus on how to proclaim Christ effectively, but the challenge now is keeping pace with the number who would receive Him, the director said.
“The greatest challenge in the ministry right now is not whether these people will accept Christ or not,” he said. “In all our travel to deliver the aid and preach God’s Word, we did not find anyone opposed to or rejecting our message. The challenge is how and when we will reach all those people with the message of salvation in the squares, sidewalks, roads, inside the tents and out, and everywhere.”
An indigenous Iraqi ministry distributes both food and spiritual sustenance to Iraqi’s displaced people.
Christian Aid Mission’s Middle East director said that as a result of this trend, some church leaders and workers for ministry organizations are remaining in Iraq even as the cruel practices of ISIS – beheading Iraqi children who refuse to deny Christ in Qaroqosh and Western journalists elsewhere – gain greater notoriety.
“I think of workers who stayed behind in Mosul and the surrounding areas because there are so many who are receptive to the gospel,” he said. “They are willing to risk being in an area under the rule of ISIS for the privilege of more and more fruit for Christ.”
Forced to trust God more than they ever have before, these Christians are growing in their relationship with God in ways they had never imagined, he said.
“I respected them before the Arab Spring because they were serving in Islamic areas, but now they are serving more and maturing even more,” he said. ”We need to intercede for these workers. They are all always in danger. They need God’s power to show His love to the thousands of helpless people.”
When Iraqi ministry workers assisted by Christian Aid Mission obtain more funds for food, water, medicine and other supplies, they have the opportunity to demonstrate Christ’s love in a tangible way, he added.
“God has put within the hearts of thousands of Muslims a desire to read His Word,” he said. “We can be the instruments of providing them with New Testaments and audio Bibles.”
To help indigenous missionaries to meet needs, you may contribute online using the form below, or call 434-977-5650. If you prefer to mail your gift, please mail to Christian Aid Mission, P.O. Box 9037, Charlottesville, VA 22906. Please use Gift Code: 444IRAQ. Thank you!

A Blaze of Warmth and Light amid Dark Forces in Guatemala

A Blaze of Warmth and Light amid Dark Forces in Guatemala


October 9, 2014
An after-school program gives kids a sense of belonging.
Children from impoverished families in Guatemala face oppression on several fronts. Illiteracy thwarts them, gangs come to schools to recruit them, and parents routinely beat them – sometimes killing them.
Humberto Chavez*, director of a ministry based in Guatemala City reaching out to such children, knows the oppressive forces first-hand. Not only does he live among the poor as an indigenous missionary, but physical and verbal abuse from his own childhood family drove him from home when he was 7 years old.
His dark-skinned father had mistreated him because he was born light-skinned, like his German mother. When his father divorced and remarried, his stepmother was also cruel toward him. For seven years, until he was 14, he lived on the streets, sleeping in abandoned cars and eating from garbage piles.
At 14 he sought out his mother, but she was too poor to care for him.
“When I found my mother, she said ‘I can’t have you here,’” he said. “I went hitch-hiking to Puerto San Jose to live with an aunt. But when I arrived at the town, I went to end of the pier, and I wanted to throw myself into the sea.”
Something in him told him not to kill himself. “I turned around and went to find my life,” he said.
He went to the house of his mother’s sister, who consented to take him under one condition – that he attend church.
Chavez found Christ, went to Bible college and pastored churches for 30 years.
“During those 30 years, I still had a little resentment toward my parents,” he said. “My wife felt called to work with children, and one time someone praying said, ‘You’re going to be the father of many children.’ I said, ‘I don’t want children – I want adults.’”
The bitterness and resentment simmering within eventually led him to forgive and reconcile with his father, and Chavez gained the heart for children that would enable him and his wife to launch the ministry.
“The Lord changed my mind and my heart, and He put the love in my heart for children,” Chavez said.
The ministry began in 1997, and Christian Aid Mission began assisting it in 2001. In a country where 40 percent of those in prison are youths, according to Chavez, the ministry offers the poorest children in the Guajitos slum hot meals three times a week, after-school tutoring, Bible instruction and, critically, a sense of belonging.
“We were called to love children to reach them with the gospel of Christ,” Chavez said. “Children become members of the ministry, and that gives them a sense of belonging. We teach them that they have ownership in the ministry – that they are to help others as they have been helped – in order to prevent delinquency.”
Violent gangs offer kids first and foremost a sense of belonging, he said. In Guatemala City, where 30 people are killed each day, gang members show up at schools to recruit children. They also send kids text messages saying, “If your family in your house doesn’t love you, come join with us. We can give you that and more,” Chavez said.
Gang initiation requirements can involve killing store owners or others, he said.
Children pray at ministry center in Guatemala City.
“Recently they sent three young people from 10 to 12 years old to kill five elderly people,’” he said. “They only killed three, and they were arrested. The jails have more than 15,000 adolescents.”
Accepting children for care between the ages of 3 and 7, the ministry is one of prevention.
“And the prevention is not theoretical – the ministry is them feeling the love of the ministry,” Chavez said. “The children long to be part of the ministry. They enter, and they don’t want to leave. It’s heaven for them inside, and they don’t want to go outside because it’s hell.”
Many of the children remain in the program as they grow older and help to care for the younger ones. Coming from homes where the father is absent in about 40 percent of the families, children in the programs sometimes find home is more dangerous than the street.
“It’s something incredible, but there are parents who are very bad, drinking, fighting, killing, even killing their children in ‘accidents,’” Chavez said.
He described how, after one child’s drunken mother and father were fighting, the mother and an uncle crashed a motorbike into a truck with the little one placed on the front end of the bike.
“The kid who was in front was part of the ministry, and he got killed when his head was injured,” Chavez said.
Rosa Contreras Hart, head of Christian Aid Mission’s Latin America Division, said Chavez and his wife Martha* regard the children as their own.
“They were really sad about this, because they said, ‘This is a kid I held in my hands, carried him, taught him the Bible, and it’s like I lost my own grandchild because I have cared for him and fed him,’” she said. “So each one is like their own child.”
Serving 80 children in one locale and 30 in another in Guatemala City, the ministry last year expanded to two other regions. A weekend program in the Solola area, 71 miles west of Guatemala City near Lake Atitlan, reaches 600 children; another 400 kids are served in the Jalapa area, 35 miles east of the capital.
Some parents come to Christ after seeing the impact the ministry has made on their children, said Chavez’s wife Martha. The couple seeks to expand an incipient program to teach parenting classes.
“We train them how to raise their children, how to reach them and instruct them in the Word of God,” Martha said. “We teach the parents to have a mind open to other ways than simply insulting them – they were mistreated, so they’re mistreating the children. The parents could be mad about something, and they’re unloading it on their children.”
The couple also seeks to develop classes on trades such as baking and carpentry – skills that could eventually translate into an escape from poverty. And they need more space so they won’t have to turn away so many children who seek care. A building they would like to purchase for their headquarters in Guatemala City would cost $100,000, they said.
“Children want to come, but they have limited space,” Contreras Hart of Christian Aid Mission said.
Chavez knows what it’s like to be turned away, and he knows the power of the gospel to change lives. The testimony of his own life ultimately affected some who most hurt him as a child.
“My father never became a Christian until he was 84 years old, on the edge of life, through the change he saw in me,” he said. “My mother also accepted Christ at the end of her life.”
*(names changed for security reasons)
To help indigenous missionaries to meet needs, you may contribute online using the form below, or call 434-977-5650. If you prefer to mail your gift, please mail to Christian Aid Mission, P.O. Box 9037, Charlottesville, VA 22906. Please use Gift Code: 176LSM. Thank you!

Fun Haven

As in war everywhere, military conflict in Ukraine this year has hit children hard. These two young ones displaced by violence in eastern Ukraine, however, found safe haven in a facility run by a ministry that provides food and shelter at a spiritual center, children´s camp, church building and the homes of several Christians. Assisted by Christian Aid Mission, the ministry has facilities to accommodate 350 people and feed 600 people, but the director said it is struggling to keep up with the growing number of people arriving with nothing but bare essentials. “We are in need of humanitarian supplies such as clothing, hygienic products, kitchenware and food,” he said. “Any amount will help to ensure that people continue to receive food and shelter. We look forward to the opportunity to bless the lives of those who have lost so much. Your contribution, however small, will be highly appreciated and significant for the cause.”

Civilians Flee Terrorist Attacks on Towns in Northeastern Nigeria

Civilians Flee Terrorist Attacks on Towns in Northeastern Nigeria


September 25, 2014
A brutal rebel takeover of several towns and villages in northeastern Nigeria has sent a flood of people to safe-havens with only the shirts on their backs – and survival on their hearts.
“I have never in my life seen people run for their lives such as this,” the director of the ministry said. “The gospel has been our only message all along, and now the enemy is trying to bring another message – this time it is with swords and arms.”
Food is set out for displaced persons in northeast Nigeria.
At least 300 people were killed in the rebel attacks on the predominantly Christian towns and villages in late August and the first week of September, according to published reports.
“More than 200,000 refugees alone entered Yola, while others fled to Cameroon and to Maiduguri, depending on which route takes them safer during the flight,” the director said. “Now our ministry has been turned to helping virtually all the refugees. No one man can do this alone, as the number of people is on the increase.”
Yola is the capital of Adamawa State, which shares a border with Cameroon to the east and Borno State to the north, where Maiduguri is the capital. The Nigerian military later regained control of two of the attacked towns near the Adamawa/Borno border. Some who fled have begun to trickle back to those areas, where the assailants burned down many homes, but thousands remain in Yola in need of food and shelter.
The influx of fleeing masses has driven up food and other prices by 300 percent, but people continue to arrive without a means to pay for anything, said the director of the ministry that Christian Aid Mission assists.
“Now we must ask you again because we cannot fight this battle alone,” the ministry director said. “Our missionaries and the people need your urgent prayers, and we must not shy away from your prayers and support.”
He said the ministry is enlisting the help of some of its indigenous missionaries from other parts of Nigeria to help.
“Pray for us as much as you can,” he said. “Share with others to support children and others who have not eaten for days. We cannot afford to feed the displaced people, and local churches have come to understand they must also help to meet these desperate needs. But the number of people needing help is too great for them to handle alone.”
The group provides food and clothing to displaced persons taking refuge at the Yola School of Missions and also offers assistance, including help for those whose houses have been destroyed in the attacked areas.
“Normally its costs $6 per day to feed one person,” the director said. “But there have been times when there were so many that we spent $2,400 per month to feed them, not including the costs of providing soap and other kinds of support that usually go along with helping victims.”
The ministry has plans to relocate to Abuja, the federal capital in the central part of the country, but must first ensure the well-being of those who have become Christians under the ministry’s influence in the area in Nigeria’s predominantly Islamic north, he said.
“We are planning to get more food and materials for the people,” the director said. “This must be our ministry, to salvage both souls and spirit. Beloved, ask God’s people to pray for us and for the northeast of Nigeria.”
Use the form below to contribute online. Or call 434-977-5650 to contribute by phone. If you prefer to mail your gift, please mail to Christian Aid Mission, P.O. Box 9037, Charlottesville, VA 22906. Please use Gift Code: 550MCM. Thank you!

Road to Recovery in Nepal


Workers at a center for the rescue and recovery of trafficked or abused girls in an undisclosed city in Nepal found Maya*, 17, working as a dishwasher at a hotel, where her mother had abandoned her after the death of the child's father when she was 8 years old. Maya had been routinely abused at the hotel, according to the director of the center, Sunita* (right). "We found her there in a wretched condition and rescued her," Sunita said. "We shared the gospel with her and she stayed with us for 28 days; now, she is born-again believer." The ministry found Maya's aunt and handed her over to her. "We thank God for rescuing her from a hellish life through us," Sunita says.

Shell-Shocked Iraqi Refugees Receive Love of Christ

Shell-Shocked Iraqi Refugees Receive Love of Christ


September 25, 2014
Fleeing their home physically and emotionally exhausts Iraqi refugee children.
With tears in her eyes, an Iraqi mother trembled as she told a ministry director of the incident that drove her from Iraq to Jordan.
“One of her relatives was sitting outside in her home garden with her two babies, when suddenly out of nowhere a missile landed and exploded, tearing them all apart right before her eyes,” said the ministry director. “It was a horrific scene. She mentioned how she and other members had to collect their body parts and bury them.”
She and her family then fled to Jordan, while under attack throughout the entire journey, he said.
“They made it safely, but they have nothing with them - only the clothes they were wearing that day,” he said.
Given the choice of either converting to Islam or leaving everything they had worked for, refugees fleeing the terror of the Islamic State (ISIS) continue to stream into Amman and Zarqa in Jordan, to Erbil in northern Iraq, and into Lebanon. During one three-week period, 700 Iraqi Christians entered Jordan, the ministry director said. Nine different church centers in the two Jordan cities have ministered to their needs.
“Almost all of them do not have clothes for now or for the winter season,” he said. “Many of them needed basic items for their children, such as diapers and personal hygiene items. Many needed medicines that they could not afford to buy.”
The locally-based ministry, assisted by Christian Aid Mission, worked with area churches to help meet their needs.
“They were invited to eat a hot meal by another church,” the director said. “So we prepared boxes of clothes, enough for 170 people, specifically winter clothes, for people of all ages, so that they would at least have a long sleeve shirt and a coat to keep them warm. Children also received teddy bears and toys as presents.”
Through face-painting, ministry workers provide a happy respite for Iraqi refugee children.
In August Iraqis fleeing Mosul and other cities to Erbil, in the northern region of Kurdistan, began settling in public parks around churches or in the garden areas of the church properties.
“Many Christian families have been arriving from the villages around Mosul to Erbil, because the ISIS attacked these villages and took it all. The situation of these families is very terrible right now,” the director said. “Two old men and four newborn babies have died.”
Once successful, hard-working people, the Iraqi refugees are well-educated people trying to make the best of a bad situation. "As a result of this exile, men and women have lost everything they ever worked for, whether it was money, cars, homes and even businesses,” the director said. “Even the children have lost their basic right to education. We served them a hot meal and drew a smile on the children’s faces by doing some face painting.”
The ministry is providing water, mattresses, medicine, tents, bread and thousands of cans of bread, beans, fish and cheese. More is needed. During one two-week period, the ministry provided family food baskets for 450 displaced families. Each basket included a New Testament, a children’s Bible, and a gospel tract in Arabic, Aramaic and Kurdish languages.
None of the refugees has any hope of returning to their homeland.
“As one young man said, ‘I would have never thought of leaving Iraq, and now we have no place to go back to – no home, no business, no schools and no cars.”
The future is unclear for nearly all the refugees; they do not know where they will go or what will happen to them.
“Some wish to leave Jordan and start a new life elsewhere, while others do not want to leave and hope they can build a new life here,” the director said. “Until they are able to make decisions, they need our help and support to live a somewhat normal life.”
To help indigenous ministry workers to meet needs, you may contribute online using the form below, or call 434-977-5650. If you prefer to mail your gift, please mail to Christian Aid Mission, P.O. Box 9037, Charlottesville, VA 22906. Please use Gift Code: 444IRAQ. Thank you!

Nalu of Guinea

 
Nalu of Guinea
The Nalu live along the coastal lagoons of southern Guinea-Bissau and in Guinea near Boke, Katchek Island. They mainly grow rice in this marshy area that is flooded six months out of the year, during which time the only way to get around is by canoe. The men fish and grow cola nuts; the women grow rice. Historically, they have believed in a single god, known as Kanu, assisted by male and female spirits. The people to some extent converted to Islam in the 1950s.
Ministry Obstacles
The Nalu people may have a confused worldview, a mixture of traditional religion and Islam.
Outreach Ideas
Christians need to genuinely care for the physical needs of the Nalu tribe, finding ways to assist them and build bridges of friendship.
Pray for the followers of Christ
There may be a few that know and follow Jesus among the Nalu people. Pray that teachers will be sent to help them become firmly established in the faith. Pray they will live upright lives, honoring Christ. Pray they will learn to live in the power of Christ's Spirit, demonstrating the fruit of the Spirit consistently.
Pray for the entire people group
Pray the Nalu people will be given the gift of hearing clearly of Jesus. Pray that each person in the tribe will hear at least once who Jesus is, and what He has provided for them. Pray they hear it in their mother tongue, and hear it without confusion or uncertainty in the presentation.
Scripture Focus
"All nations you have made will come and worship before you, O Lord, they will bring glory to your name." Psalm 86:9
 

People Name: Nalu
Country: Guinea
10/40 Window: Yes
Population: 10,000
World Population: 21,000
Language: Nalu
Primary Religion: Islam
Bible: None
Online Audio NT: No
Jesus Film: No
Audio Recordings: Yes
Christ Followers: Few, less than 2%
Status: Unreached
Progress Level:
1.2

Bairwa of India

 
Bairwa of India
"Bairwa" means brave. The Bairwa are located in the fertile regions of the Indo-Gangetic plains of North India in the states of Rajasthan, Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, and Jharkhand. They are an influential community. They are known for their skill in making mats and ropes. Feeling exploited by the higher castes, they have been involved in a struggle for social rights for the poor and farmers. Education has become an important means of progress, so the Bairwa emphasize education for their children. Vermilion, bangles and toe rings are some symbols of marriage for women. They are Hindus and worship many gods, goddesses and saints.
Ministry Obstacles
The worldview of Hinduism is very different than that of the Christian. Much has to change in a person's thinking to move from Hinduism to Christianity, but this is not impossible.
Outreach Ideas
Much prayer is needed to prepare the hearts and minds of the Hindu Bairwa to understand and believe that faith in Jesus is the only means of acceptance by a holy God. The way is narrow.
Pray for the followers of Christ
As far as we know there probably are no Christians among the Bairwa at the present time. Pray that members of this community will come in contact with believers who will hear and obey the Spirit's prompting to share the Good News with them.
Pray for the entire people group
Please pray this Hindu community will be given the gift of conviction of sin, and will realize their need for a Savior from sin. At the proper time, pray the Lord may reveal his Son, Jesus as this Savior.
Scripture Focus
"The Lord of hosts will prepare a lavish banquet for all peoples on this mountain.. And on this mountain He will swallow up the covering which is over all peoples, even the veil which is stretched over all nations. He will swallow up death for all time." Isaiah 25:6-8
 

People Name: Bairwa
Country: India
10/40 Window: Yes
Population: 939,000
World Population: 939,000
Language: Hindi
Primary Religion: Hinduism
Bible: Complete
Online Audio NT: Yes
Jesus Film: Yes
Audio Recordings: Yes
Christ Followers: Few, less than 2%
Status: Unreached
Progress Level:
1.1

Baggara, Dekakire of Chad

 
Baggara, Dekakire of Chad
The name Baggara comes from the Arabic Baqqara, the word for cattle. They are cattle herding Arabs. The Dekakire are one of the Baggara subgroups. The Baggara claim origin from Arabs in the Hijaz, the Red Sea coast area of the Arabian Peninsula, perhaps around 1100-1200 AD. They have been Muslims since the thirteenth century. The Baggara wear the clothes prescribed by the Muslim religion, and bury their dead facing Mecca. They are a very superstitious people, believing strongly in evil spirits.
Ministry Obstacles
The Baggara are usually somewhat nomadic, making it especially difficult to establish relationships with them. Also, they have been committed to Islam for centuries.
Outreach Ideas
Pray for Gospel radio to become available to these nomadic people in Chad, and that the people will learn of these broadcasts. Pray for excellent programming, so the people will listen.
Pray for the followers of Christ
It is questionable if there are any followers of Jesus among the Dekakire Baggara. Pray the Lord will soon prepare workers to take the Gospel to these people, and that he is preparing the Dekakire for these workers.
Pray for the entire people group
Pray for the Baggara to have sufficient rainfall for their herds and for their crops. Pray also they will have an increasing desire to find forgiveness for their sin.
Scripture Focus
"After these things I looked, and behold, a great multitude which no one could count, from every nation and all tribes and peoples and tongues, standing before the throne and before the Lamb." Revelation 7:9
 

People Name: Baggara, Dekakire
Country: Chad
10/40 Window: Yes
Population: 13,000
World Population: 13,000
Language: Arabic, Chadian Spoken
Primary Religion: Islam
Bible: New Testament
Online Audio NT: Yes
Jesus Film: Yes
Audio Recordings: Yes
Christ Followers: Few, less than 2%
Status: Unreached
Progress Level:
1.1

 

Nogai of Russia

 
Nogai of Russia
The name Nogai derives from the name of one man. Nogay, grandson to Genghis Khan, was an outstanding chieftain and the real leader of the Golden Horde. He was the ruler of these people west of the Danube. Nogay was killed either in the year 1294 or, according to other sources, 1300, but his name remains. The Nogays live in scattered linguistic enclaves. In recent times several waves of migration have swept into Nogay territories. Some of these have come from other regions of Caucasia. The relations of the Nogays with recent settlers in the Nogay Steppe are strained and extremely inflammable. The reasons for conflict are primarily economic. An especially destabilizing influence has been the immigration of the Dargwas from Dagestan.
Ministry Obstacles
The Caucasus is very difficult for Christian workers to enter.
Outreach Ideas
Please pray that Christian radio will be made available throughout the Caucasus, and that people will find it and listen.
Pray for the followers of Christ
There may be no followers of Jesus today among the Nogai people. But pray that even now the Lord will be preparing those who will come and help them find Christ.
Pray for the entire people group
Pray for peace in the Caucasus region. Ancient animosities are at work in this region.
Scripture Focus
"For the earth will be filled with the knowledge of the glory of the Lord, as the waters cover the sea." Habakkuk 2:14
 

People Name: Nogai
Country: Russia
10/40 Window: No
Population: 102,000
World Population: 114,000
Language: Nogai
Primary Religion: Islam
Bible: New Testament
Online Audio NT: No
Jesus Film: No
Audio Recordings: No
Christ Followers: Few, less than 2%
Status: Unreached
Progress Level:
1.2

 

Bhangi, Hindu of Bangladesh

 
Bhangi, Hindu of Bangladesh
The Bhangi are a Scheduled Caste, and were traditionally associated with scavenging, sweeping, basket-making, etc. Their women are considered equal in family matters, participate on an equal footing in social and religious matters, and contribute to the family income. A few of the Bhangi living in cities are educated. Hanuman, Chamunda, Ambamata, and other gods and goddesses are regularly worshipped. Many of the Bhangi are followers of Kabir, Ramanandi, Nanak, etc.
Ministry Obstacles
Spiritual opposition to the Gospel is always an issue, perhaps especially so in South Asia. Much prayer is needed to withstand spiritual opposition.
Outreach Ideas
There are a few reported Christian believers in this group in Bangladesh. And in India, there are a number of believers in this community. Perhaps Christians in the Bhangi community in India will be led by God's Spirit to help their brethren in Bangladesh. Pray to this end.
Pray for the followers of Christ
Pray that the few believers among the Bhangi will have access to scripture in both printed and audio form. Pray they will be given a hunger for God's Word.
Pray for the entire people group
Pray for this low caste community, that their education level will rise in the future, and that they will find adequate employment opportunities.
Scripture Focus
"All the ends of the earth will remember and turn to the Lord, and all the families of the nations will worship before You." Psalm 22:27
 

People Name: Bhangi, Hindu
Country: Bangladesh
10/40 Window: Yes
Population: 9,900
World Population: 4,799,000
Language: Bengali
Primary Religion: Hinduism
Bible: Complete
Online Audio NT: Yes
Jesus Film: Yes
Audio Recordings: Yes
Christ Followers: Few, less than 2%
Status: Unreached
Progress Level:
1.1