Now Entering Filth and Fertile Ground
A Gospel for Asia News Release (www.gfa.org) -- For Immediate Release
WILLS POINT, TX (ANS -- Feb. 5, 2016)
-- Prisha stepped out of the rickshaw only to be greeted by a crowd of
dirty, half-naked children running around. One woman stood nearby barely
clothed—much to Prisha’s embarrassment. Animal carcasses and burning
waste littered the village, creating a stench so bad passersby would
speed recklessly through the village to escape it.
Prisha
had heard about this village before. Punya Basti’s residents lived in
squalor with no electricity, running water or toilets. Most of the
villagers left for months at a time to find low-paying work and beg in
other areas, but they still couldn’t afford to feed their children three
meals a day—much less provide for them to go to school. Alcohol and
drug abuse ran rampant, even among children, and fights commonly broke
out. On top of all this, outsiders despised the villagers for their low
caste and lack of hygiene and education.
Going Where Others Wouldn't
Prisha
had come to Punya Basti to serve as a Sister of Compassion, a woman
missionary committed to sharing Christ’s love in practical ways,
specifically among poor and marginalized people groups.
GFA pastor Hoob Kumar, who served in the village, was having difficulty ministering to the women.
“The
ladies didn’t know how to wear clothes properly,” Pastor Hoob recalls,
“and the mothers weren’t bothered that the vessels they cooked with and
ate food from were not clean.”
Moreover,
the women couldn’t open up to Pastor Hoob because he was a man. He knew
they needed someone to come alongside them, educate them and listen to
their struggles, so he asked his leaders to send Sisters of Compassion
to Punya Basti.
Knowing
she was called to go where others wouldn’t, Prisha agreed to go. Out of
consideration for her safety, her leader said she could commute there
each day from a nearby village that would have safer, more comfortable
accommodations, but Prisha wanted to live with the villagers.
“I
don’t want to stay in a different place,” she told him. “I want to stay
in the midst of them, in the village, so I can understand their
feelings . . . and they can understand the love that we want to show
them.”
Immediate Challenges Require Unswerving Faith
But
living among the villagers wasn’t easy. They rarely bathed or washed
their clothes. Drunken fights broke out frequently, with men and women
shouting vulgar words.
When
the landlord of the house Prisha stayed in offered her and her fellow
Sister of Compassion water, Prisha looked at the glass in shock.
“The
glass that she gave [us] really smelled very bad. We were not able to
drink from that,” Prisha remembers. “Seeing this glass, we were really
broken, and we didn’t have anything in our hand to give them. All we
could do for them was just pray to God Almighty.”
Prisha
and her co-worker knew adjusting to this culture would require more
than one prayer, though. They dedicated their first week to fasting and
praying; then they began finding ways to help the villagers. They
started by sweeping out the village’s filthy drains.
At
first, Punya Basti’s dirtiness made Prisha wonder if she would ever
feel comfortable eating in the villagers’ homes. But she, and the seven
Sisters of Compassion who eventually joined her, made a decision to
embrace the villagers and share in their lives.
“Slowly
we understood that if we don’t get to know them closely, we won’t be
able to have relationships with them,” Prisha explains.
The
Sisters of Compassion helped the local women with their chores, took
care of their babies and ate the food they cooked—food most outsiders
would have refused because it consisted of game like tortoise and
mongoose.
By
identifying with the villagers, the Sisters of Compassion eventually
earned their trust, and the villagers began listening to their advice.
People stopped drinking and fighting. Women started dressing modestly
and cooking in a healthier, cleaner way. Children started going to
school, and the Sisters of Compassion taught them how to bathe, brush
their teeth, comb their hair and dress neatly. The villagers even began
seeing the missionaries as their own family.
“These
eight sisters are like our daughters,” explains one villager. “We love
them because they love us. They brought lots of changes in our family,
in our home, in our society and in our children.”
Once Scorned, Village Shines
As
the Sisters of Compassion reflected God’s love, many people decided to
follow Him. Now Christ is transforming Punya Basti from the inside out.
Today,
the vast majority of Punya Basti’s residents, numbering more than
1,000, proclaim faith in Jesus. Even when half of the village is away
traveling for work, more than 200 people gather to worship Jesus each
week, ready to learn more about the God who cared enough to send His
daughters to live among them.
Learn more about the Sisters of Compassion at http://www.gfa.org/women/sisters-of-compassion/
To Watch a video about them, go to http://www.gfa.org/news/articles/now-entering-filth-and-fertile-ground/?cm_mmc=GFA-_-Email-_-2903832-_-160202%20Digest%20308%20WB62-G100%20(1)%20remainder
Gospel for Asia (www.gfa.org) is a mission organization based in Wills Point, Texas, involved in sharing the love of Jesus across South Asia
Photo
captions: 1) Sisters studying the Bible. 2) One of the sisters talking
to a woman. 3) Man working in the village. 4) Sisters with children in
the village.
** You may republish this or any of our stories with attribution to the ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net).
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