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Frontline
Newsletter: Targeting Christians
Terror
bombings of civilian centres in Southern Sudan have intensified.
Numerous churches have been bombed including on Christmas
Day.
Worst
hit in this bombing campaign was Moruland. Lui, Kotobi,
Mundri, Jambo, Tali and Lanyi have all been repeatedly subjected
to aerial bombardments by the Sudan Air Force. Churches,
schools, the only hospital in Moruland and the few medical
clinics appear to be the primary targets.

This
was the 8th time in one year that the Cathedral in Lui
had been bombed. This church has also been destroyed
by government forces twice before. |
Churches
Bombed on Sunday Morning
On
one day, Sunday 7th January, 5 separate communities
in Moruland were bombed. 46 bombs were dropped on
Kotobi, Mundri, Jambo, Singo and Kediba during Sunday
morning worship services.
Churches
Bombed on Christmas Day
On
Christmas Day, during the Christmas morning services,
the congregations in Jambo and Tapari were subjected
to aerial bombardments by the Sudan Air Force. Back
in November, a Frontline Fellowship and Evangelism
Explosion mission team were bombed on Sunday morning
at the same church in Jambo that was also bombed on
Christmas Day. (In the last year, I have been bombed
twice whilst preaching in a church. Both these churches
were also bombed on Christmas Day.)
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Cathedral Bombed
On
29 December, the Fraser Cathedral in Lui was hit and severely
damaged by bombs dropped by the Sudan Air Force. Lui had
been attacked on 26 December with 7 bombs. Then on 29 December
another 10 bombs were dropped on Lui. Five of those bombs
landed close to the Episcopal Church of Sudan cathedral.
A huge hole was blown into the West wall of the church building,
flinging parts of the corrugated iron roof up into the sky.
Most
of the West wall is pockmarked with holes from hundreds
of pieces of schrapnel. All the windows on all sides of
the church were blown out. Most of the doors were splintered.
Almost every wooden beam in the roof of the church has cracked.
Much of the structure is now unstable and would need to
be torn down before rebuilding of the cathedral could begin.
This was the third time that this church in Lui has needed
to be rebuilt because of assaults by the Government of Sudan
forces.
One
of several shipments of Bibles in English and Moru,
delivered to teachers to use as textbooks in the primary
schools.
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The
Church that Will Not Die
This
church building in Lui stands on the site of the very
first church established in Moruland. It was initially
built by pioneer Scottish missionary Dr. Kenneth Fraser
in 1921. The church in Lui was burned down by government
forces in 1965. It was later rebuilt by 1983, but
when the National Islamic Front government forces
swept into Lui, the congregation had to again flee
into the bush and the church building was vandalised.
In
1997 the church was restored and since that time Frontline
Fellowship has shown Christian films many times in
the cathedral and conducted numerous services there.
Jesus is the Resurrection and the Life and He continues
to bring life abundant life out of death
(John 11:25).
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Bishop
Bullen Dolli condemned this "senseless violence and
reign of terror against civilian populations" and declared
that those committing such atrocities "must be treated
with the contempt they deserve and the perpetrators condemned
in the strongest possible terms." Bishop Bullen emphasised
that Lui "has always been and still is, a civilian
population centre best known for its religious and educational
life." He expressed outrage at the "callous disregard"
for life and "senseless terrorism" of the government
of Sudan.
Pastor
Jeffrey of the Diocese of Lui appealed to the new President
of the United States, George W Bush, to intervene by declaring
Southern Sudan a no-fly zone for military aircraft. Using
the air exclusion zones in Iraq (designed to protect the
Kurds and Shite Muslims), as an example, Pastor Jeffrey
requested urgent action to protect the Black Christians
of Sudan from the terror bombing campaign of the National
Islamic Front government of Sudan.
Schools
Bombed
We
gathered details from eyewitnesses of 55 bombings. In just
over 2 months, over 458 bombs had been dropped on churches,
schools, medical clinics and homes mostly in Equatoria.
As best as we could confirm, casualties have included at
least 41 dead and over 100 injured.
The
community which includes the Frontline Fellowship mission
station and Christian Liberty High School has now been bombed
9 times in the last year, by MiGs and Antonovs of the Sudan
Air Force. Over 100 bombs had been dropped on our community
during the previous 12 months!

Chaplains
receive instruction in conducting services with the
new Chaplains Prayerbook. |
Bibles
Delivered, Leaders Trained
In
the last 6 months I have conducted 4 separate mission
trips to Sudan. I was also sick for over 2 months
as a result of the injuries to my ribs and lungs received
during one of the bombings. On the most recent trip,
the airline lost my backpack so I travelled around
Sudan for over 2 weeks without my luggage or a change
of clothes. By the time I returned home, my trousers
could just about stand on their own!
I
also had the challenge of battling beauracracy and
undertaking archaeological excavations at the Nairobi
Post Office to unearth missing boxes of school books
posted from Christian Liberty Academy in the USA to
Christian Liberty High School. By Gods grace,
the postal supervisor went out of his way to enable
me to recover several of the precious parcels from
amongst mountains of mail in the huge postal warehouses.
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Despite
the disruptions, sicknesses and lost luggage, we were able
to distribute over 12 000 Bibles and I presented over 240
sermons, lectures or Bible studies and 10 seminars for Sudanese
pastors, teachers and chaplains often across rivers
and through burning fields. It was a privilege to conduct
services in many of the communities that had recently been
bombed including in the shattered remains of the
Fraser Cathedral in Lui.
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Please
continue to pray for the Frontline mission team who
remain in Sudan restoring and running the Christian
Liberty High School, clinic and chapel.
"Many
are the afflictions of the righteous, but the Lord
delivers him out of them all." Psalm
34:19
Dr.
Peter Hammond
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One
of the crosses erected on the road to Christian Liberty
High School in Sudan |
Related
Resources:-
Terrorism
and Persecution (video)
Sudan,
the Hidden Holocaust (video)
Faith under
Fire in Sudan (book)
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