|
Christians
Under Fire
The St James Massacre
|
|
 |
Shooting
Back - Your Right to Self Defence
by: Charl van Wyk
read more... |
A
terrorist attack on St. James Church in Cape Town, South
Africa left 11 people dead and 50 wounded.
At about 7:30pm, on Sunday 25th July, while the congregation
of 1400 listened to a hymn of worship, a group of gunmen
burst into the church and opened fire with automatic weapons.
"I noticed the handle of the side door facing the congregation
turn and then the doors were kicked open. A black man wearing
some kind of overall was standing in the doorway. He was
carrying an assault rifle - it looked like an AK 47. As
he stepped forward he raised the rifle, cocked it and fired
it on full automatic directly into the congregation."
Another
eye-witness described it this way: "I saw this man
kick open the door next to the stage and holding his rifle
from the hip he opened up on us spraying bullets across
a wide arc into the packed congregation. But before he even
opened fire, two other black men who seemed to be wearing
some olive green uniforms lobbed two handgrenades into the
centre of the church."
"There was this trail of smoke from the grenades and
a few puffs of smoke from the first shots fired. The grenades
were still in the air when he started firing."
"As I dived under the pew for cover I heard two grenades
explode. I looked up and saw pews sticking up into the air.
The firing went on for a while and then suddenly everything
was quiet."
For
over 11 years Frontline Fellowship has taken the Gospel
to the war zones. On Sunday 25th July 1993 the war zones
came to us. Our mission headquarters are a few metres from
St. James on the same road. Several of our workers are members
and both my father and my brother were converted at St.
James.
I
had just been singing with my daughter and was about to
pray with her before putting her to bed when the phone rang.
"It was the worst nightmare, Peter, St. James has been
attacked by terrorists."
As I sped to the church my mind reeled with the implications.
I thought of my many friends there and prayed that they
would be safe. Vivid memories of blood splattered churches
and scenes of massacres in Angola and Mozambique flooded
my mind.
As if in sympathy with the storm in many hearts, lightning
flashed across the sky and the heavens wept in a blinding
downpour of torrential rain. Above the roar of the rain
the air was filled with wailing sirens from convoys of ambulances,
police vehicles and fire engines as they converged upon
3rd Avenue, Kenilworth. Flashing lights and flashing lightning
lit up a scene of dazed survivors fleeing from the church,
weeping church-goers praying in the rain and frantic relatives
searching for loved ones.
I
was soaked as I stumbled into the church. The tiles in the
foyer were smeared with blood. Inside the church there were
several bodies lying on the bloodstained carpets or on shrapnel
scarred pews. Some wooden pews were overturned. There was
a hole in the floor where one grenade had exploded. Prayer
books, music sheets, welcome cards and Bibles were strewn
amongst the pools of blood. The ceiling was pockmarked with
shrapnel.
Rescue workers were working swiftly and efficiently. Some
of the wounded were being cared for inside the church. Others
were being carried out on stretchers to the waiting ambulances.
A broken pew was used to transport one person. Pockets of
Christians sat or stood holding hands and praying. The police
moved swiftly, but with sensitivity, to clear the church
sanctuary of all but emergency workers. Then they began
to separate eye-witnesses for questioning.
I located several friends and then began to help serve tea
to the shocked survivors. Only later, as I began to hear
the different testimonies of those involved, did the full
scale and horror of the attack strike me.
Mr.
Lorenzo Smith had his wife Myrtle die in his arms. A piece
of shrapnel had pierced her heart. They had been married
for 21 years. She left behind her husband and her two children,
Craig and Mandy, who were not hit in the attack.
Mrs.
Marita Ackermann was shot in the chest at close range. She
died about 30 minutes after arriving at the hospital. Marita
had twice triumphed over cancer and she had helped start
an outreach ministry to Khayelitsha and had also initiated
an outreach ministry to Russian seamen passing through the
harbour in Cape Town. Marita left behind her husband and
three children, Braam, LiesI and Pierre. She was buried
on her birthday.
Peter Gordon, who was wounded in the attack, saw his wife
Denise murdered next to him. Denise left behind her husband
and her little daughter, Sarah.
Seventeen-year-old, Richard O'Kill died instantly from a
bullet through his head as he flung himself across two young
friends, Lisa and Bonnie, to shield them from the line of
fire.
Twenty-one-year-old Gerard Harker died instantly as he dived
on top of one of the handgrenades.
A police spokesman praised the selfless action of Gerard
and said that his act of sacrifice undoubtedly saved the
lives of many others by absorbing most of the blast. Gerard's
brother, 13-year-old Wesley, also died in the attack. They
left behind their elder brother Shaun (23) and parents Dennis
and Dawn Harker.
Four of the slain were Russian sailors -Valentin Varaksa,
Pavel Valujev, Andrey Kajl and Oleg Karamzin. Another victim
was Guy Javens.
Of those victims crippled in the attack the most heart rending
situation is that of Ukrainian sailor Dimitri Makagon. Both
his legs were ripped off when one grenade fell in his lap.
His right arm had to be amputated and both his eardrums
burst in the blast. Dimitri, who is 23-years-old, was earning
money as a sailor in order to pay for his wedding upon his
return. The St. James Church is trying to fly out his fiancee,
Olga and they have started a fund for the victims of the
massacre.
A medical student, Gillian Schermbrucker, narrowly escaped
death when a piece of shrapnel pierced her lung and an artery.
Her feet were also badly damaged yet she still sang a hymn
to comfort her friends as she lay bleeding on the church
floor.
Several
survivors expressed their amazement that more people had
not been killed. Police investigators agreed. The M26 fragmentary
handgrenades had been attached to tins of nails to provide
additional shrapnel. If Gerard had not covered the one grenade
with his body more would have been killed. And if another
member of the congregation had not shot back, wounding one
of the terrorists, then many more would have been shot.
After the grenades exploded, one of our workers, Charl van
Wyk, returned fire with his revolver. One bullet wounded
the gunman who was firing into the congregation. The shooting
stopped and the attackers withdrew. Charl then pursued the
terrorists into the parking lot and fired at their getaway
car as it sped off into 3rd Avenue. When the police later
recovered the terrorists' getaway car the bloodstained seats
indicated that at least one of the gunmen was seriously
wounded.
If one compares the St. James massacre with similar atrocities
in Zimbabwe, Mozambique, Angola and Sudan - it becomes apparent
that many more people would have died had Charl not fired
back.
WHY?
In numerous reports on the St. James massacre the questions
have been asked: Who could possibly want to attack a congregation
of Christians worshipping in a church? And what could anyone
hope to accomplish through such senseless slaughter? To
these questions Christians have added another: How should
we as believers respond?
When I saw the shocking carnage at St. James Church it immediately
brought similar bloody scenes flooding back into my mind.
Over the last 11 years of missionary work I have personally
come across dozens of similar atrocities, especially in
Angola and Mozambique.
In August 1983 Frelimo troops killed 5 pastors and burnt
down all 5 churches in Maskito village, Zambezia province,
Mozambique. In September 1983 Frelimo troops killed over
50 Christians and burnt a church down in Pasura village.
At Chilleso Evangelical Church, in Angola, Cuban troops
shot 150 Christians during a church service. At New Adams
farm in Zimbabwe, 16 missionaries and their children were
murdered in November 1987.
Muslim mobs have burnt down hundreds of churches and killed
hundreds of Christians in Nigeria. In the Sudan more than
a hundred Christians were crucified earlier this year. Many
hundreds of churches have been attacked in Ethiopia over
the last 20 years. And there are no more churches in Somalia
- the last church was burnt down and the last minister murdered
late last year. And one could continue to recount literally
hundreds of similar atrocities.
The fact is that churches have often been the target of
Muslim extremists and Marxist terrorists.
In answer to the second question as to what could anyone
hope to accomplish through the attack at St. James we must
note that it is the aim of terrorists to instill fear in
the hearts of their target community. To paralyse people
into inactivity and non-resistance. To induce people to
flee the country or at least to be too afraid to fight back.
An additional aim of terrorism is to provoke an unreasoned
and extreme response. To provoke counter-terrorism which
would then be exploited for propaganda.
The aim of persecution is not to kill Christians. Sending
believers to meet their Lord in heaven hardly achieves the
purposes of evil. No, the aim of persecution is to shock
Christians into fear and inactivity. To paralyse and neutralise
the church.
Only if one gives in to this fear and allows oneself to
be intimidated into silence and compromise does the enemy
achieve his objectives.
This should encourage us not to betray the Faith for which
the martyrs have died. The only appropriate response to
the massacre is for us to be faithful to Jesus Christ and
His Word - The Bible. We dare not allow the fear of man
to divert us from fulfilling the Great Commission of our
Lord Jesus Christ.
In this context it is shameful that some have sought to
exploit this tragedy to enhance their own public image or
to promote inter-faith services. As one member of St. James
wrote in the following letter to a Cape newspaper:
"It is hard for us to take politicians like ANC MP
Van Eck or Archbishop Tutu seriously when they so shamelessly
milk tragedies like the St. James massacre for media coverage
and to advance their political agenda. As a member of St.
James Church of England I find it offensive that certain
priests and politicians have cynically exploited the Sunday
massacre for their own political ends.
"With the ANC's abysmal human rights record of placing
landmines in farm roads, car bombs in public streets and
limpit mines in shopping centres and restaurants, they are
the last people who have the right to condemn violence.
The thousands of victims of ANC necklace murders, petrol
bomb attacks, stonings and shootings and those dissidents
tortured in ANC concentration camps bear eloquent testimony
to the ANC's real position on violence.
"As for Tutu - how could he barge into St. James and
lie to the policemen on duty - claiming that he was the
head of the denomination - in order to gain access to the
site of the massacre? Most people are not aware that the
Church of England in South Africa (CESA) is an entirely
separate denomination from Tutu's Church of the Province
of SA (Anglican) denomination. Yet surely Tutu is aware
that he is not the head of the CESA!
"For Tutu to have gained access for his media entourage
to St. James by deception and then to have desecrated the
sanctuary by turning it into a media circus to exploit this
tragedy for his image overseas is despicable.
"Other political activists in the guise of the priesthood
have suggested that we use this opportunity for a "reconciliation"
service. St. James is a fully multi-racial church that has
opened it's doors to all races at all times. Our church
has an outreach to Khayelitsha and offers Bible studies
in Xhosa on a weekly basis. We have always worked for reconciliation;
first to God and then to man. We as a church do not have
to use this tragic event to prove our commitment to reconciliation.
"The Church of England in South Africa is an evangelical
denomination which holds to the inerrancy of the Bible as
God's perfect Word. CESA holds to the full Deity of our
Lord Jesus Christ and to His bodily resurrection from the
grave. We proclaim salvation by the Grace of God, through
the atonement of Christ, received by faith. For this reason
it would betray the martyrs who were killed on Sunday if
we were to partake in an interfaith service with those who
reject this Gospel.
"The greatest tribute and memorial which we could erect
in honour of the victims of the massacre would be for us
to remain faithful to Jesus Christ and His Word - the Bible.
May many more come to Christ in true faith and repentance."
I also notice that every time the negotiation process stalls
and reaches a deadlock, some high profile atrocity occurs
which is then used to accelerate the process of hurtling
this country towards the transitional executive control
which the socialist "liberation forces" so desire.
Their expressions of outrage are hard to take seriously.
Their actions, stained with the blood of thousands of innocent
victims, speak far louder than their words.
Which brings us to the third question: How should we as
believers respond? In any crisis or tragedy we need to turn
to God and cast all our burdens and frustrations upon Him
in prayer. We need to seek answers and guidance from studying
the Word of God. Many survivors of similar atrocities have
found tremendous comfort and strength through praying the
Psalms.
At the mid-week service three days after the massacre the
church was packed almost to it's capacity. Bishop Frank
Relief opened the service by reading Psalm 11:
"In the Lord I take refuge. How then can you say to
me: Flee like a bird to your mountain. For look the wicked
bend their bows; they set their arrows against the strings
to shoot from the shadows at the upright in heart. When
the foundations are being destroyed, what can the righteous
do? The Lord is in His holy temple; The Lord is on His heavenly
throne. He observes the sons of men; His eyes examine them.
The Lord examines the righteous, but the wicked and those
who love violence His soul hates. On the wicked He will
rain fiery coals and burning sulphur; a scorching wind will
be their lot. For the Lord is righteous. He loves justice;
upright men will see His face."
Frank Relief said that many had commented on the calmness
of the St. James congregation in the face of this tragedy.
"While we are shocked, stunned, shattered, hurt and
angry at the senselessness of what has happened we also
have a sense of peace."
At
the Sunday evening service one week after the massacre,
over 2000 people packed the church and the overflow facilities.
If the aim of the terrorists had been to terrify people
into avoiding the church they had clearly failed.
At that service Rev. Retief outlined a Biblical response
to the tragedy, which I summarised as follows:
1. The world is not our home. We are pilgrims passing through.
Do make a meaningful contribution to improving society but
don't get too caught up in materialism and personal ambitions.
We won't live forever.
2. We must believe in a Day of Judgement. If evil is not
finally punished then this world is meaningless. The wicked
may seem to prosper for a time, but a just God will deal
with sin. Only Christians have the spiritual resources to
cope with such tragedy.
3. Life is uncertain. None of us know how long we will live.
Spiritual apathy is dangerous. We need to be jolted awake.
4. There is a constant need to re-examine ourselves. Is
your faith genuine or nominal? Watch out for temporary emotional
motivation. Have done with empty words. Do away with frivolous
things. Be serious about your faith. Get involved in the
life of your church and in the lives of others.
5. Do not be ruled by fear. Our trust must be in God. We
fear God and no one else.
Frontline Fellowship's official letter of sympathy to St.
James Church included the following message:
"Jesus Christ is building His Church and the gates
of hell will not prevail against it. You cannot destroy
the Church by attacking buildings. The Church is not buildings
- but people. People who love Jesus Christ. People who have
a relationship with God as their Father. People who have
been changed by the Holy Spirit. One cannot kill Christians
by sending them to heaven. Death for the Christian is not
final. Jesus is the resurrection and the life....I rejoice
in the assurance that the great work which He has begun
at St. James will not falter or be distracted from the Great
Commission."
Such
traumatic experiences remind us of the reality of the spiritual
war in which each of us is engaged. There is a life and
death struggle between the Kingdom of God and the forces
of Satan. Outside of Christ, man is desperately wicked.
"It is appointed unto man once to die and after that
the judgement." Heb. 9:27. God is just and He will
ultimately reward the faithful and punish the wicked.
We need to live our lives for the Glory of God - to the
fullest.
"Only one life - it will soon be past only - what's
done for Christ will last"
WHO IS RESPONSIBLE?
As the shock of the St. James massacre has turned to anger
- many have asked the question: Who is responsible?
On Monday 26 the Citizen newspaper received a telephone
call from a man claiming to be the Azanian Peoples Liberation
Army (APLA) regional commander for the Western Cape. He
claimed that an APLA unit was responsible for "the
operation at the church". Later the SAPA/Reuter press
office in Johannesburg received a call from someone who
identified himself as Ropa Honda, a commander in the Western
Cape. He said that the killings were part of "a widespread
offensive against the settler regime." He also warned
that "more blood will be spilt". APLA is the so-called
"military wing" of the Pan African Congress (PAC).
The PAC and ANC are allied in a Patriotic Front, with the
Libyian backed PAC taking an even more extreme position
to that of their ANC allies.
Thereafter other statements from the PAC were conflicting.
The Pan Africanist Student Organisation (PASO) and the Azanian
National Youth Unity (AZANYU) said that they were perplexed
and shocked at the level of reaction to "the killing
of only 11 European settlers" at St. James Church.
The statement said that as churches were counter-revolutionary
they were legitimate targets of war.
In its official reaction to the massacre, Christians For
Truth reported that the new slogan amongst radicals in the
townships is 'Kill the pastor! Kill the church!"
A British researcher for the Freedom Association has just
published a report entitled "Christians in the Crossfire"
in Freedom Today (Aug 93). In this report Rachel Tingle
documents several incidents of Christians being singled
out for whipping with barbed wire, stoning, burning and
murder. She noted that ANC radicals had a prejudice against
Christians and were deliberately targeting believers.
In its press statement United Christian Action called upon
those churchmen -who by propagating "Liberation Theology"
had encouraged the terrorists and fuelled the culture of
violence - to return to the Biblical message of repentance
and faith, holiness and love.
The
South African Police have reported that they have arrested
2 PAC members in connection with the massacre and that their
investigations indicated a link between the church attack
and the terrorist attack on a Claremont steakhouse (less
than a kilometer from the church) last December, and an
attack on a hotel in East London on the 1st May. The Police
also noted that the attack on St. James brought to 405 the
number of people killed so far in the month of July in so
called "political attacks".
TESTIMONIES OF GRACE
As we learn to cope with the shock and sense of loss, many
testimonies of God's grace and sovereignty have begun to
surface.
The attack took place on St. James Day -the day when the
Church commemorates the first martyrdom of an apostle (Acts
12:2-3).
The attack took place five minutes after the children had
left for a children's service in a separate venue.
The attackers had apparently wanted to burst through several
doors simultaneously - but all the other doors were locked
on that cold winter night.
Excerpts of the unpreached sermon of Rev. Ross Anderson
have been printed in local newspapers. One verse in particular
stands out: "Jesus said to her, I am the Resurrection
and the Life. He who believes in Me will live, even though
he dies." John 11:25
One man testified that as he pushed his wife's head down
he felt a bullet whistle over the back of his hand and heard
it slam into the wall behind. Another husband pushed his
wife flat seconds before a bullet smashed into the backrest
against which she had been sitting.
One Ukrainian seaman, Demichev Vladimir testified of how
Marita Ackermann had led him to Christ: "I have been
a seaman for 28 years and never in this time have I met
such warm and kind hearted people as Marita and Dawie Ackermann.
I met Marita in October last year, my first time in Cape
Town. Marita gave me some papers to read about our Lord.
Before that I was an atheist. Marita invited me and my crew
to church and our attitudes changed as we began to read
and discuss the Bible."
Just three weeks before the massacre 72 Russian sailors
had made public commitments to Christ.
Marita's favourite verse was Phil3:10: "I want to know
Christ and the power of His resurrection and the fellowship
of sharing in His sufferings, becoming like Him in His death."
Other members of the Church have shared these testimonies:
"Possessions and position are no longer important to
us - these things last only for a short time."
"When
we keep our mind on God, God keeps our mind at peace."
"God is our refuge and our strength, an ever present
help in trouble. "Psalm 46:1
On the order of service bulletins handed out at the main
funeral service on 29th July this passage was quoted: "Who
shall separate us from the love of Christ? Shall trouble
or hardship or persecution or famine or nakedness or danger
or sword?... No, in all these things we are more than conquerors
through Him who loved us. For I am convinced that neither
death nor life, neither angels nor demons, neither the present
nor the future, nor any powers... will be able to separate
us from the Love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord.
~
Rom 8:35-39
Rev.
Peter Hammond
Related
articles:
In the Lion's Den for the World's
Greatest Revolutionary
|