Scarred for life: the 4-year-old children who survived Indonesian church attack
By Michael Ireland, Chief Correspondent for the ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net)
*Warning: Readers may find the accompanying images upsetting.
SAMARINDA, EAST BORNEO (ANS – June 25, 2017) --
Two-year-old Anita Sihotang cannot bear the sound of her father’s
motorbike because it reminds her of the noise of the explosion last
November, when a petrol bomb was thrown into a church park where
children were playing, killing one child and seriously injuring Anita
and two four-year-olds. Whenever her father turns the key in the
ignition, she runs away.
“It
was so heartbreaking to see them on that dreadful night,” recalls
Anita’s father, Jackson. “We felt so powerless,” he said in an article
circulated by World Watch Monitor (www.worldwatchmonitor.org)

A fourth young victim, two-year-old Intan Banjarnahor, was the most severely injured. She died the following day.
World
Watch Monitor says Indonesians were horrified by the attack, and an
image depicting Intan with angel’s wings was shared widely on social
media.
Intan’s
mother, Diana, said: “It was just a week after we returned from North
Sumatra to attend my mother-in-law’s funeral. So we were already in deep
sorrow when it happened.”
She
and her husband felt unable to visit their daughter’s grave until
Easter, five months after the tragedy. “I just couldn’t do it before as
the pain was too much,” she said.
“She [Intan] brightened up the house with her singing and never ending questions, and now she’s gone. It feels so quiet.”
“I saw her head covered with smoke and her face black. Her body was so hot that I had to rip away her clothes.”

The
father of one of the injured children was working in West Borneo, more
than 1,000 miles away, when he heard that his son had been hurt in the
explosion. Hotdiman, a construction consultant, reached home 26 hours
later.
“I cried all the way, thinking the worst – that my son’s leg or arm might have gone,” he said.
When he was at the airport, he saw a picture in a newspaper of his wife holding their son, Alvaro.
Later
came the news that their friends’ daughter, Intan, had died. “That news
broke my heart,” he said, “and I remembered pleading and pleading with
God, ‘O God, please don’t take Alvaro away from me too.'”
Sarinah,
the mother of the injured Trinity, was on duty as a church elder
leading the Sunday service when she heard the explosion outside. She ran
out, looking for her daughter.
“I
saw her head covered with smoke and her face black. Her body was so hot
that I had to rip away her clothes,” Sarinah recalled.
“Weeks
after the incident, I was certain that Trinity would be healed
completely, but now, looking at the slow development, my hope is
starting to weaken.”
Trinity and Intan were best friends. For weeks after the explosion, Trinity asked Intan’s mother, Diana, where her friend was.
“It
tore my heart and made me want to cry every time she asked, but I
answered that she was on vacation to visit our family in North Sumatra,”
Diana said. Trinity has not been told that her best friend has died.
Long and slow recovery ahead

Doctors
feared that Alvaro’s scalp was so badly scarred that his hair would not
grow back. Alvaro’s father, Hotdiman, said: “There were moments when I
was broken-hearted and losing hope when I saw his scalp and scars. You
know, he is my precious and my pride and joy. He is smart and handsome.”
He later learned that Alvaro’s ears were functioning normally and that Alvaro might be able to undergo a hair transplant.
Alvaro
suffered traumatization, as well as severe burns. His mother, Novita,
said: “He is still terrified whenever he sees me cooking. He will be
screaming, ‘Put the fire out, Mama!'”
However,
she has been encouraged by Alvaro’s response to his medical care, which
has included 17 operations. “What makes me strong is seeing Alvaro so
brave going through all the treatments,” she said.
Meanwhile,
Trinity is undergoing steroid injections to remove the raised, keloid
scars. “I wish there are other options to remove the keloid. I cannot
stand to see and hear her screaming before the injections,” said her
mother, Sarinah.
Trinity is sedated under general anaesthetic before the injections, which she only has every fortnight because of her age.
“Weeks
after the incident, I was certain that Trinity would be healed
completely,” Sarinah said. “But now, looking at the slow development, my
hope is starting to weaken.”

In
April, representatives from Indonesia’s State Agency for Witness and
Victim Protection visited the victims and their families. They offered
them bi-weekly trauma counselling and invited them to attend the trial
of Juhanda bin Muhammad Aceng in Jakarta, which began last month.
Diana,
Intan’s mother, said with a trembling voice: “I’m not going [to the
court], but I hope the perpetrator will receive the proper punishment.”
Recently,
she gave birth to a baby girl. She had been three months pregnant when
Intan died. “This baby, she cures our longing to see my late daughter,”
she said, unable to mention Intan’s name.
Trinity’s
mother, Sarinah, added: she wanted to set an example for the other
church members by forgiving the perpetrator. She said: “I don’t have any
hatred towards the bomber. I forgave him already. The most important
thing is for my daughter to recover well.”
Other
children at the church have also been left badly shaken by the attack.
They hide and cower whenever they hear sounds similar to the explosion.
A
Sunday-school teacher at the church, Naomi Sagala, 24, explained: “A
few weeks after the blast, I was surprised when our kids start to shout,
‘Shoot the bomber’, when they talked about the incident … with each
other.
“We
had to redirect them to what the Bible teaches about loving our
enemies, loving the bad guys, even the bomber. We must forgive and pray
that they will repent. To be honest, even adults are finding it
difficult to do this. But we believe in God and in the power of His Word
to heal, so we keep teaching this to our kids.”
Please
pray for these children and families, who have been scarred for life,
that they may also receive emotional and psychological healing.
Photo
captions: 1) Trinity Hutahaean, 4, was one of three children seriously
injured in a November petrol-bomb attack on a church in Indonesia.
Another girl, 2-year-old Intan Banjarnahor, died from her injuries.
(Photo: Open Doors) 2) Trinity with 2-year-old Anita Sihotang. 3)
Four-year-old Alvaro Sinaga with his mother, Novita. (Photo: Open Doors)
4) Trinity (pictured) and Intan were best friends. For weeks after the
explosion, Trinity asked Intan’s mother, Diana, where her friend was.
She still hasn’t been told that her best friend has died. (Photo: Open
Doors). 5) Michael Ireland.
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