General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsJohn Chau Aced Missionary Boot Camp. Reality Proved a Harsher Test.
Just months before undertaking the most forbidding journey in his life as a young missionary to a remote Indian Ocean island, John Allen Chau was blindfolded and dropped off on a dirt road in a remote part of Kansas.
After a long walk, he found a mock village in the woods inhabited by missionaries dressed in odd thrift-store clothes, pretending not to understand a word he said. His role was to preach the gospel. The others were supposed to be physically aggressive. Some came at him with fake spears, speaking gibberish.
It was part of an intensive and somewhat secretive three-week missionary training camp. Mary Ho, the international executive leader for All Nations, the organization that ran the training, said, John was one of the best participants in this experience that we have ever had.
For Mr. Chau, 26, the boot camp was the culmination of years of meticulous planning that involved linguistics training and studying to become an emergency medical technician, as well as foregoing full-time jobs so he could travel and toughen himself up.
He did it all with the single-minded goal of breaking through to the people of North Sentinel Island, a remote outpost of hunters and gatherers in the Andaman Sea who had shown tremendous hostility to outsiders.
It was an obsession. Ever since Mr. Chau had learned in high school through a missionary website, the Joshua Project, that the North Sentinel people were perhaps the most isolated in the world, he was hooked. Much of what he did the rest of his short life was directed toward this mission.
He would pull up Google Maps and point to a green speck in a place no one had ever heard of the Andaman Islands, far off the coast of India and tell his friends with a buoyant smile: Im going there.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/john-chau-aced-missionary-boot-camp-reality-proved-a-harsher-test/ar-BBQjIiu?li=BBnbcA1
msongs
(67,420 posts)Tanuki
(14,919 posts)WhiskeyGrinder
(22,359 posts)Sad, too, that he thought this was the best thing to do with his life.
pecosbob
(7,541 posts)stopbush
(24,396 posts)RainCaster
(10,886 posts)pamdb
(1,332 posts)What an idiot. What gives him the right to think he has the right to
preach his religion to other peoples? Leave them the hell alone. The
arrogance is astounding.
Thomas Hurt
(13,903 posts)Jake Stern
(3,145 posts)He complained that the Indian government should drop tear gas and flash bangs to scare off the islanders so they can recover Chau's body and that the islanders should be prosecuted.
My response was that they were only defending their borders against an illegal alien invader.
keithbvadu2
(36,829 posts)treestar
(82,383 posts)One to convince him to take on easier projects. It sounds like he was passionate about his work. But that was like taking in the toughest job first.