Families of murdered Nigerian pastors mourn their losses
By Dan Wooding, Founder of ASSIST News Service, who was born in Nigeria
NIGERIA (ANS – August 5, 2016)
-- Thousands of people, including journalists from around the world,
attended the funeral of Father Jacques Hamel, the French priest murdered
on July 26th, while presiding over Mass.
The
attack on the French priest felt all too close to home for a Western
audience, but, as World Watch Monitor reported last week (https://www.worldwatchmonitor.org/2016/07/4566336/), such events are taking place all the time in other parts of the world.
There was much less global coverage following the recent murders of two pastors in Nigeria.
World
Watch Monitor is reporting that Joseph Kurah, regional chairman of the
Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) in the central state of Nasarawa
and a pastor of the Evangelical Church Winning All, was murdered on June
30th by suspected Fulani herdsmen on his farm in Obi.
Then
on July 9th, Eunice Elisha, 42, assistant pastor at the Redeemed Church
of God in the Kubwa region of the Nigerian capital, Abuja was killed.
She was buried on July 23rd; it would have been her birthday. Local
media published photos of her husband, Olowale, and their seven
children, all dressed in pale blue, standing next to her grave. Olowale
explained how she came to die:
“About
three weeks ago, my wife preached next to a mosque, while the imam in
the mosque was also preaching. He stopped talking and listened to what
Eunice was saying and then told his members to listen to what she was
saying because she was speaking the truth about God. When she told me
about this, I told her to be very careful.”
After
a visit from a stranger who claimed to be a local imam and demanded
money from Eunice, Olowale said he “began to feel very uncomfortable.”
He
said: “[On July 8] we prayed all night and Eunice led us in worship
songs … Little did I know that this was the last time we would ever pray
together. We went to sleep at about 4 am. Eunice got up at about 5 and
left for her morning preaching, as she did most mornings. She usually
came back by about 6.30, but on that day, she didn’t return on time. As I
lay in bed, I wondered what could be the matter.
“Meanwhile,
my sons had gone out for football training. While they were playing,
some boys told them that a woman had just been killed on their street,
while she was preaching. Immediately they ran home, shouting.
“I
jumped out of bed and ran to where the killing took place. I didn’t
find my wife there. All I saw was a pool of blood. I asked the people
standing around where my wife was and they told me police had taken her
to the station in their van. I went down to the station and there I
found the body of my wife.
“I
broke down and cried. We were taken into the station and consoled.
Eventually someone drove us home because I was in a state of shock.
“I lost my true companion.”
And
Martina Kurah spoke of her dead husband, Joseph, saying: “I will
forever remember June 30th as the day I lost my best friend.
“Two
days before, Joseph heard that there were woodcutters in the area and
asked if he could borrow their machinery to cut down some trees on his
farm. While he was on the farm, a young man approached and started
arguing with him. He said Joseph was cutting down a tree that belonged
to him.
“Joseph
reported the incident to the local traditional ruler, who summoned them
both to a discussion. The ruler ordered Joseph to pay for the tree,
which he did, but following the meeting the youth threatened him,
[saying]: ‘A fight is not finished in a day.’ Everyone present heard him
and the ruler issued a warning to [him].
“Joseph
decided to stay away from the farm the next day, but when the youths he
had hired to help him called late afternoon to tell him the machine had
broken down, he went to assist them. I begged him not to go, but he
wanted to help the youths. After replacing the part, he continued to
work with them so that they could finish that day.
“As
they were packing up, they heard some shouting in the bush, and the
next moment a group of Muslims came running towards them. ‘I know they
have come for me,’ he apparently told the youths with him. They ran
away, but Joseph faced the attackers. They killed him and left his
mutilated body.
“Back
home, I was growing anxious. A neighbor came to ask if he was home, but
when I told her he was not back yet, she said she heard rumors that he
was attacked and badly injured [his hands were cut off]. I started
shivering, hoping he was just injured. But a few minutes later a church
member arrived in tears and told me, ‘Baba was killed.’
“I
started shouting and collapsed. Some men from the congregation went and
collected his body and took it to the morgue. After all of this, I
cried until I had no more tears left.”
Ebenezer,
Martina’s oldest son, said he was tempted to take revenge: “At first I
made up my mind that I must avenge the death of my father, even if it
would cost me my own life. But after many words of encouragement from
different people, I realized that two wrongs can never make a right. My
father is gone and I will never see him again. My prayer is that those
who killed him should never find peace until they repent and turn to
Christ.”
CAN
accused Fulani herders of the murder and expressed concern over its
brutality. They said the recent increase in such attacks against
Christians is preventing them from going to their farms.
For more information, please go to: https://www.worldwatchmonitor.org.
Photo
captions: 1) Murdered French priest. 2) Joseph Kurah, murdered on June
30th, and Eunice Elisha, who was killed 10 days later. (Twitter:
@uncanny_sam / World Watch Monitor). 3) Officiating pastors with the
seven children of Eunice Elisha and their father, Olowale. (https://www.thecable.ng).
4) Martina Kurah and six of her children. (World Watch Monitor). 5)
Olowale Elisha. (Open Doors International). 6) Dan and Norma Wooding
pictured outside their home.
About
the writer: Dan Wooding, 75, is an award-winning winning author,
broadcaster and journalist who was born in Nigeria of British missionary
parents, Alfred and Anne Wooding, who then worked with the Sudan
Interior Mission, now known as SIM. He now lives in Southern California
with his wife Norma, to whom he has been married for some 53 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 the ASSIST (Aid
to Special Saints in Strategic Times) and the ASSIST News Service
(ANS), and is also the author of some 45 books. He also has one weekly
radio show and two TV shows all based in Southern California.
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