Friday, January 4, 2008

Prayer for Kenya, Crossing Partnerships

Thought I'd pass on this important information about the current upheaval in Kenya and it's relevance for The Crossing's ministry partnerships there. I'm reminded that the body of Christ is truly a global reality, one that we're called to actively participate in and support. I'd encourage everyone to engage the situation through prayer.

My thanks to Cami Wheeler, who wrote what follows:
Kenya urgently needs restoration of peace and order as tribal violence sweeps the nation in the wake of last week’s highly contested presidential election. Food and water are scarce in areas blocked off by the violence.

This crisis is of particular concern for The Crossing. For over three years, we have been building ministry partnerships in Kenya , including New City Fellowship-Nairobi, where we provide direct support to Erick and his four orphaned siblings; Pistis School in Nairobi, which is full of kids from all over Africa and beyond; and Pamoja Orphanage in Meru and Racefield School in Mwingi, both of which feed, educate and care for destitute children. So far, we have had no direct contact with these partners. But we have heard through mission friends that the members of New City Fellowship and the children at Pistis School are safe, though quite fearful. Pamoja Orphanage and Racefield School are in rural areas that for now are mostly stable. However, Erick and his siblings are stranded in Western Kenya, one of the worst areas of inter-tribal violence. Erick, a Luo, has repeatedly risked himself to feed and care for his Kikuyu neighbors who are the targets of ethnic hatred. He is doing all he can to live out the love of Christ by helping his neighbors survive.

Our friends in Kenya ask that we plead for God to humble the hearts of their political leaders, as well as for an end to the violence and threat of civil war. Pray also for protection of the innocent, perseverance of the faithful, and that God’s mercy and grace would be poured out, making his glory known. Pray especially for those who are suffering greatly, including those who are elderly, displaced, physically unwell, or have lost a family member. Finally, pray for God to open our eyes and tenderize our hearts, allowing us to respond with humility, compassion, and generosity.

The following summary provides more background information and the links below are included for you to access further news:

Leaders in Africa and The West urge peace, a return to order, and diplomatic solutions while each side accuses the other of promoting violence and tribal hatred. Charges of election fraud and inciting genocide are being hurled between the incumbent President, Mwai Kibaki, and the opposition presidential candidate, Raila Odinga, following the Kenyan presidential election held Dec. 27, 2007. Rioting has raged across the nation, particularly in Nairobi’s impoverished slums, the Coast, and Western Kenya, all strongholds of Odinga support. While the world looks on, police in riot gear turn back angry mobs with water cannons and teargas, men cut each other down with machetes, and hooligans loot and burn slums, shops and churches. The official death toll, now over 300, is said to fall far short of the actual numbers. Many fear escalation to the sort of genocide and civil war seen in Rwanda, Ivory Coast, Congo, and other African states in recent decades. Those who can are leaving, those who can’t cower in their homes or are crowding into churches and other places of refuge hoping for protection and peace.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/default.stm
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/16ED2681-04F1-4E20-987D-441249318394.htm

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3 Comments:

Blogger Cami said...

I've had more email saying the last day or so has been much more calm in Nairobi and people have been able to get some food and provisions. Erick and family are trying to travel back from Kisumu & will stay with our NCF pastor's family until they can resettle. Mary, the widowed Sudanese refugee who hand-makes the beaded jewelry, is being forced to resettle her family. Mission friends are helping her. Matayo continues to shelter a dozen or more family members in his one room place. His brother has machete wounds. Please continue to pray for our partners in Kenya and for peaceful resolution to the fighting.

Jan 5, 2008, 1:36:00 PM  
Blogger Cassafras said...

I didn't realize the Crossing had ministry partnerships in Kenya. Is there a blog or website or email list I can subscribe to? I would love to keep up with what is going on there.

feel free to email me!
cassidyshearrer@hotmail.com
-Cassidy

Jan 14, 2008, 6:35:00 AM  
Blogger Turner said...

I object to Cami's choice of linking to Al Jazeera as a news source for the Crossing on the status of Kenya. If you need a link I'd like to suggest one of the two below. One is with Fox News, or the New York Times (something for everyone).

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,319148,00.html
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/01/05/world/africa/05nairobi.html

I understand that Al Jazeera, has tried to tone down their English on-line version to improve their image with westerners, but they are not without an agenda. Because Kenya, a non-muslim, Christian nation is surrounded by nations in a struggle between Sharia Courts, and traditional Civilization, Al Jazeera will always push the envelope, to portray Kenya, a non-muslim, democratic nation more darkly, to the extent it is believable to a western Audience. Al Jazeera’s cleaned up online, English media, doesn't excuse the fact that their Arabic speaking broadcast media, still broadcasts hate speech like the link below from Al Jazeera, an alleged quote from Benjamin Franklin about the Jews:

http://www.memritv.org/clip/en/1629.htm

Yes things in Kenya were rocky for a while, and we should be concerned. The violence in Kenya has eased however, unlike every non-Christian country on it's border. I hope this persists, and I hope the news gets out that the violence has ceased, because Kenyans are heavily reliant on tourism. Kenya is one of the few safe countries in Africa for people from civilized nations and westerners. Despite the machetes prominently displayed on Al Jazeera, it is far more peaceful than the Janjaweed, in Darfur (western border, Sudan), the pirates, the mad-max violence and excessively violent Sharia courts in Somalia (northeastern border), the Islamic terrorists in Tanzania (southern border) the Sharia Court extremeists from Eritria in low-grade conflict against semi-Chrisitian Ethopia (northern border). Al Jazeera will not cover this difference, but that difference is why Christian or liberal agnostic missionaries are able to offer relief ministries in Kenya, without being burned or stoned to death.

In my opinion, when you try to present Al Jazeera as an unbaised news source to our church you are into some political currents way beyond the ordinary person’s awareness or understanding, when you need not play with such fire.

Turner

Jan 21, 2008, 12:40:00 AM  

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