Refugees from Syria, Iraq Seek Help to Survive
From Christian Aid Mission (www.christianaid.org) -- For Immediate Release
Contact: Amie Cotton APR, +1 (434) 327-1240, Amie@christianaid.org
CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA (ANS – December 18, 2015)
-- While Persian Gulf countries have closed their doors to Syrians and
Iraqis fleeing war and atrocities of the Islamic State (ISIS),
missionaries native to other Middle Eastern states are bracing to help
refugees survive winter – and bring Christmas hope.
Many
refugees who have left Islam will be celebrating their first Christmas
this year, as they have seen the power of Christ meet them in their
despair, report ministry leaders in Turkey, Iraq and Lebanon. Iraqis
displaced by ISIS have had their eyes opened to the gospel, a ministry
leader native to the country said.
“What
ISIS is doing today is dictated by the Quran and Islamic books and has
become visible and public to people,” he said. “Every day we hear
testimonies from Muslims that have accepted Christ.”
In
spite of calls for restricting refugee flows to Europe following the
Nov. 13 terrorist attacks in Paris, the welcome that many Muslims from
Syria and Iraq have experienced in some European countries has softened
their disposition to the gospel, he said.
“Some
European communities welcomed immigrants and harbored them, showing
love to them,” the director said. “This stirred feelings in the Muslim
world, as they started realizing the difference between European
countries, which carry the principles and history of Christianity, and
Muslim countries such as Saudi Arabia and the Gulf states, which refused
to receive any refugees.”
Shut
out of the Persian Gulf states and facing hostilities from ISIS, many
Syrians and Iraqis have denounced Islamic teachings in social media
outlets, and in the past few months hundreds of Muslims have come to
Christ, he said. One of the ministry director's childhood friends was
forced to flee Iraq and told him how he's been treated in Europe. The
Muslim made it to Turkey, then survived a treacherous trip to Athens on
one of the feeble “boats of death” before arriving in Germany, where he
telephoned the director in Iraq.
“He
said, 'I found all love, respect and appreciation in Christians, and
all that I saw of believers in Christ was the purity and sincerity of
heart, and the love is unconditional,'“ the ministry leader said. “And
then he asked me how it would be possible for him to follow Christ. He
surrendered his life to Christ over the phone; he and his wife prayed
and asked the Lord to enter into their hearts and help them with their
new life.”
While
Syrian and Iraqi refugees may face prejudice and social difficulties in
Middle Eastern countries accepting them – Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey –
Christians are opening their arms to them. In Lebanon, an indigenous
ministry leader opens church doors on Friday evenings to refugee
families for coffee, socializing and sharing about Jesus.
“We
often see miraculous answers to prayer,” he said, adding that one of
his team members had been meeting for Bible study with a Muslim woman
named Yana, who was beginning to believe the Bible was God's truth.
“Her
brother was very ill and was told by a doctor that he had to be
hospitalized immediately or he would die,” he said. “Having no money,
Yana pleaded for prayer for her brother. Soon after being prayed for,
the brother's fever left, and he stopped coughing up blood.”
Yana rushed to the doctor to tell him her brother no longer needed hospital treatment, but the doctor didn't believe her.
“Together
they went to the home of Yana's brother, and the doctor was able to see
for himself that the illness was completely gone,” the ministry
director said. “The doctor was completely amazed and described it as a
miracle. Yana accepted the Lord Jesus into her life and went on to share
the good news with all her neighbors.”
As
a result, at least 15 of the neighborhood women have approached the
ministry team, asking for prayer and visits to their home, and they also
have been declaring the power of prayer in Christ's name.
“Praise the Lord Jesus that His glory has been revealed among this community!” the director said.
The
ministry plans to distribute 30,000 to 50,000 New Testaments, Bibles
and children's Bibles this month as part of a Christmas season outreach,
he said. At least 20 workers are traveling to various cities in this
year's effort; last year, the same outreach resulted in many people
coming to Christ, he said.
In
Turkey, an indigenous ministry provided a Christmas dinner last year
that led to Muslims who had never heard the gospel coming to Christ. It
hopes to expand the event this year, the director said.
“We
pray that we can reserve the same place that we had for the last
Christmas dinner,” he said. “Last year we invited 100 unreached people.
Now we want to invite 400 to 500 people for Christmas dinner, so we can
reach more people for the Lord.”
The
ministry's visits to refugee camps near the south-central city of Adana
are centered on providing for winter needs, as families in 90 tents
have urgent need for heaters, firewood and food.
“They
need immediate help from us, since no one can work in winter time, and
their life is getting even harder,” the director said. “We have visited a
tent where a mother had a 10-day-old son. They were freezing, and the
baby was coughing, so we brought him to a doctor, paid the expenses and
got medicines for cold and bronchitis.”
When
refugees in other tents see the team members, they approach and ask for
heaters and other critical items, he said. Team members tell them they
are trusting that God will provide for them. Ministry workers moved by
the sight of toddlers standing barefoot and cold outside their tents
hope to be able to provide them socks and shoes.
“We
have also received phone calls from the refugees, and they keep telling
us about their urgent need for items to keep them alive,” he said,
adding that they have encountered two more families who were interested
to study the Bible.
“They
had asked some questions about Jesus,” he said. “They kept saying they
knew about Jesus from the Quran, so we explained verses from their book
that salvation will be only from Jesus. We prayed for them. We are
praying also that we can bring help to the other 90 suffering refugees
soon, and that we can touch their hearts to the Lord Jesus.”
For more information, click here: http://www.christianaid.org/News/2015/mir20151217.aspx, where you can find out how you can help Middle East refugees.
Photo
captions: 1) A refugee returns to her tent in Adana, Turkey with vital
supplies from an indigenous ministry(Christian Aid Mission). 2) Refugee
children in Turkey need food, medicine and shoes. (Christian Aid
Mission).
Christian Aid Mission (http://www.christianaid.org)
is an evangelical missionary organization based in Charlottesville,
Virginia, that assists indigenous missionary ministries overseas through
prayer, advocacy and financial support. Since 1953, Christian Aid
Mission has identified, evaluated and assisted more than 1,500
ministries in more than 130 countries that are reaching the unreached
for Christ in areas of the world where there is no witness for Christ,
where Christians suffer from poverty or persecution, or where foreign
missionaries are not allowed.
** You may republish this or any of our ANS stories with attribution to the ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net)
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