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Stories
from the Field
December
2003
FearFactor: Following
Christ
October 01, 2003
In the heat of midday, as most walk in from
the fields to rest, a group of men gathers under some shade.
One picks up a drum and starts playing as the others sing.
Villagers go out of their way to avoid this patch of shade.
No one wants to be too closely involved or even associated
with this group.
Just far enough down the dirt path to not
be considered part of the group, but close enough to hear,
stands the village chief, Musa. Emotions well up and he
turns from the group, but does not leave his post. He wants
to hear.
Musa is one of 28 million Hausa living on
75,000 square miles straddling the borders of Nigeria and
Niger. Almost a year ago, Chief Musa publicly professed
Jesus Christ as his Savior. “I want to be the first
to ask Jesus into my heart,” he proclaimed after three
years of learning Bible stories. “I want to lead my
village in the ways of Christ.”
Days later, Chief Musa asked the missionary
to leave the village and never return. He banned all Christian
worship and reminded his people that they were Muslim and
would always remain Muslim. The sudden change of heart came
after holy men visited. They threatened his family, his
village and to take away his power as chief if he continued
to be a Christian.
With fewer than 200 known Christians, it is
difficult to stand alone. More than 99 percent of the Hausa
follow the rules of Islam. Their belief is more than a religion--it's
a culture. This fear induced by the culture is a major barrier
for the Hausa in coming to Christ. Once a person makes a
decision to change, pressures from family and the village
can force him to fall back to old ways. If he chooses to
stay a Christian, he is shunned from his family--which could
mean a quiet, slow death.
Many who know the truth choose to stay Muslim,
just as Musa. He knows that no matter what his heart says,
he will not join this small church service. For him, the
cost is too high.
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