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Stories
from the Field
August
2003
A holy warrior for the gospel
As a boy he fled school, slipped into the
mountains of his native Afghanistan and became a mujahedeen,
a holy warrior. He fought in the jihad against the Russians
and their efforts to dominate his country. Now nearly 20
years later, Hussain Andaryas is still a holy warrior.
“I’m a different kind of warrior
now,” he says. “When I was a young man, I fought
as a patriot for my country.” Today he fights for
the souls of his countrymen from an apartment in the United
States.
Above Hussain Andaryas was a mujahedeen, a Muslim holy warrior,
in Afghanistan. Still a warrior, he vies for the souls of
his countrymen by producing evangelistic radio programs
beamed back to his native country.
Andaryas is an evangelist, producing gospel radio programs
broadcast into Afghanistan from the Seychelles. He also
maintains two Web sites which carry the JESUS film in five
of the six languages of the Afghan people.
In a day when it is difficult, if not impossible,
for Christians to go into Afghanistan, his efforts are a
missionary presence.
“Afghans are crazy for radio,”
he says. ”They are addicted to BBC [British Broadcasting
Corporation]. Everyone has access to radio.
“You see, you cannot go into Afghanistan
right now, but radio can.”
Afghans hide while listening to his broadcasts.
To be caught listening could bring a beating or worse. Evening
programs are evangelistic and target nonbelievers. Weekend
programs are for believers.
Andaryas receives letters and e-mail testifying
how important these broadcasts are to those who listen.
One group of 26 Afghans who became believers tells of going
to a lake and baptizing each other.
The letters not only speak of conversions,
they tell him the broadcasts are often the only form of
worship people have.
“They don’t know how to worship,”
he says.
“There are no churches in Afghanistan,
so they cannot pattern their worship after them. Most of
the people cannot read or write. This is the only worship
they have.”
His Web sites draw 200,000 viewers. Most e-mail
he receives through them is positive.
“They say, ‘We thought Christianity
is Madonna or Michael Jackson or Hollywood and all these
vulgar things, you know? If what you preach, if what you
say that this is is what Christianity is, then this must
be the perfect religion,’” he says.
But not all are positive.
“We do get 20 percent of the letters
which are threatening our lives,” he says, “that
we will be killed, or if we we are found, we will be cut
into pieces.”
Andaryas has heard these threats before. He
knows what it costs for a Muslim to accept Christianity.
While a student in Iran—while studying
to become an Islamic scholar—he began studying the
Bible with an Iranian Christian. When discovered, he was
detained and tortured for three days by “keepers of
the religious peace.”
His body still carries scars from the beatings
and electric shocks he received.
Later, he was expelled from Syria and Egypt
for owning a Bible. In India, where he became a Christian
and began his radio broadcasts, he also was beaten several
times. And members of his family would kill him for abandoning
the Muslim faith if he returned to Afghanistan.
It would be easy for him to hate.
“But you cannot hate people and bring
people to God,” Andaryas says. “And you cannot
hate people in order to set the people right.
“Yes, I am a different kind of warrior
now,” he continues. “I have different weapons,
a different method of war. And this war? It starts with
love.”
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