California church frees 4500 Christian slaves in Pakistan, sees two Muslim leaders come to Jesus
By Mark Ellis, Senior Correspondent for ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net)
They
also participated in an evangelistic outreach that saw two Muslim
clerics and several hundred others receive Christ. One of the imams had a
powerful vision of Jesus as the Great Physician in the middle of the
night following the outreach, which resulted in his miraculous healing
and salvation.
It may have been the most productive short-term mission trip since Paul’s visit to Macedonia.
Coincidentally,
the man taking the lead on this trip was an unassuming 73-year-old
retired barber, also named Paul, aka “J.P.” He had trouble finding
another person in the church to go to Pakistan with him, but at the last
minute, another self-effacing congregant, Mark, agreed to accompany
him.
Their Christian connection in Pakistan, Pastor Tariq*, is the leader of a large network of house churches in a major city.
A
few years ago, “Pastor Tariq had a bounty on his head from the
Taliban,” J.P. recounts. “His best friend was martyred. The Taliban shot
and killed him and burned his body, put it into a 55-gallon drum and
took it back to Pastor Tariq, and told him they would do the same to
him.”
Taking
this warning to heart, Pastor Tariq traveled to the U.S. at the behest
of his church and on that visit made his first connection with the
church in Southern California.
“We
gave him the second service to preach. He started bawling like a baby.
He has a wife and three kids at home and wanted to go back, but his
church wouldn’t let him. But after a few weeks, a U.S. drone killed the
terrorist who put the fatwa on his head,” J.P. reports.
Shocked by Christians enslaved in brick factories
“Every
brick in Pakistan is made by a Christian slave,” J.P. notes, because
Muslims will not do that kind of work. Pastor Tariq told him there are
approximately 56,000 brick factories in Pakistan – all functioning with
Christian slaves.
“It’s
been going on for generations, like the Indian caste system,” J.P.
says. “The slave owner has phony books where he charges them for food
and shelter. Not only do they stay enslaved by his books, the debt grows
and passes along from generation to generation. They inherit the debt
of their parents and grandparents.”
While
it is against the law to have slaves in Pakistan – these Christians are
considered indentured servants – their harsh reality becomes a
functional enslavement.
It
is also against the law for a child under 14 to work, but the brick
factories are full of underage children making bricks. Apparently, the
government looks the other way at many of the abuses that go on.
J.P.
discovered a typical family of four has a quota to make 2000 bricks a
day, working seven days a week from sunup to sundown. There are no days
off. “They can do it but they have to work very hard. If they don’t meet
their quota they don’t eat.”
The church in Southern California agreed to partner with Pastor Tariq to start a school and help free some of the
slaves. Initially, they inquired about paying the debt of the little girl named Miriam and her family, so they could leave the brick factory.
slaves. Initially, they inquired about paying the debt of the little girl named Miriam and her family, so they could leave the brick factory.
“It was too late,” J.P. laments. “She had already died from the terrible working conditions. She was 8 or 9 years old.”
After
they broke ground, Pastor Tariq informed them he needed another $36,000
to continue. The lead pastor put the need before the congregation on
Sunday and noted the money had to be wired by the following Thursday.
“That’s
when miraculous things happened,” J.P. says. Someone walked up to the
pulpit and announced they would give $5000 and asked if anyone would
match it. Another person stood and said they would match the gift.
Eleven people raised their hands to say they would give $5000 each.
On
that remarkable Sunday in 2014, between two services, $296,000 was
raised. “We built the school and paid for two years operating expenses,”
J.P. says. The K-12 Christian school accommodates 2000 students.
J.P.
had never wanted to go to Pakistan, but decided he must see the new
school. He got turned down twice for a visa and finally went to the
consulate in Los Angeles and shared his heart about the school. A
consular official appreciated his compassionate desire to help kids and
J.P. got his visa.
After
his arrival in Pakistan, the first thing he did was go to a brick
factory. He noticed “they treat the Christian slaves worse than
animals.” He learned the overseers will chop off fingers if a worker is
not meeting a quota or tries to run away. “They constantly do things to
put fear in these slaves,” he notes.
Photo
captions: 1) Young Christian girl working at brick-making factory. 2)
Newly freed slaves board buses to take them away from brick factory. 3) A
worship service after being freed. 4) Dan Wooding welcomes Mark Ellis
to the set of their TV show, "Windows on the World".
** You may republish this and anh of our ANS stories with attribution to the ASISST News Service (www.assistnews.net). Please tell your friends that they can have a complimentary subscription to the ASSIST News Service by going to the website.
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