Armed Muslims Take Wife, Children from Christian in Kenya
Also in coastal region further south, two church buildings gutted
By Dan Wooding, Founder of the ASSIST News Service
NAIROBI,KENYA (ANS - November 20, 2015)
-- A secret Christian in coastal Kenya escaped Muslim in-laws who last
week sought to stab him and took his wife and children, less than two
weeks after Islamic extremists further south torched two church
buildings, sources said.
According to the East Africa correspondent of Morning Star News (http://morningstarnews.org/),
former Muslim Hassan Ali said he narrowly escaped death when Muslim
neighbors and in-laws armed with knives and a dagger known as a “Somali
sword” on Nov. 11 knocked on his door in Witu, Lamu County at about 8
p.m.
“I
thank God that I am alive,” Ali said. “I know they were out to kill me.
I am praying that my wife will not lose her faith in Christ.”
He said area Muslims may have come for him after noting his lack of mosque attendance.
“I
heard people talking outside my house and mentioning my name,” he said.
“Fear caught me up, and I went inside my inner room. Then they knocked
at my door in an unusual manner, and my wife opened the door for them,
and they immediately started asking of my whereabouts. I knew I was in
trouble when they started questioning my wife about her faith. I then
escaped through the window.”
Ali,
who said he later learned from his wife that those who arrived at his
home were armed, traveled for two hours before reaching the house of a
Christian family who provided accommodation for him.
“Ali
arrived at my house restless,” the head of the family said. “He was
worried about the fate of his family in the hands of the Muslims who
stormed his house.”
The
Morning Star News (MSN) correspondent said that early the next morning
(Nov. 12), the host, whose name is withheld for security purposes,
called Ali’s wife and found that her relatives had taken her and their
two children, a 7-year-old boy and a 4-year-old girl, to her parents’
home.
“The
parents are telling Ali’s wife that the children should start going to a
madrassa, an Islamic elementary school,” the host said. “Ali’s wife is
facing pressure from her parents to recant the Christian faith, and she
is emotionally troubled.”
Ali said it will be “very difficult” to return to his house or see his family again.
“What
is worrying me at the moment is that communication between my wife and
me has now been disconnected,” he said. “I cannot reach her again. I
know my wife and my two children, Hussein and Mariam, will be Islamized.
This is making me to have sleepless nights.”
MSN
went on to say that after embracing Christianity 10 months ago, Ali’s
family had moved from their home village of Katsakakairu, about nine
miles from predominantly Muslim Witu town, to an area near Witu where a
few Christians live. Christians in Witu on several occasions had visited
Ali’s house for Bible Study and prayers, and Muslim neighbors
discovered the meetings, Ali said.
Before
the incident, a Muslim neighbor questioned Ali about whether he was a
Christian because he had heard prayers using the name of Jesus in his
house; he asked Ali why he was using the name Ali, which some Muslims
believe can be used only by Muslims, if he was Christian.
The host said Ali is depressed at being separated from his family.
“He needs prayers at this difficult moment,” he said.
Two Churches Torched
About
127 miles down the coast by air (167 miles by road), near coastal
Kenya’s Mombasa, suspected Islamic extremists set ablaze Faith Victory
Church and Holistic Church on the outskirts of Tiribe town, sources
said. Tiribe is about 25 kilometers (15 miles) from Mombasa town.
Church
leaders who said they had received threatening messages from radical
Muslims told Morning Star News that the buildings were torched on Oct.
30 at about 2 a.m.
“Please
stop converting our people to Christianity, and if not you will soon
regret changing our people to Christianity,” read one anonymous text
message to Pastor Francis Mutuku of Faith Victory Church, which has a
congregation of about 80.
Pastor Mutuku said his church lost their building along with the chairs and traditional musical instruments within.
“The
total cost of the loss we incurred is amounting to 400,000 Kenya
shillings [US$3,845],” he said. “We have rented a tent, but the heavy
rains are affecting us. Inside, the tent is getting flooded, which is
affecting our Sunday worship.”
The
Holistic Church, with a congregation of about 50 people, has been also
been hard-hit by El Niño rains, said pastor Peter Nyawa. Five people
were swept away by a heavy outpour in Narok, as were two people in
Mombasa, and several places are flooded, he said.
“The church members have been worshipping in the cold under a tree,” Pastor Nyawa said. “The
El Niño rains have really affected us, keeping us from holding church
services. Most of my members have left the church after we lost 300,000
Kenya shillings [US$2,883] from the inferno.”
“The
church is thankful for police protection at its worship site in Tiribe,
but the remnant congregation is suffering,” he told the MSN
correspondent.” It is now getting cold for our children, and the place
outside is getting flooded,” Pastor Nyawa said. “We do appeal for
support in rebuilding the church building, so that our members can have a
safe place to worship.”
Police have arrested two suspects from the predominantly Muslim, Digo ethnic people and are looking for several others.
Digo elders and an area chief recently approached Holistic Church leaders asking for forgiveness, the pastor said.
“We as a church are considering how to forgive them, as Jesus commanded us to forgive,” Pastor Nyawa said.
Photo
captions: 1) Children in celebration at Kenya church service. 2)
Members of two tribal groups throw rocks at one another across
barricades in the Mathare slum of Nairobi, Kenya. A church was also set
on fire. 3) People carry wooden crosses to symbolize the people killed
at Garissa University College, Kenya, by gunmen from al-Shabaab. (Photo:
Goran Tomasevic/Reuters). 4) Dan Wooding Hosting a TV Show.
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About
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 has reported
from Burma on two occasions and is also the author of some 45 books and
has two US-based TV programs –- “Windows on the World” and “Inside
Hollywood with Dan Wooding” -- which are both broadcast on the Holy
Spirit Broadcasting Network (http://hsbn.tv/) and a weekly radio show called “Front Page Radio” on the KWVE Radio Network (www.kwve.com).
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