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ON THE GROUND IN SOUTHEAST ASIA Regional Manager Ryan Morgan details his trip to Southeast Asia. page 3 Issue 3/4 Children rescued from Islamic training centers pose with Special Blessings gifts from ICC donors. Your Bridge to the Persecuted Church YOUR DOLLARS AT WORK: For Christians in Laos, life under Communism has been easy. Read how your donations have provided their needs and greatly strengthened their faith. page 7 IN THIS ISSUE: International Christian Concern | January 2013 PERSECUTION

Persecution Magazine, January 2013 Issue 3/4

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Persecution Magazine gives you the inside scoop on modern-day persecution of Christians

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ON THE GROUND IN SOUTHEAST ASIARegional Manager Ryan

Morgan details his trip to Southeast Asia.

page 3

Issue3/4

Children rescued from Islamic training centers pose

with Special Blessings gifts from ICC donors.

Your Bridge to the Persecuted Church

YOUR DOLLARS AT WORK:

For Christians in Laos, life under Communism has

been easy. Read how your donations have provided

their needs and greatly strengthened their faith.

page 7

IN THIS ISSUE:

International Christian Concern | January 2013

PERSECUTION

A NOTE FROM THE PRESIDENT

Iron, till it be thoroughly heated is incapable of being wrought; so God sees good to cast some men into the furnace of affliction, and then beats them on His anvil

into what frame He pleases.

Anne Bradstreet (puritan Christian)

In the fire is where Daniel met the living God. The only thing he lost was what bound him—his ropes.

Jeff King, President International Christian Concern

Last July, Adija* was incredibly excited about the life she had found in Christ only a few months earlier. After living under a lie for her whole life, she had found Christ. He was living inside her and she had changed so much.

Unfortunately, her husband was a fundamentalist Somali Muslim and began to suspect something was amiss. He began to monitor her movements and soon discovered the truth: his Muslim wife had become a Christian.

For a fundamentalist Muslim, this is not acceptable. Muhammad declared that apostates should be killed, so her husband planned to kill her and escape their home in Kenya for Somalia, where he would not be prosecuted.

On July 2, he doused her with kerosone, set her ablaze, and then left for Somalia. She stumbled around, screaming in flames before collapsing. The next thing she knew, she woke up in a hospital in horrible pain.

As you will see (page 15), she is horribly disfigured. Because of our network on the ground, and our incredible Regional Managers, Adija came to our attention. We are now trying to repair the damage that Satan and her husband dealt to her. We are working with doctors trying to reduce her scarring and relieve her pain to the best of the doctors’ ability.

Adija’s external appearance and physcial life will never be the same. Yet, because of your devotion to the persecuted, her life is going to be dramatically improved.

Persecuted Christians never stop telling us how amazed they are that Christians from the other side of the world care about their pain and suffering, and will sacrifice to make their lives better.

On Adija’s behalf, I’d like to thank you for providing the funds to heal her, and for building and bandaging Christ’s persecuted Church. This work we do in partnership is a holy work, and wholly worthy of your touch, time, and treasure. As you provide funds for ministry to the persecuted, please know that ICC will use your gifts ethically, efficiently, and effectively.

*name changed for security

3 You can help today! www.persecution.org

SOUTHEAST ASIA

ON THE GROUND IN southeast asia

I just can’t believe the expression on their faces. The couple standing in front of me is smiling calmly, shaking my hand, telling their story as if we were simply making small talk. Yet the air around me is filled with a tension so palpable I can feel my heart starting to race. And why wouldn’t it be? Just a few feet in front of me lies the still fresh evidence of an attempted multiple homicide and I’m told the perpetra-tors, who are still at large, are probably not far away.

But I’m getting ahead of myself.

To tell the whole story, I have to start from the beginning, a little less than two weeks before my journey to visit per-secuted Christians in Southeast Asia began. In my time as ICC’s Regional Manager for Southeast Asia I have found that nothing can really replace the crucial visits we make to our regions. Meeting with victims, documenting their sto-ries, and helping the persecuted church are absolutely criti-cal in ICC’s neverending effort to make the Western Church and the rest of the world aware of the immense challenges faced by persecuted Christians today, as well provide advo-cacy and assistance to them.

BY REGIONAL MANAGER

RYAN MORGAN

As Regional Manager for Southeast Asia, Ryan Morgan is no stranger to the plight of believers in this heavily persecuted region. However prepared, it is difficult to remain calm when faced with a bombed-out car, and the knowledge that the believers you are interviewing are risking

their lives to meet with you.

You can help today! 800-ICC-5441 4

VIETNAM

My journey began in Vietnam. Looking out of the taxi’s window at the masses of motorbikes, the groups of tourists snapping photos, and the occasional luxury hotel, one would never guess they had arrived in one of the last five Communist nations on earth. Thanks to market reforms and greater eco-nomic freedom, Vietnam’s economy has been booming. Sadly, these re-forms have yet to translate into broad religious freedom, as I quickly discov-ered firsthand.

Over the next two days I sat down with one Christian after another who has experienced persecution in ways I could only imagine. They came from all over Vietnam to meet with ICC, though of course the meetings are conducted in secret.

A local pastor confirmed what I already suspected, namely that I could expect all of my e-mails to be read, my phone conversations to be tapped, and the secret police to be moni-toring my movements. The government doesn’t like foreign-

ers meeting with dissidents, a term which of course includes many Christians bold enough to simply share their faith with others.

MR. PHAN

One man, we’ll call him Mr. Phan, related his powerful testimony about growing up in a wealthy, pa-triotic family. His parents had be-

longed to the Communist Party and his father was even a war veteran. Living in relative luxury, Mr. Phan said that he “lived for himself” and started using drugs at just 14. Years later, at 30, he was miraculously delivered from his addic-

JUST A FEW FEET IN FRONT OF ME LIES THE STILL FRESH EVIDENCE OF AN ATTEMPTED HOMICIDE AND I’M

TOLD THE PERPETRATORS, WHO ARE STILL AT LARGE, ARE

PROBABLY NOT FAR AWAY.

Radical Islamists detonate a bomb in the driveway of a Christian couple’s house in the city of Poso, Indonesia. It was in this city, a decade ago, that 10,000 Christians were slaughtered.

5 You can help today! www.persecution.org

tion after accepting Jesus as his Lord and Savior. Mr. Phan’s deliverance from drugs led his entire family to accept Christ. Believing that without God’s help he would have died long ago, Mr. Phan committed the rest of his life to helping others recover from their addictions.

For a time, Mr. Phan’s “esteemed” heritage protected him from too much scrutiny as he started a rehabilitation cen-ter. However, the ministry grew too successful too quickly. Hundreds were coming to Christ through their outreaches. Whole families accepted Jesus after seeing their loved ones delivered from drugs and alcohol. Soon the police started calling in workers at the center for questioning, including Mr. Phan’s elderly mother. Not satisfied with the answers, they cut off the power and water supply to the center and confiscated most of its property. When Mr. Phan continued his ministry anyway, the authorities hired a mob of about 100 thugs to storm the rehabilitation center’s compound. They destroyed everything.

This last incident took place not long before Mr. Phan and I met. As we spoke, he showed me a petition he was think-ing of sending to the federal government. He was concerned though that if he sent it, he would be arrested. Considering that this is often the fate of anyone daring enough to publicly petition the government, I knew his fears were not unfound-ed. We prayed together, asking the Lord for wisdom, and with that, I bid Mr. Phan farewell. Over the next few days I interviewed a dozen more Vietnamese Christians, many with testimonies just as compelling as Mr. Phan’s.

Only a few hours before my flight was scheduled to depart Vietnam, I found myself standing behind a pulpit at a small service in one of the country’s many illegal house churches. It seemed surreal that just a day before I was in the back of a cramped van, wearing a disguise, conducting an on-the-go interview with two women whose pastor husbands had been sent to prison for their faith. My visit had been brief, but intense. What could I possibly have said to en-courage this group in the face of so much opposition? My

SOUTHEAST ASIA

Although the constitution of Vietnam allows religious freedom, government restrictions remain on organized activities of many

religious groups, especially those perceived by the government as a challenge to its rule or authority.

MR. PHAN’S MINISTRY GREW TOO SUCCESSFUL TOO QUICKLY. THE POLICE CUT OFF THE POWER

AND WATER SUPPLY TO THE CENTER AND CONFISCATED MOST OF ITS PROPERTY. WHEN

HE CONTINUED HIS MINISTRY ANYWAY, THE AUTHORITIES HIRED A MOB TO STORM THE

REHABILITATION CENTER. THEY DESTROYED EVERYTHING.

You can help today! 800-ICC-5441 6

own words seemed so insufficient, so instead, I simply read from Jeremiah 29:11: “‘For I know the plans I have for you,’ declares the Lord. ‘Plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.’” (NLT) Looking back now, I realize that the only thing harder than recording the heartrending stories of these precious men and women of God, was perhaps getting back on the plane and leaving them.

INDONESIA

My next destination was Indonesia. This island nation is the world’s fourth largest country and home to more than 200 million Muslims. It is widely cited as an example of Islamic tolerance, democracy, and religious freedom. This reputa-tion, however, I found to be ill-deserved.

My first meetings were with pastors in the city of Bekasi, a region just outside the capital, Jakarta, where radical Islamists had been forcing churches out of their buildings and into the streets for years. One of these pastors, Rev. Palti Panjaitan, has had bricks, rotten eggs, and even bags of hu-man urine thrown into his congregation as they tried to wor-ship outside of their sealed off building (see “Pastor Palti Panjaitan: An Unlikely Hero” page 15). During the meetings I am asked over and over again if America will put pressure on the Indonesian government to stop this discrimination. I told them that I can’t make any promises, in terms of relief.

Finally, I travel to the city of Poso, Sulawesi. It was in this city, Poso, that a little over 10 years ago, the eventual slaugh-ter of approximately 10,000 of Indonesia’s Christians began. Tragically little is remembered today in the outside world of this massacre, so I’ve come to follow up on those horrific events and see how Christians there are doing today.

It is here that I meet the Christian couple who at the begin-ning of this story so surprised me with their calmness. A few days before I met them, radical Islamists detonated a bomb in their driveway. As we speak, they pull back the tarp over their vehicle and I see up close how the bomb had twisted the car’s metal into unnatural shapes, shattered the windows, and blown out all of the tires. The husband and wife were home at the time and knocked off their feet by the blast, but thankfully they were left unharmed. I am told that this blast is not an isolated one, and that Christians in Poso are still living in constant fear of another mass attack by the radical Islamists, whose camps are within walking distance of the city. After this last visit, the reality of just how imminent the dan-ger is for some Christians begins to sink in. Whether targeted by a Communist government that fears its authority is being threatened, or radical Islamists bent on spreading their theol-ogy through violence, Christians in Southeast Asia face very real threats to their lives. Yet they seem to have the courage it takes to face these threats; so my only question is, do we in the West have the courage to stand with them?

Wreckage from a car bomb planted in front of a Christian home in Poso, Indonesia.

A persecuted pastor in Indonesia says, “Thank You!”

For Christians in Laos, life under Communism has never been easy. From restrictions on im-porting Bibles to bans on building new church-es, every Christian in Laos must live with their

freedoms curtailed to some extent. Arrests for preaching the Gospel and rough treatment at the hands of police are not unheard of. But for some Christians living in more rural areas, conditions are even worse.

Such was the case for a group of more than two dozen Christian families living in a small village in the central part of the country. On February 21, Communist officials arrived in their village to conduct a seminar on the “tricks of the enemy,” which of course included Christians. They concluded the seminar by ordering the confiscation of the Christian church in the village, which had been holding ser-vices for the community of believers for more than 30 years.

The Christians were shocked and saddened by the loss of their building, but eventually found the courage to hold ser-vices again, even risking arrest by meeting outside of their padlocked church. Things, however, soon took another turn for the worse. In May, ICC was informed that these families were beginning to run out of food. Terrible flooding the pre-vious year had wiped out their rice harvest and supplies were dwindling. Some families had already run out. Out of their dislike for the Christian families and in an attempt to pres-

sure them to recant their faith, local authorities were making sure that any food brought in to help with the famine wasn’t getting to the Christian families. Help would have to come from elsewhere.

By early June, the Christian families were facing starvation. Out of desperation, some had even started sending their chil-dren to sneak over the border in search of food. At this point ICC partnered with a regional organization in a mission to bring in some relief. Thanks to ICC donors, within weeks nearly 6,000 pounds of rice were purchased and delivered to the Christian families. It was just enough to keep the fami-lies, which comprised about 180 men, women, and children, well fed long enough for them to find new sources of food.

Leaders of the Christian community in the village reported to ICC that not only were they able to fend off starvation with the timely delivery of rice, but that their faith had been greatly strengthened. As remote as their village may be, they realized that Christians all over the world had come to their aid and that they were not alone in their struggle against the local authorities.

Today, these brave Christians still face pressure from their lo-cal government. They were recently instructed to tear down their church building. Our most recent report says they have yet to comply, and that thanks in large part to the support of the outside world, their faith remains unshaken.

7 You can help today! www.persecution.org

YDAW

Leaders of the Christian community stand in front of the emergency delivery of rice and take a moment to thank ICC.

RICE IN LAOSCommunity Rebuilding

YDAW

© Copyright 2013 ICC, Washington, D.C., USA. All rights reserved. Permission to reproduce all or part of this publication is granted provided attribution is given to ICC as the source.

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ICC makes every effort to honor donor wishes in re-gards to their gifts. Occasionally, a situation will arise where a project is no longer viable. In that case, ICC will redirect those donated project funds to one of our other funds that is most similar to the donor’s original wishes.

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