Young Christian in Eastern Uganda Who Left Islam Is Beaten, Ostracized
Father, uncle attack him a week after he received Christ
By Dan Wooding, Founder of ASSIST News Service
KATENDE, UGANDA (ANS – March 10, 2016)
-- After Mohammed Nsera graduated from high school last year, his
Muslim family built a small house for him on their homestead in eastern
Uganda. They burned it down this year after he put his faith in Christ.
According to Morning Star News (http://morningstarnews.org),
Nsera’s family lives in the predominantly Christian village of Katende
near Busede, Jinja District, some 50 miles east of the Ugandan capital
of Kampala. Part of a hardline Islamic minority, his family, including
six siblings, strongly objected to his Jan. 3, 2016, conversion.
It
took a week for his father, 47-year-old Abdu Nsera, to hear that his
son had become a Christian. On Jan. 10 at about 7 p.m., the young man’s
father and uncle went to the small house they had built for him about
200 yards from the family home to confirm the allegation that he had
left Islam.
“I
could not deny Christ when my father asked me whether I had joined
Christianity,” Nsera told Morning Star News. “With a lot of joy I
answered him affirmatively, with a yes. My uncle, who had a walking
stick, hit me on my back, and my father tried to get hold of my shirt,
but I managed to escape with a tattered shirt and a bleeding back.”
While recovering at the home of a Christian some 13 miles away, he learned that they had burned down his house.
“I
received reports that my parents, uncle and some other Muslims were
looking for me,” Nsera said. “I have lost my entire valuables,
especially my academic certificates.”
Nsera
said he first heard the message of Christ’s salvation preached by an
evangelist from Jinja at an evangelistic event. That night Jesus
appeared to him in a dream, and the next day he met with a pastor who
prayed with him to receive Christ as Lord and Savior.
According
to the East Africa Correspondent of MSN, he has since taken refuge in
an undisclosed village more than 60 miles from his home. Another pastor
caring for him there is providing shelter.
“Mohammed needs support for furthering his education,” the pastor said. “My church, which was founded recently, is still small.”
About
85 percent of the people in Uganda are Christian and 11 percent Muslim,
with some eastern areas having large Muslim populations. The country’s
constitution and other laws provide for religious freedom, including the
right to propagate one’s faith and convert from one faith to another.
MSN
went on to say that Nsera’s ordeal is “typical of converts to
Christianity in eastern Uganda”, which has seen a series of attacks on
Christians. On Jan. 27 in Numuseru village, Naboa Sub-County in Budaka
District, the body of Laurence Maiso was found at his house, his head in
a pool of blood. Four days earlier, Imam Kamulali Hussein had met him
and his wife on a local road and told him, “Allah is about to send to
you the Angel of Death in your house. Please prepare to meet him at any
time.”
On
Dec. 23, 2015, a pastor in eastern Uganda was hacked to death as he and
other church members resisted an effort by Muslims to take over their
land in Nansololo village near Mazuba, in Namutumba District, area
church leaders said. Pastor Bongo Martin is survived by a widow and two
children.
In
another area of eastern Uganda, five underground Christians in a
predominantly Muslim village, including a pregnant mother, died from a
pesticide put into their food after a Bible study on Dec. 18, area
sources said. The Bible study took place in Kachomo village, Kachomo
Sub-County, Budaka District at the home of Hajii Suleiman Sajjabi, a
convert from Islam who had begun the study with eight family members who
had come to faith in Christ under his influence.
Four
of Sajjabi’s relatives have died, as did a pregnant neighbor, according
to area sources. A doctor at Mbale Regional Hospital said a postmortem
test showed a substance known as Malathion, a low-toxicity pesticide, in
those who had died. Though low-level toxic, Malathion when ingested
quickly metabolizes into highly toxic Tomalaoxon.
Islamic
extremists in eastern Uganda on Dec. 8, 2015, set a deadly trap for a
Christian policeman who had left Islam, and the next day other hardline
Muslims kidnapped three children from another convert in a nearby
village. More than 20 Muslim extremists in the Komodo area of Kadama
Sub-County, Kibuku District, killed officer Ismail Kuloba at about 4
p.m. after he responded to an urgent call to intervene in a supposed
land dispute between warring parties, an area Christian told Morning
Star News. Kuloba was 43.
One
of the assailants, Mudangha Kasimu, threw a stone that hit Kuloba in
the forehead. Kasimu then shot him twice in the head, and he died as
other Muslims were shouting, ‘Allah Akbar [God is greater],’” sources
said.
The
MSN story continued by saying that about 12 miles east in Kabuna, near
Budaka in Kaderuna District, a group of Muslim men from Palissa on Dec.
9, 2015, kidnapped three children of Madengho Badir, a Christian convert
from Islam, sources said. Badir, 42, arrived at his home in Kabuna
Sub-County, Kabuna parish, at 10 p.m. to find 5-year-old Nabukwasi
Shakira, 7-year-old Gessa Amuza and 10-year-old Wagti Musitafa missing.
An
area source said a 14-year-old boy from Kabuna, Karami Hassan, was with
Badir’s three children when they were abducted near their home. The boy
said a group of Muslims from Palissa were looking for Badir, and the
boy led them to Badir’s children.
Outside
of Kabeshai, near Palissa, a Christian father of five who supported 10
children whose families had disowned them for leaving Islam was killed
on Dec. 2. One of three men who attacked Patrick Ojangole reproached him
for failing to heed a warning to cease his Christian activities before
the Christian was killed, said a witness who was with Ojangole and
escaped. Ojangole was 43.
On
Nov. 12, 2015, the father of a young Muslim woman in east Uganda tried
to beat her to death after she became a Christian, but community leaders
intervened and limited him to disowning her, sources said. Kibida
Muyemba learned that his 21-year-old daughter, Namusisi Birye, had put
her faith in Christ at an evangelistic campaign held that day in Nandere
village, Kadama Sub-County, Kibuku District, 41 kilometers (25 miles)
west of Mbale, church leaders told Morning Star News. Birye and a man in
the traditional dress of an imam confessed openly to receiving Christ,
they said, and angry Muslims cut the event short.
On
Oct. 19, 2015, Muslims in Kalampete village, Kibuku District who were
angry at a Christian for leaving Islam killed his wife, a month after
his brother was killed for the same reason.
Mamwikomba
Mwanika, mother of three adult children and five others ranging in age
from 17 to 9, died en-route to a hospital after Muslims unknown to her
dragged her from her home at about 9 p.m. and assaulted her, survivors
said.
Her
husband’s brother, Samson Nfunyeku, was killed in the village on Sept.
23 after flaring tempers cut short a religious debate he’d had with
Islamic scholars.
In
Nsinze village, Namutumba District, a Muslim beat and left for dead his
wife and 18-year-old son on Aug. 11, 2015, after learning they had
converted to Christianity, area sources said. Issa Kasoono beat and
strangled his wife, Jafalan Kadondi, but she survived, said a source who
requested anonymity. He said other relatives joined Kasoono in beating
her and their two sons, Ibrahim Kasoono, 18, and Ismael Feruza, 16,
though the younger son managed to escape with only bruises on his arm.
The
wife of a former sheikh was poisoned to death on June 17, 2015 after
she and her husband put their faith in Christ in Nabuli village, Kibuku
District. Namumbeiza Swabura was the mother of 11 children, including a
5-month-old baby.
In
Kiryolo, Kaderuna Sub-County, Budaka District on March 28, 2015, five
Muslims gang-raped the 17-year-old daughter of a pastor because the
church leader ignored their warnings that he should stop worship
services, she said.
Photo
captions: 1) Illustrative rendering of photo to protect identity of
Mohammed Nsera, here with remains of his home. (Morning Star News). 2)
Worship service in Uganda. 3) Muslim women in Uganda. 4) Dan Wooding and
Ray Barnett, standing on a bridge in Uganda, where the bodies of
thousands of Christians were fed to the crocodiles. This photo was taken
while Dan and Ray were researching their book, Uganda Holocaust.
About
the writer: Dan Wooding, 75, 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), and is also the
author of some 45 books, including Uganda Holocaust (with Ray
Barnett), which chronicled the terrible events during the eight-year
misrule of Idi Amin, a Muslim, during which some 300,000 Christians were
slaughtered.
** You may republish this or any of our ANS stories with attribution to the ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net).
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