Chairman’s Report for September 22, 2023
In this issue of the newsletter
New: Personal mission report from Nigeria…Progress at the orphanage.
New: Celebration of the deliverance of the children from certain death in 2021.
New: Personal visit to site of attacks in Mangu and delivery of aid to IDP.
New: Personal visit to seriously wounded Christians awaiting surgeries in hospital.
Nigeria Orphanage: Personal observations
By William J Murray
Positive change: In 2018 when I visited the orphanage at Miango, waste from the girls hostel building was draining from a pipe to an open pit. The children were receiving two meals a day consisting of gruel, a type of cereal mixed in water. Two times a week the children were each given an egg. Also, twice a week the children received some form of protein.
What happened?
A Christian organization that founded the orphanage was unable to continue funding. A headmaster, Joshua, was appointed and the local trustees were left to do their best to care for 147 children with no outside help. Attempts to locate the evangelist failed.
Buildings were in poor repair and there was not enough water supply to flush waste properly from buildings.
Where to start?
There are 18.5 million orphans in Nigeria. One million of those have been made orphans because of attacks by the Boko Haram and Fulani Herdsmen … both Sunni Muslim. Most of the 147 children at the orphanage had come from homes destroyed by terror attacks and had lost one or both parents. They did not have anywhere to go.
The Religious Freedom Coalition does not have the size or revenue to assist a million children, but we can help some. In 2018 I began having our accountant, Shatha, regularly send enough money to purchase a month’s supply of protein for the children and allowance for three meals a day. For Christmas 2018, gifts to the children included leather and other material to make shoes, because most of the children had none.
I had new wells dug, built a new double water tower and supplied pumps for the wells. Pipes were run to all buildings and new toilets were installed. Proper waste disposal was provided for.
On August 2nd, 2021, all the work we had done at the orphanage was destroyed when Sunni Muslim Fulani herdsmen invaded the Christian village of Miango. Hundreds of adults were killed, homes and churches were burned — and the orphanage was invaded, with every building burned down! Our team had already headed to Miango to rescue the children! Soldiers had set up roadblocks into Miango and at first did not allow our buses in to rescue the children. Our volunteers were allowed to proceed only when the soldiers were told it was a mission commanded by God to save the children. The children were delivered from certain death by the grace of God.
Everything was destroyed — even the children’s clothing was lost, and the farm we had planted was overrun by the Fulani cattle and destroyed! Yet, from that destruction came hope and a better life for the children.
Because the orphanage founder could not be located, I helped to set up an all-new organization and registered it with the state. I have a Nigerian Residency Card that gives me full legal privileges in Nigeria. The new orphanage was formed two years ago.
The Deliverance Celebration: On Sunday morning a celebration was held in the new chapel at the Jos Christian Refuge for Children. I was honored to have been present for the celebration which occurred on Nancy’s 74th birthday. The children made a cake and sang happy birthday to her.
The difference in the children from five years ago when I first found the orphanage is staggering. They all have commercially made shoes that fit and new school uniforms. They live in dormitories with hot water showers and flushing toilets and have three hot meals a day.
The teachers are actually paid now!!! On the land we bought we have renovated all the buildings and constructed several new buildings, the last of which is just now being finished and will have the ability for a second floor.
Room for more children? Yes, a few. We have made space for 15 of the children most in need after the attacks in Mangu Local Government, just south of Jos. More than 200 died and hundreds of homes were destroyed. Many more children need homes; but we can only house a few.
The sickening attacks in Mangu
Married 19 years and father to four children: I watched the tears flow down her cheeks … they had been married for 19 years and had 4 children. Her family was fleeing the latest Fulani attack when her husband received a call from a Muslim who lived in the village who said all was well. The husband and father made the mistake of returning to check on his home. A short time later he called to say the Fulani had him “in their hands.”
The next call she got was from her husband’s phone, but the caller was a Muslim Fulani herdsman. He told her that he had killed her husband and discarded his body, and that by Islamic law she had been inherited by him so that she was now his wife.
Media in the EU and the United States referred to the attacks in early August by Fulani with automatic weapons as “ethnic clashes.” The Christian farmers have no guns, and every person killed or wounded was a Christian. That is not a clash — it is a massacre!!
In Mangu I delivered mattresses for every individual sleeping on the floor in a makeshift IDP camp in a grammar school. I also delivered tons of rice, beans, corn meal, canned meats, cooking oils, and requested medical supplies. All was possible only because of Religious Freedom Coalition supporters. Upon returning to Jos, I visited seriously wounded victims who will need multiple surgeries, including a man shot in the face and another who had his stomach removed.
Please pray for the victims of the continued Islamic oppression in Nigeria!
One victim had a bullet hit just below his lower left jaw and exit out the right jaw. He lost teeth, most of his tongue and parts of the roof of his mouth. He has had several operations and will require several more to
try to rebuild enough of his mouth to be able to talk again.
Another I prayed with had stomach perforations from wounds. He suffered many infections and I prayed with him just before he headed to a needed operation.
What you don’t see: These victims of terror were in hospital “wards,” something that no longer exists in the United States. There were 12 men per room.
In the bottom photo I am standing on the roof! Instead of tin we have poured concrete for the roof. This will allow expansion. With the cement roof we can add a second floor at less expense in the future.
In addition to classrooms, the new building will have five bathrooms accessible from the outside. This is much needed by the students during the day. The green building in the background is of similar construction but has a traditional tin roof and cannot be expanded to two floors.
We can expand to accommodate more victims of Islamic terrorism, but there is a limit. I want quality living and educational environments for the children.
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