Senin, 16 November 2015

Catholic priest felt ‘born again’ during Islamic State captivity

Catholic priest felt ‘born again’ during Islamic State captivity  

By Mark Ellis, Special to ASSIST News Service
Syrian Priest Mark EllisSYRIA (ANS - October 28, 2015) -- He was one of 250 Christians captured by Islamic State militants in Syria. Miraculously, with the help of a Muslim friend he managed to escape their clutches and regain his freedom October 11th. Recently, he described his captivity and the remarkable resolve of his fellow Christian captives.
“Even while being deported, with my hands tied behind my back, I surprisingly found myself repeating again and again: I am going towards freedom,” Father Jacques Murad told Arab Christian broadcaster Noursat TV.
Before his abduction on May 21st, Fr Jacques belonged to a monastic community on the outskirts of Al Qaryatayn. His community was founded by the Italian Jesuit Paolo Dall’Oglio, from Rome, who disappeared in 2013 from Raqqa, Syria, which became a stronghold of ‘Islamic State’ jihadists, according to Agenzia Fides, the information service of the Pontifical Mission Societies.
After his capture, Islamic State militants took Fr Jacques to the city of Palmyra, where he was placed in a dorm that included 250 other Christians, also captured from the same area.
“The Christians were often questioned about their faith and about the Christian doctrine, and they did not convert to Islam despite much pressure,” he recounted.
“Almost every day there was someone who came to my prison and asked me ‘what are you?’ I would answer: ‘I’m a Nazarene, in other words, a Christian.’
“So you’re an infidel!” the Islamic State militant shouted. “Since you’re a Christian, if you don’t convert we’ll slit your throat with a knife.”
The excruciating pressures related to his abduction and captivity brought an unexpected result. “This experience of trial strengthened the faith of everyone including my faith as a priest. It is as if I have been born again,” he declared.
Phoro caption: Father Jacques Murad.
About the writer: Mark Ellis is senior correspondent for the ASSIST News service and also the founder of www.Godreports.com, a website that shares stories, testimonies and videos from the church aorund the world to build interest and involvement in world missions.
** You may republish this or any of our ANS stories with attribution to the ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net)

Nung in Vietnam

Nung in Vietnam
The Nung support themselves through agriculture, and are also known for their handicrafts. They have an abundant wealth of folk art and cultural activities including folksongs and alternative songs ("sli"). The smooth melodies of the "sli" are harmonious with the natural sounds of the forests and mountains. This type of folksong is a combination of verse and music. The Nung mainly worship their ancestors, spirits, saints, Confucius, and Kwan Yin.
Ministry Obstacles
The Nung may well believe that to follow Christ will offend their ancestors.
Outreach Ideas
Christian workers can carry the Gospel message to the Nung by telling them stories from Scripture, as well as with films and Gospel recordings. Bridges of friendship are needed.
Pray for the followers of Christ
Pray for the followers of Christ among the Nung, that they will be sent teachers to help them, and mature believers to model Christ-like behavior.
Pray for the entire people group
Pray the Nung will be able to live peaceful lives and be able to care well for their families.
Scripture Focus
"Give thanks to the Lord, call on His Name; make known among the nations what He has done." Psalm 105:1
 

People Name: Nung
Country: Vietnam
10/40 Window: Yes
Population: 1,065,000
World Population: 1,066,000
Language: Nung
Primary Religion: Ethnic Religions
Bible: Portions
Online Audio NT: No
Jesus Film: Yes
Audio Recordings: Yes
Christ Followers: Few, less than 2%
Status: Unreached
Progress Level:
1.2

Gospel Advances amid Uptick in War in Iraq

Gospel Advances amid Uptick in War in Iraq


October 29, 2015
Kurdish soldiers prepare for battle outside Kirkuk in northern Iraq. (File photo, Boris Niehaus, Wikimedia)
Iraqi and U.S.-led coalition forces in Iraq faced fierce opposition in counter-offensives against the Islamic State (ISIS) this month, but in spiritual battles in the north, native Christian workers saw the gospel advance nearly unopposed, Iraqi ministry leaders said.
The coalition units in Iraq this month stepped up military strikes in Ramadi in the west and Baiji in the north, and the first U.S. fatality in the fight against ISIS occurred on Oct. 22 when Kurdish soldiers and U.S. special operations members freed prisoners held by ISIS in the northern town of Hawija. The approximately 70 hostages had been told they would be executed that day. Their graves had already been prepared.
At the same time, Christian workers doing spiritual battle in northern Iraq could barely keep up with area residents' desire to learn about Christ and the Bible, ministry leaders said. People in northern Iraq's predominantly Muslim, autonomous region of Kurdistan have long been more open to Christianity than other Iraqis, but they have been especially keen since ISIS took over parts of the region.
"They're just sick of Islam," said the director of a ministry based in Kurdistan. "People are very hungry to know about Christ, especially when they hear about miracles, healing, mercy and love."
In numerous testimonies he heard from Kurds every day, in churches that have emerged and in satellite television broadcasts with people calling in telling how they came to put their trust in Christ, the ministry leader cited an "awakening" among Muslims in northern Iraq. No one declined a Bible or the opportunity to hear the gospel, he said, though not all came to faith overnight. He spoke of giving a Bible to a Muslim receiving aid from his ministry.
"He said, 'OK, but I'm Muslim, I can't become Christian – I have a big family, and my father is a very extremist radical,'" the director said. "I said, 'I didn't ask you to be Christian. I'm not trying to change your religion here. I just want you to read the Bible and know who Jesus Christ is. I want you to have a relationship with God.'"
The Kurdish Muslim agreed, and he began reading the Bible with his wife and their many children. His house was frequently without electricity, and when the director and members of the ministry visited him, often they found him reading the Bible by candlelight. The Muslim presented the ministry leader with a list of questions he had made while reading. One day he asked the ministry leader to tell him about the prophet of Islam.
The surprised director, who normally does not talk about Islam, gave him a token bit of information about Muhammad that did not include anything offensive about the founder of the religion.
"I said, 'Why do you ask me that question?'" he said. "He goes, 'You know what? I don't like Muhammad anymore.' I was happy but surprised, so I said, 'What now?' He goes, 'I want to be a Christian.' I said, 'I thought you said you didn't want to be Christian before.' He goes, 'Oh, I changed my mind.' So he got saved."
The Word of God alone, he said, has a power to change lives and requires no embellishment. The ministry leader said he has seen that power work countless times, but it was perhaps never clearer than when administrators at a sharia (Islamic law) college recently made contact with him after they learned he was giving away Bibles. They requested 21 Bibles for a comparative religion class so they could equip Muslims with enough criticisms of the Bible to proselytize Christians.
"In a couple months, after they took that class going through the Bible, five of the students got saved," the ministry leader said. "They called me and said, 'Hey, we're done with Islam.'"
The teacher reported the conversions to authorities, who summoned the ministry director. A policeman asked him if he had tried to convert the students, and he replied that he didn't even know them. When the officer asked him why he gave them Bibles, he said they had requested them. The officer confirmed this with the teacher and asked the students why they had converted.
"One said, 'The Bible is strong, powerful; it changed our lives,'" the leader said. "Then the policeman said, 'Okay, then go, there is no case here; I can't do anything.' So he dismissed the guy and asked me, 'Is it true that the Bible has the power to change lives?' I said, 'Yes, of course. It's been changing lives everywhere.' He asked, 'Can I have a copy?'"
Kurdish Muslims are asking about Christianity and comparing it to what's going on around them, he said.
Displaced Iraqis are facing their second winter in either run-down apartments or tents such as this one in Erbil, Kurdistan.
"As terrifying and horrifying as ISIS is, they did us a great favor because they came and have shown them all the killing, saying that it's all in the Koran verses," he said. "So now we don't have to say much, we just say the truth."
The indigenous ministry leader said the gospel continues to be well received among displaced people, with 10 house churches meeting regularly in run-down apartments in Erbil, Dohuk and surrounding areas. From time to time the fellowships vanish as displaced people leave the country in search of a better life, but others spring up in their place, he said.
The ministry continues to provide aid to displaced people in tents and whatever dilapidated or unfinished buildings they can find for shelter, with needs for blankets, heaters, food and diapers still being high. First ministry members show the love of Christ by meeting physical needs, and only later do they bring Bibles, he said.
"We just help because we love them, and maybe the next time we visit we tell them about Jesus and give them Bibles," he said. "We believe in the power of the Word of God. We don't have many preachers. We don't have many missionaries, but we have the Word of God that we're able to print, purchase and deliver to the people and their children."
To help indigenous missionaries 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: 444SHM. Thank you!

China ends its one-child policy

China ends its one-child policy

By Michael Ireland, Senior Reporter, ASSIST News Service answritermike@gmail.com
BEIJING, CHINA (ANS, October 29, 2015) -- China has decided to end its decades-long one-child policy, the state-run Xinhua news agency reports. Couples will now be allowed to have two children, it said, citing a statement from the Communist Party.
Chinese infants 10292015According to the BBC, the controversial policy was introduced nationally in 1979, to slow the population growth rate. It is estimated to have prevented about 400 million births. However concerns at China's ageing population led to pressure for change.
The BBC report said couples who violated the one-child policy faced a variety of punishments, from fines and the loss of employment to forced abortions. Over time, the policy has been relaxed in some provinces, as demographers and sociologists raised concerns about rising social costs and falling worker numbers.
The BBC said the Communist Party began formally relaxing national rules two years ago, allowing couples in which at least one of the pair is an only child to have a second child.
The BBC explained the policy, introduced in 1979, meant that many Chinese citizens - around a third, China claimed in 2007 - could not have a second child without incurring a fine. In rural areas, families were allowed to have two children if the first was a girl
Other exceptions included ethnic minorities and - since 2013 - couples where at least one was a single child.
The BBC reported that campaigners say the policy led to forced abortions, female infanticide, and the under-reporting of female births. It was also implicated as a cause of China's gender imbalance.
The BBC went on to explain the decision to allow families to have two children was designed "to improve the balanced development of population'' and to deal with an aging population, according to the statement from the Community Party's Central Committee carried by the official Xinhua News Agency on Thursday.
Currently about 30 percent of China's population is over the age of 50, the BBC said.
The BBC report added that correspondents say despite the relaxation of the rules, many couples may opt to only have one child, as one-child families have become the social norm.
According to the BBC's John Sudworth, critics say that even a two-child policy will not boost the birth rate enough. And for those women who want more than two children, nor will it end the state's insistence on the right to control their fertility, he added.
"As long as the quotas and system of surveillance remains, women still do not enjoy reproductive rights," Maya Wang of Human Rights Watch told Agence France Presse (AFP).
The BBC stated the Chinese Government announcement comes on the final day of a summit of the Chinese Communist Party's policy-making Central Committee, known as the fifth plenum. The party is also set to announce growth targets and its next five year plan.
Reggie Littlejohn, President, Women's Rights Without Frontiers
www.womensrightswithoutfrontiers.org told ASSIST News: “Xinhua News Agency announced today that China is moving to a universal two-child policy. This comes as no surprise, given the demographic disaster China now faces as a result of its One Child Policy.”
“However, instituting a two-child policy will not end forced abortion, gendercide or family planning regulations in China. Couples will still have to have a birth permit for the first and the second child, or they may be subject to forced abortion.” 
“The core of the One Child Policy is not whether the number of children the government allows.  It's the fact that the government is setting a limit on children, and enforcing this limit coercively.  That will not change under a two-child policy.  The One Child Policy does not need to be modified. It needs to be abolished.
Littlejohn stated: “Women will still be forcibly aborted under a universal 2-child policy. We need to keep up the pressure until China abandons all coercive population control.”
Other experts say the new policy could mean that China’s population, now around 1.5 billion, could increase until it tops out at 1.6 billion, before declining.
According to Hans Rosling a Swedish medical doctor, academic, statistician and public speaker, who is Professor of International Health at Karolinska Institute, talking to BBC Radio, also said that China’s one-child policy had failed.
Rosling said the average number of births per female worldwide is 2.5. Births in Africa were increasing, while in Asia, women were having fewer children. He added that, worldwide, there were now more adults than children.
To view “Stop Forced Abortion – China’s War on Women!” Video (4 mins) click here:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=JjtuBcJUsjY
Michael Ireland small useAbout the writer: Michael Ireland is a Senior Correspondent for the ASSIST News Service, as well as a volunteer Internet Journalist and Ordained Minister who has served with ASSIST Ministries and ASSIST News Service since its beginning in 1989. He has reported for ANS from Jamaica, Mexico, Nicaragua, Israel, Jordan, China, and Russia. Click http://paper.li/Michael_ASSIST/1410485204  to see a daily digest of Michael's stories for ANS.
** You may republish this or any of ANS stories with attribution to the ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net).

Rahanweyn in Somalia

Rahanweyn in Somalia
The Digil and Rahawiin (Mirifle) are two of the clan federations of the Somali peoples. The Somalis are not a unitary people group, but a grouping of broad clan federations divided by language and by clan conflicts. The Digil-Rahawiin speak various dialects of what is known as the Maay language. The Digil and Rahawiin clans retain much of the historic nomadic, pastoral culture primarily centered around camels with a few cattle and goats. They are virtually all Muslim.
Ministry Obstacles
The Digil-Rahawiin clans may offer special challenges to evangelists and church planters because of the clan divisions within the broader group.
Outreach Ideas
Christian workers need to care genuinely for the material and physical needs of these people, living in a harsh land.
Pray for the followers of Christ
There are very few followers of Jesus among this large clan grouping in Somalia. They need prayer support. Pray they will be sent resources (Scripture, Jesus film, and so forth) to help them become established in the faith. Pray they will be patient with each other, bearing with one another in love.
Pray for the entire people group
Pray for the Digil-Rahawiin people living in the harsh environment of Somalia to be able to care adequately for their families. Pray for sufficient rain, and for good agricultural practices.
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: Rahanweyn
Country: Somalia
10/40 Window: Yes
Population: 2,123,000
World Population: 2,123,000
Language: Maay
Primary Religion: Islam
Bible: Portions
Online Audio NT: No
Jesus Film: Yes
Audio Recordings: Yes
Christ Followers: Few, less than 2%
Status: Unreached
Progress Level:
1.1

Asia Bibi’s Lawyer says she is ‘healthy and safe’

Asia Bibi’s Lawyer says she is ‘healthy and safe’

By Michael Ireland, Senior Reporter, ASSIST News Service, answritermike@gmail.com
Asia Bibi and familyPAKISTAN (ANS, October 30, 2015) -- The lawyer of the only Pakistani Christian woman to be given the death penalty for alleged blasphemy met her in prison last week, reporting that she is safe and in good health.
According to an article by Asif Aqeel, writing for www.worldwatchmonitor.org, the final appeal for Asiya Noreen, commonly known as Asia Bibi, is pending before Pakistan’s top court, after the Lahore High Court turned down her appeal last October on technical grounds. The mother of five has been in prison since the summer of 2009, when she was arrested on allegations of insulting the prophet of Islam.
Defense lawyer Saif-ul-Malook told World Watch Monitor he was accompanied by Asia Bibi’s husband Ashiq Masih on his Oct. 21 visit in the Multan Women’s Prison.
Supreme Court of pak courtesy supremecourt gov ukThrough Malook, a prominent attorney and expert in Islamic law, Bibi had been allowed to take the final appeal against her death penalty to the Supreme Court in Islamabad in July 2015.
Malook told World Watch Monitor that since early October several foreign news agencies, including one from the Vatican, contacted him over news that Noreen’s health was worsening. “After this I decided to visit the prison and personally meet Asia, to ascertain if the news was correct,” he said.
“Only family of the inmate or the lawyer representing the convict can visit the chamber, so Ashiq and I went together to see her. Inmates on death row are separated and locked into an 8 by 10 feet chamber called a death cell,” Malook said.
“There are three death cells in this prison and Asia is the only death convict, so two cells are empty. She has been given one servant who sits outside the lockup for any help,” the lawyer said. “Asia is probably the only prisoner in Pakistan who has been given a TV set in her cell. She looked healthy and normal, but I still asked her if she suffered any serious illness.”
“Asia has totally denied she ever suffered any serious illness since 2009 in prison. She became happy when I told her that she would soon be released,” her lawyer said.
World Watch Monitor said Malook stated the deputy-superintendent of police was also present during his meeting with Bibi. “There are no men in the prison, and one extra female police officer is deployed outside her chamber so that her security could be ensured,” he said.
Masih confirmed to World Watch Monitor that he had visited his wife with Malook, and that none of his daughters accompanied them on this visit. He could see “a glimmer of hope” on Asia’s face, her husband said.
Malook’s account of Bibi’s health contrasts with reports, which began to surface a year ago, that she had become seriously ill. Since that time, hard evidence or on-the-record testimony about her condition has been scarce, and what information has emerged has been inconsistent.
World Watch Monitor stated that in October 2014, Agence France-Press (AFP) cited an unnamed Pakistani government “official” as saying that Bibi "was vomiting blood last month and was having difficulty walking." AFP also quoted the noted Pakistani Christian activist Sardar Mushtaq Gill as saying that Asia's "life is in danger because of her health." Yet the news agency also quoted an unnamed "source close to the prisoner's family" as saying "we were told that her health condition had worsened at one time but she was recovering now."
World Watch Monitor further stated that in June of this year, reports again appeared with claims Bibi was vomiting blood and was almost too weak to walk. Few of the reports contained first-hand information or original reporting. Several, including a June 30 item posted by the UK-based www.Dailymail.com , based their reports on an item posted on a website called The Global Dispatch. The Global Dispatch, in turn, had relied upon a single source: a web site called MasLibres.org, which is published by HatzeOir.org, a Madrid-based nonprofit organization that says it is devoted to human-rights advocacy.
Though MasLibres has devoted significant attention to Aasiya Noreen's case, the website currently does not contain any report that Asia is in ill health. It had earlier hosted an advocacy visit to Europe by Ashiq Masih.
In fact, on Oct. 22, MasLibres published a more upbeat assessment following a prison visit to Bibi by Joseph Nadeem, director of the Lahore-based Renaissance Education Foundation. Malook, the attorney, accompanied Nadeem on the visit, MasLibres reported. (It's not clear if this was the October 21 visit reported above.)
"They found Asia Bibi in good health and state of mind," the article reported.
World Watch Monitor went on to report there are also indications all is not well inside Multan Jail. Open Doors International, a charity that supports Christians who are under pressure because of their faith, said this month that "people close to the case" have told church contacts in Pakistan that the prison is an overcrowded, unsanitary "hell hole," and that Bibi is in poor health.
Malook had previously served as the prosecution lawyer in the murder case of the former Punjab Govenor Salmaan Taseer, who was assassinated after visiting Asia Bibi in prison and supporting her case. The governor had called Pakistan’s blasphemy statutes “black laws,” calling for their reform and supporting a presidential pardon for Asia Bibi.
Taseer was shot and killed by Mumtaz Qadri, a 26-year-old member of his own security detail, in Pakistan’s capital, Islamabad, on January 4, 2011. Qadri shot the governor 27 times without being intercepted by other police officers present at the crime scene. Then he threw down his AK-47 sub-machine gun and reportedly pleaded to be arrested so that he could explain his intentions, to punish Taseer for opposing Asia Bibi’s blasphemy conviction.
World Watch Monitor explained that because of death threats from hardliners, no lawyer would agree to represent Qadri’s prosecution. After months of no representation, Malook took up the case. When the trial judge, Pervez Ali Shah, convicted Qadri and sentenced him to death in October 2011, the judge was threatened and finally sent to Saudi Arabia for fear of his life.
However, a recent Supreme Court landmark decision has upheld the judgement that Qadri had no legal justification to take the law into his own hands and reconfirmed his death sentence. This vindicated Malook's bold prosecution of the case. However, it is this verdict that has provoked the backlash against Asia Bibi by extremists.
Malook said the Supreme Court hearing in Bibi’s case should begin sometime in January or February 2016. He remains “quite hopeful” she would be acquitted and released, he said. Citing “insufficient evidence” against her, he has not found sufficient legal grounds against her under either civil or Islamic law.
Main Image: Asia Bibi with Punjab Governor, Salmaan Taseer, who was assassinated in 2011 for supporting her case.
Image:1 ) Asia Bibi with her husband and two daughters. 2) Bibi's final appeal against her death penalty is pending at the Supreme Court of Pakistan shown here. 3) Michael Ireland
Michael Ireland small useAbout the writer: Michael Ireland is a Senior Correspondent for the ASSIST News Service, as well as a volunteer Internet Journalist and Ordained Minister who has served with ASSIST Ministries and ASSIST News Service since its beginning in 1989. He has reported for ANS from Jamaica, Mexico, Nicaragua, Israel, Jordan, China, and Russia. Click http://paper.li/Michael_ASSIST/1410485204  to see a daily digest of Michael's stories for ANS.
** You may republish this or any of ANS stories with attribution to the ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net).

Christian lawyers call for Chinese colleagues’ release

Christian lawyers call for Chinese colleagues’ release

By Dan Wooding, Founder of the ASSIST News Service
Malaysian lawyer arrestedNEW DEHLI, INDIA (ANS – October 30, 2015) - Advocates Asia, a forum of Christian lawyers in 20 Asian countries, has urged the Chinese government to release “immediately and unconditionally” human rights lawyers and activists detained since early July.
According to Anto Akkara of World Watch Monitor (https://www.worldwatchmonitor.org), the participants of the 14th convention of Advocates Asia, held in New Delhi from October 22-24, expressed “deep concern over [the] arrests, detention and disappearance of human rights lawyers and activists in China, who have been defending individuals and their rights to freedom of religion or belief and freedom of expression.”
They reiterated that the “religious beliefs of all persons must be respected … Coercion, harassment and persecution of the [detained] lawyers and activists is ... unjust and harsh,”
The story went on to say that at the conference, which was attended by 120 delegates, a summary of the statement of London-based Christian Solidarity Worldwide (CSW) on the arrests of the lawyers was read out.
In its July 13 statement, CSW had quoted the China Human Rights Lawyers Concern Group, saying that “114 individuals have been targeted in sweeping arrests. Those detained include human rights lawyers and activists [and] also relatives of lawyers and staff from lawyer firms.”
Many of those detained, the statement pointed out, were “signatories to a letter condemning the forced disappearance of lawyer Wang Yu, who had defended members of Falun Gong, a spiritual practice banned in China,”
“Among the lawyers arrested were many who have defended the right to freedom of religion or belief and freedom of expression, including Li Heping, a Christian lawyer who had defended Christians, Falun Gong practitioners and other lawyers.”
Zhang KaiCSW also highlighted the case of lawyer Zhang Kai, who defended Protestant pastor Huang Yizi, who protested the demolition of churches and crosses in China’s Zhejiang province. Two Christian activists, including one leader of an unregistered church, have also been questioned, CSW said.
Though the number of detainees rose to 226 by July 20, CSW in a subsequent statement pointed out that, “while the majority have been released, at least six are being held incommunicado and at least 14 are in some form of detention or confinement.”
This followed international protests led by UN human rights experts, the European Union, UK, US and other international groups.
“We are meeting in a free atmosphere, but the Christian lawyers of China even do not have the liberty to meet,” said Min-Choon Lee, a Malaysian lawyer and president of Advocates Asia.
Lee told the conference he too had been arrested in early 2014, during Malaysian Christians’ fight for the right to use the word “Allah.”
Vietnamese Christian lawyer Nguyen Van Dai, who was instrumental in setting up an independent human rights commission in Vietnam, has been under house arrest since 2006, Robin David, a New Delhi-based lawyer and executive committee member of Advocates Asia, told the conference.
“Van Dai participated at the Advocates International Conferences in Washington DC in 2000 and 2004. He was arrested in 2006 and is under house arrest even now,” David told World Watch Monitor.
“I had the privilege of meeting him at both the conferences. He registered for the Advocates Asia Conference in 2006. However, he did not show up. He is still under house arrest.”
“Ours is not a profession, but a vocation,” said Michael F. Saldanha, a Catholic and retired judge of the Mumbai high court – in his keynote address on the theme ‘Advocates as Catalysts for Change.’ “A lot of social injustices can be stopped if lawyers give up their indifferent attitude to human rights violations. Most atrocities take place because of the total failure of the legal system,” he said.
World Watch Monitor said that Jamie Williams, an American who has been teaching law in the Pelita Harapan University of Indonesia for five years, said that the type of religious persecution experienced in the West has “little significance” compared to the incidents in Asian countries.
“In the US, persecution could mean a photographer being forced to take snaps of gay weddings against his or her will. But, in the Asian context, it is much more stark and brute,” he said.
“The expansion of Islamic fundamentalist groups is posing a great threat to religious freedom in Central Asian countries,” said Ekaterina Smyslova, a lawyer from Russia. “Even the rights of Muslims to live according to the Qur’an is being threatened.”
Photo caption: 1) Advocates Asia founder and president Min-Choon Lee was arrested in Malaysia as part of the ongoing battle for Christians to be able to use the word 'Allah'.(World Watch Monitor) 2) Chinese lawyer, Zhang Kai.3) Dan Wooding.
Dan Wooding on His Channel Live with Paul EshlemanAbout the writer: Dan Wooding, 74, is an award-winning winning author, broadcaster and journalist who was born in Nigeria of British missionary parents, and is now living in Southern California with his wife Norma, to whom he has been married for more than 52 years. They have two sons, Andrew and Peter, and six grandchildren who all live in the UK. Dan is the founder and international director of ASSIST (Aid to Special Saints in Strategic Times) and the ASSIST News Service (ANS). He is also the author of some 45 books and has two US-based TV programs and a radio show called “Front Page Radio.”
You may republish this or any of our ANS stories with attribution to the ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net)

‘Judas’ betrayal led to massacre – claim

‘Judas’ betrayal led to massacre – claim  

Norwegian island tragedy linked with Israel policy
By Charles Gardner, Special to ASSIST News Service
Norway killer at his trialNORWAY (ANS – October 30, 2015) -- The tragedy of Norway’s Utoeya massacre was directly linked with the country’s policy toward Israel, a new book claims.
A Breach in the Wall (available from a-breach-in-the-wall.com, relates how the Norwegian Labour Party, once Israel’s greatest friend, had turned Judas by betraying them into the trap of the Oslo Accords which have given them twenty-plus years of terror instead of the promised ‘land for peace’.
Norway had thus been left particularly vulnerable to attack in view of God’s clear statement that those who curse Israel will come under judgment (Genesis 12.3). And Jeremy Hoff concludes that it was surely no coincidence that the tiny island of Utoeya, where the ruling Norwegian Labour Party’s youth wing (AUF) was enjoying its annual summer camp, was the scene of the deadliest massacre by a single gunman in world history – also referred to as Norway’s 9/11.
Norway shooter on the islandOn July 22, 2011, right-wing extremist Anders Behring Breivik murdered 77 people. After detonating a car-bomb in the heart of the Government complex, killing eight, he drove unhindered to Utoeya, where he slaughtered 69 left-wing political activists.
Only the day before, the campers had mounted a re-enactment of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, complete with security wall and checkpoint, to help illustrate what they perceived as the causes of trouble in the region. Foreign Minister Jonas Gahr Store was photographed in front of a ‘Boycott Israel’ banner, and Palestinian youth had previously been hosted at the site while AUF had encouraged terrorism against Israel. They had reaped a bitter harvest.
A Breach in the Wall book coverThe party’s youth had long been aggressively campaigning for a much more pro-Palestinian stance and, by 1993, the mother party became the official peace broker for the Oslo Accords which set up the mechanism for negotiations towards a two-state solution dividing Israel – against the clear commands of God (Joel 3.2) – and breathing new life into the PLO (Palestinian Liberation Organization) in the process.
Norway still presides over the committee responsible for channeling millions of dollars of aid to the Palestinian Authority, much of which is frittered away by corrupt leaders feathering their own nest.
The author sees the tragedy as a warning from God, giving Norway the chance to repent. And on a visit to Britain earlier this month, he suggested that the rest of Europe, including the UK, also needed to heed this warning.
He tells of a profound experience a year before the massacre during which he wept bitterly for the sins Norway had committed against Israel and that subsequently – in an email dated August 28 2010 – he published a ‘prophetic revelation’ pertaining to an attack about to happen in which he noted: “Norway’s critical role [in the Oslo Accords] has placed the nation in a dangerous position of standing against God! Judgments are scheduled against Norway unless she repents of this serious sin.”
UK-based South African, Francois Botes, in a message given at a YWAM (Youth With A Mission) base on another Norwegian island on May 11 2011, described a vision he saw of a flag flying at half-mast across the whole country “because of an event”, and it was soon after the tragedy that political scientist Per Haakonsen caused a media storm by linking Utoeya with the nation’s policy on Israel at a meeting organized by a local leader of the Christian Democratic Party.
Norways twin massacresHumanly speaking, the whole tragic episode could have been avoided but for a series of monumental communication blunders, starting with the approach road to the government complex, which had been flagged up as a security risk seven years earlier when it was recommended that it should be blocked off. Then there were questions as to why sufficient road blocks weren’t set up and how Breivik managed to board the only island ferry disguised as a policeman. Indeed, communication between police rescue teams broke down to the point of almost total confusion comparable to that which afflicted the ancient enemies of Israel in biblical records.
In fact, there are too many ‘coincidences’ recounted in this book to allow any seriously open-minded reader to escape the conclusion that God takes a dim view of those who touch the apple of his eye (Zechariah 2.8).
The book is too important to be written off simply as the figment of overactive imagination, or even to be restricted to the ‘review’ section of theological journals. The message is basically a summing up of the Bible’s doctrine on the seed of Abraham – “I will bless those who bless you, and whoever curses you I will curse” (Genesis 12.3) – with the help of meticulous documentation of a major modern catastrophe.
This was underscored by the first scripture publicly quoted by a Norwegian politician in association with the attacks – “He who keeps Israel shall neither slumber nor sleep” (Psalm 121).1
The author also emphasizes – as Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu has done in the past week – the PLO’s direct links with the Nazis. And yes, the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, Haj Amin al-Husseini, did help to persuade Hitler to annihilate the Jews rather than simply expel them.
Paying respectsHoff also sees prophetic significance in the number of those killed – 77 – which is closely associated with vengeance in each of its three mentions in the Bible. In addition, the name Lord of Hosts (also translated Lord of Armies), a title denoting military authority, occurs exactly 77 times in the book of Jeremiah, generally seen as a prophet of doom despite many inspiring passages focusing on Israel’s future hope. And the generation experiencing the outpouring of God’s vengeance when Jerusalem was destroyed in AD 70 was the 77th from Adam.
As it happened, the official investigation into the tragedy found that the road to Utoeya remained open for at least 77 minutes [after the bombing] before the national alarm was triggered.
It seems that God’s hand of protection on Norway had been lifted.
Asked if he had a ‘word for Britain’, Hoff’s answer was brief. It was “pride”, he said.
1) Labour’s Oyvind Groslie-Wennesland in Oslo Cathedral on July 24 2011.
Photo captions: 1) A fascist salute by Breivik as he faced sentencing (Photograph: Heiko Junge/AFP/Getty). 2) A live picture from a helicopter of the shooter on the island with the shooter circled in red. 3) Book cover. 4) Peaceful Norway shocked by a day of horror as a gunman goes on a shooting rampage at a youth camp and a massive blast kills and injures several people in capital city of Oslo. (Photo: Reuters). 5) People gather outside the Oslo Cathedral to mourn and pay their respects. (AFP: Jan Johannessen). 6) Charles and Linda Gardner.
Charles Gardner with his wife Linda useAbout the writer: Charles Gardner is a veteran Cape Town-born British journalist working on plans to launch a new UK national newspaper reporting and interpreting the news from a biblical perspective. With his South African forebears having had close links with the legendary devotional writer Andrew Murray, Charles is similarly determined to make an impact for Christ with his pen and has worked in the newspaper industry for more than 41 years. Part-Jewish, he is married to Linda, who takes the Christian message around many schools in the Yorkshire town of Doncaster. Charles has four children and eight grandchildren. Charles can be reached by phone on +44 (0) 1302 832987, or by e-mail at chazgardner@btinternet.com .
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Teli, Hindu in India

Teli, Hindu in India
"A community which derives its name from the Sanskrit word talika or taila, used for the oil extracted from sesame and mustard, thus alluding to their traditional occupation... Mythological origin of the Teli is traced to Lord Shiva who created them to destroy five demons. However, their legend also says that the first Teli was created by Shiva to rub him with oil." (Singh, K. S., India's Communities, p. 3462)
Ministry Obstacles
The Teli may have little concept of a loving creator God who has made provision for the forgiveness of sin and for an abundant life.
Outreach Ideas
Several teams of workers will be needed for this large community that speaks many languages. Pray for workers.
Pray for the followers of Christ
There are a few followers of Christ among the Teli community, pray they will hunger to learn of Christ, and follow him wholeheartedly.
Pray for the entire people group
Pray the Teli community will be able to properly provide for their families, and will have good schools available for their children. Pray for their material well-being as well as for their spiritual needs.
Scripture Focus
"The time is coming to gather all nations and tongues. And they shall come and see My glory." Isaiah 66:18
 

People Name: Teli, Hindu
Country: India
10/40 Window: Yes
Population: 18,545,000
World Population: 19,058,000
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

Persian in Iran

Persian in Iran
Persian identity, at least in terms of language, is traced to the ancient Indo-European Aryans who arrived circa 2000-1500 BC. The first known written record is from an Assyrian inscription of 834 BC. Starting around 550 BC, from the province of Fars, the ancient Persians spread their language and culture to other parts of the Iranian plateau through conquest and assimilation. Looking to link the modern state with the imperialist past, the Reza Shah government switched the country name from Persia to Iran in 1935. The synonymous usage of Iranian and Persian persists today.
Ministry Obstacles
The Iranian government strictly controls any kind of Christian evangelistic ministry within the country.
Outreach Ideas
Satellite television, radio, and the internet all provide good means of communicating across geopolitical borders.
Pray for the followers of Christ
The Lord is calling many Persians to himself in these days. Pray these new believers will grasp how wide and long and high and deep is the love of Christ, and will know this love that surpasses knowledge.
Pray for the entire people group
Pray for the people of Iran to have access to the good news about Jesus. Pray also for peace between Iran and its neighbors.
Scripture Focus
"The harvest is plentiful, but the workers are few. Therefore beseech the Lord of the harvest to send out workers into His harvest." Matthew 9:37-38
 

People Name: Persian
Country: Iran
10/40 Window: Yes
Population: 30,613,000
World Population: 34,612,000
Language: Persian, Iranian
Primary Religion: Islam
Bible: Complete
Online Audio NT: Yes
Jesus Film: Yes
Audio Recordings: Yes
Christ Followers: Few, less than 2%
Status: Unreached
Progress Level:
1.2