Jacksons, Mission Partners of Castle Street, Missions, Whats On

Jacksons Update – October 17th 2019

We held our nerve in the Bible study in Stellenbosch Prison and continued to work through the Gospels. Now more men are attending and saying they want to follow Jesus.

Into day 2 of the Restorative Justice course at Drakenstein prison, barriers were being overcome and strongholds brought down.  

Faiek in Maximum, sentenced to 23 years, is struggling with the thought of his many years behind bars.  He is now in a “Brothers” (Christian) room where he’s finding some support but is greatly exercised over the divisions and stresses in the family he has left outside.

Derryk in medium is still struggling with depression but felt his burden lift after people prayed for him.   He is concerned that his two children (31 and 18) are no longer responding to his phone calls.

Fraser had a good meeting with the NetACT staff last week.  There is enough money left in the budget for a ‘catch-up’ training session here in Wellington for those who were unable to attend the regional training, but Fraser has to arrange it all.

Blythswood, Mission Partners of Castle Street, Missions, Whats On

Blythswood Update – October 3rd 2019

Daniel Centre

The new resident Florin is currently in hospital to set up treatment for his mental issues.  Another new resident Alin has found work at a petrol station along with 3 former Daniel Centre residents.

Ionuz now has the keys, but not yet the contract, for his new apartment.  He is struggling in his nursing course because of having had an epileptic seizure in one of his lectures.

The young couple, the first Daniel Centre resident and his wife to have got a mortgage on a home, are now moving out of their temporary stay in the Centre into their new home.

The Christianity Explored course has started for past and current residents with an encouraging attendance of a dozen at the weekly Sunday sessions.

Missions, The Persecuted Church Across the World, Whats On

Children prompted to betray their families – October 3rd 2019

Voice of the Martyrs, 30 September 2019

North Korean underground Christians do not reveal their Christian identity even to their own children until the children reach the age of fifteen. That is because North Korean schoolteachers are responsible for getting children to inadvertently reveal that their families are Christian.

They ask questions like, “Do your parents have a special book they hide in your home? Do they sing different songs to the ones we sing in school? Do they ever bow their heads or close their eyes and mumble?” More than a few children have been the cause of their own families (including themselves) ending up in concentration camps.

One woman was about seven years old when she found a Bible in her home. Without hesitation, she knew she needed to inform the police. Her parents, underground Christian leaders, tied her up in a chair to prevent her from going out. They shared the Gospel with her, and she became a Christian rather than a government informer.

North Koreans have a saying: Whenever two or three people are gathered together, one of them is a spy. This is true even in family settings, as children are taught to spy on their parents from a young age.

Barnabas, Mission Partners of Castle Street, Missions, Whats On

Barnabas Update – October 3rd 2019

Persecuted turns persecutor in Bangladesh

Barnabas Fund, 24 September 2019

A tiny group of Christians amongst the 750,000 mainly-Muslim Rohingya people, who fled genocide at the hands of the Myanmar Army as refugees, are now doubly persecuted from Muslims within refugee camps in Bangladesh.

Already belonging to what some have called the “most persecuted people on earth”, the small community of Rohingya believers are now subjected to anti-Christian violence from extremist Muslim Rohingya in the camps in Cox’s Bazaar district.

In May 2019, a group of 17 families living in simple shacks were violently attacked on at least three consecutive nights by a Muslim mob of several hundred men armed with knives, swords, iron rods, stones and catapults.

No security personnel attempted to protect the Christians and there has been no investigation into the attacks.

The rise in persecution against Rohingya Christians follows on from calls by Rohingya Muslims for the Bangladeshi government to expel Christians from the camps.

Missions, The Persecuted Church Across the World, Whats On

Boko Haram Executes Two Christian Aid Workers – October 3rd 2019

Morning Star News, September 30, 2019

Boko Haram released a video last week showing the execution of two Christian aid workers in Nigeria.

Lawrence Dacighir and Godfrey Shikagham, who had gone to Maiduguri to help build shelters for people displaced by Islamic extremist violence, were shot from behind.

The middle terrorist in the video says that they have vowed to kill every Christian they capture in revenge for Muslims killed in past religious conflicts in Nigeria.

Pastor Pofi, a cousin of the two executed Christians, said “Lawrence and Godfrey left for Maiduguri for the betterment of humanity and paid with their lives”.

Emmanuel Ogebe of the U.S.-Nigeria Law Group, wrote to the U.N. that workers kidnapped in July had issued a distressed plea for government help with no notable administration response.

He expressed concern that the Nigerian government did not condemn the killing of the two men even though they were helping to provide shelter for displaced Nigerians. 

“Despite these humanitarian organizations’ resilience in still serving victims, the Nigerian Government has since just last week suspended Action Against Hunger and Mercy Corp on dubious grounds.”

Missions, The Persecuted Church Across the World, Whats On

Cuban pastor accused of disobedience – October 3rd 2019

Christian Solidarity Worldwide, 27 Sep 2019

Toledano Valiente, a prominent Christian leader in Cuba, was summoned to a police station on 25 September. He has received at least 17 police summons since 1 August.

A Commander ‘Lorenzo’ told him he was accused of ‘disobedience’ because of a women’s event held in his church. He had previously warned Valiente he would risk imprisonment if his church staged it. Despite the threat, the church went ahead with the event.

A formal accusation was lodged against him, but the authorities refused to give him a copy of the document.

He told CSW: “Pastors are more at risk than criminals and bandits … since I have not fled into exile, they seek to put me in prison. I committed no crime, it had to be manufactured. I cannot carry out any religious activity; that is to say they want me to stop being a pastor.”

In July, Toledano Valiente was prevented by government agents from boarding a flight to the US to attend the US Ministerial on International Religious Freedom.

CSW have called on the Cuban government to remind the country of its obligations in regard to the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion as laid out in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.”

Jacksons, Mission Partners of Castle Street, Missions, Whats On

Jacksons Update – October 3rd 2019

The fourth NetACT regional workshop took place in Nigeria last week.  and went well, despite Fraser’s absence (he and the other South Africans couldn’t get visas for it).  Dr Peter Gichiri, senior librarian from St Paul’s University in Kenya with a doctorate in digital repositories, did the training. 

Fraser was able to make videos of their presentations available on YouTube for the attendees to download.

Pray for the prisoners with whom Dawn is doing Bible studies at Drakenstein and Stellenbosch prisons and for the day-to-day running of restorative justice ministries.

Now that librarians from most of the partner colleges have been trained, pray that Fraser will find a cost-effective way for a final ‘catch-all’ training session for all who didn’t make it to the regional workshops.

Pray for more people to answer the call to bring restorative justice and a deeper knowledge of God into the nation’s correctional centres.

The latest RJ course began on Monday in Drakenstein prison. Pray for protection over our families and that God will be glorified through changed lives.

Missions, The Persecuted Church Across the World

Persecution of minority Christian women – December 5th 2018

World Watch Monitor, November 26, 2018

Five new reports – about Egypt, Ethiopia, Iraq, Colombia and the Central African Republic – unmask the multiple domestic, societal and state dynamics used in the persecution of Christian women and girls in each country.

 While men often face much more obvious and public forms of pressure and persecution for their faith, women’s suffering is often in daily life.

 Each report, by Open Doors International, catalogues the inter-related web that connects simultaneous persecuting events. The resulting picture is akin to the anguish caused by a thousand paper cuts, plus much deeper wounds.

 In all these contexts, women’s lives are all too often characterised by invisible and lifelong hardship. However, women from minorities (in this case Christians, but not excluding others too) have their difficulties compounded by their socio-economic and legal inequalities.

Barnabas, Mission Partners of Castle Street, Missions

Barnabas Update – December 5th 2018

An Iraqi television network has uncovered the fact that least 350 homes of Christians who fled the country have been occupied or seized, particularly around the northern city of Mosul.

Properties have been transferred under false names and sold on. Many Christian properties had already been seized by Islamic State terrorists when they overran Mosul and the Nineveh Plains in 2014.

The Iraqi government is now rebuilding and restoring churches destroyed and damaged during the group’s three-year occupation of Mosul – around 40 churches were damaged and 15 destroyed – but even if Christians brave enough to return have a place to worship, many no longer have a home to go back to.

Jacksons, Mission Partners of Castle Street, Missions

Jacksons Update – December 5th 2018

Ruth is now safely with us in Wellington.

Pray for wisdom for Dawn and Maxwell from Hope Prison Ministry as they try to support Brian, who has now been released from prison, without him becoming too dependent on them. 

Give thanks that Fraser has found solutions for several small snagging issues with the Portal. Pray for insight into the problems that remain and for opportunity to establish a forum for help and advice with people working in similar situations. 

Scheduled power cuts are expected to last into the new year and Fraser cannot get work done without the internet when the power is off.  We are grateful for having had over a year of uninterrupted electricity. 

Pray for peace of mind, security and safety on the roads.