Category Archives: Asia

Dawa Singye Bhutia: Helping Children Trapped in the Red Light District’s Sex Trafficking in North-Eastern India

Rev. Dawa distributing the stationaries to the children

Dear Brothers and Sisters:
It is with immense joy and a heart filled with gratitude that I share with you the encouraging developments from the Red Light District of Khalpara, Siliguri. In the midst of challenging circumstances, on September 4, our Love Your Neighbor Initiative took a significant step forward by establishing The Child Learning and Social Centre for the children in the heart of Khalpara. This momentous occasion marked the beginning of a new era, one that is dedicated to providing a safe and nurturing environment for the children in our community, especially those living in the red-light district. The Child learning and Social Centre serves total 52 children comprising of 24 girls and 28 boys between the age group of 6- 18 years.

Stop Child Trafficking

Khalpara’s red light district, a place known for its harsh realities and social stigma, there exists a group of children with a history marred by adversity and hardship. These young souls are brought in from distant towns like Malda, Balurghat, Assam, Meghalaya, and a few were even born and raised within the boundaries of Khalpara itself. Their lives are intertwined with the shadows of poverty casting long and unforgiving shadows over their families. For many of these children, their parents found themselves reluctantly drawn into the unforgiving world of the sex trade. It was not a choice born of desire, but a desperate attempt to survive in a world that offered them few alternatives.

Children activities in the Centre

Living in the red light district brings forth a multitude of challenges. The children, with their innocent eyes and dreams yet to be unfurled, struggle to find access to quality education and healthcare services. The warmth of a stable home environment, so vital for their well-being, is often elusive, as they navigate through the tumultuous life of their upbringing. Perhaps the most disheartening is how society treats them.  They are singled out and subjected to discrimination, simply because they live in a place scorned by society, but to them is home.

The world around them often refuse to see the potential within these children, overshadowed by the prejudices and biases that cling like a dark cloud over them. However, amidst this sea of challenges, the children of Khalpara’s red light district remain resilient. They carry within them dreams that shine like beacons of hope; talents waiting to be unearthed, and untapped potential yearning to break free from the chains of their circumstances. With the right support and opportunities, these young souls can defy the odds stacked against them. They possess the strength to rise above the darkness and carve out a brighter future for themselves, one where their past history is but a chapter, not the whole story.

Children from the Red Light District.

The inauguration of The Child Learning and Social Centre in the heart of Khalpara marks the beginning of a new era, one that is dedicated to providing a safe and nurturing environment for the children in our community, especially those living in the red-light district.. Our center is designed to be a child-friendly environment, a space where children can learn, play,and grow in a supportive, caring atmosphere, that every child will thrive and realize their full God-given potential.

During the inauguration, as part of our commitment to the well-being of these children, we distributed essential hygiene supplies and stationery to kickstart their journey towards education and personal cleanliness. Reverend Dawa graced the occasion with an inspiring message on the importance of moral living within our society. His words resonated deeply with all attendees, emphasizing the need for compassion and understanding. The highlight of the event was a cultural program featuring performances by our talented students. Their talents shone brightly, showcasing their potential and creativity.

Children doing Varies Activities.

We have taken a significant step towards ensuring a brighter future for the children in our community. However, this is just the beginning of our journey. The overall goal is to empower the children of Khalpara’s red light district by providing them with education, emotional support, and skills to break the cycle of poverty and prevent second generation prostitution and sexual slavery.  Our commitment to bringing about positive change extends beyond education, alone. We are dedicated to holistic community development, addressing the various needs and challenges faced by the residents of Khalpara. Through the Love Your Neighbor Initiative, we aim to transform perceptions and uplift spirits, demonstrating the boundless love and compassion of Christ, that they may come to know Him!

Our Goals

Education:

  • To ensure that all children in the red light district have the opportunity to receive a quality education.
  • To work towards enrolling children in schools, providing necessary school supplies, and offering tutoring or after-school programs to support their learning.

Emotional Support:

  • To recognize the emotional challenges faced by children in the red light district.
  • To provide counseling and create safe spaces where children can express themselves, share their experiences, and receive emotional support.
  • To organize recreational activities and workshops to foster their overall development.

Skill Development:

  • To equip children with skills that can enhance their future opportunities.
  • To offer vocational training, workshops, and mentorship programs that help children develop practical skills, such as computer literacy, arts and crafts, or other relevant skills based on their interests and talents.

Advocacy and Awareness:

  • To raise awareness about the rights and needs of children in the red light district.
  • To advocate for the elimination of stigma and discrimination and promote a more inclusive and supportive environment for these children.

 

Team HGNM along with the staff members and volunteers

From R.K.’s Corner

In the last few months, there have been increasing public media attention given to one of the fastest growing criminal syndicates in the world: the murky underworld of sex trafficking, especially among children.

The main focus of Dawa Singye Bhutia’s  Himalayan Good News Networking Ministry (GNNM) has always been on bringing the Gospel to the unreached in the nations of India, Bhutan, Nepal and the Himalayan hinterlands towards Tibet.  Then help train, educate and mentor the indigenous believers to become evangelists, pastors and teachers to plant churches whose members are actively reaching out to their communities by demonstrating the boundless love and compassion of Christ through various mercy ministries.

In this issue, Dawa presents their newest outreach: the establishment of a Child Learning and Social Centre which will help children trapped in their city’s red light district as sex slaves, be liberated and find a new, bright start in life.

Kazakhstan—Yermek Balykbekov— Update on His Life and Ministry

When I started my ministry journey twenty years ago, I had strong call to reach my Kazakh people with the Gospel. I joined an existent Kazakh Christian Fellowship where, in 2005, I became their pastor. In 2012, I joined the Word of Life, a Russian speaking church, where I was an overseer of the Kazakh speaking believers in the church.

Kazakhs are nomad Turkic people who was established as a nation in 16th century.  They are Muslims by faith and tradition.  In the late 18th century, Kazakhstan was conquered by the Russian Czarist Empire which in the early 19th century became the Soviet Union, till, in 1991, this communist regime collapsed.

Most of the Kazakhs were oppressed by the Russian regime and had nearly lost their identity as nation. My generation could hardly speak our native language, and knew less about our culture. So, concerning the Gospel, the Kazakhs consider it as a Russian Orthodox religion or Western culture that is not welcome by most.  The Lord spoke to many of Kazakh Christians to reach our people using our cultural approach and language. So we used that a lot and saw much fruit.

In the Fall of 2019, I was being led by the Spirit of God to step out and enter into a new phase of ministry.  I left the Russian speaking church and some of the Kazakh and Russian believers joined me.  Prior to this, the vision I had carried in my heart to see Kazakh people being saved and discipled through their own language and culture seemed to be “dead”.  But that was not in God’s plan.  In His time, He resurrects His own plans and purposes.  A new Christian Kazakh Fellowship was founded based on forming home churches with interpersonal relationships and discipleship.  That was a historical moment for us all.

My story of stepping out of the denominational boat and walking by faith on top of the water may sound very encouraging to some of you, but it is not without a cost to self, but it has been worth the struggle. During the last seven years I had been in a desperate situation in my ministry and I was ready to quit. It was like, you don’t see anything ahead of you; nothing was happening in ministry; nobody was getting saved, healed or delivered; the church members were occupied with and distracted by the worries of this world.  It was so discouraging and demotivating! But there was one thing I wasn’t ready to quit: Praying and having devotional time with the Lord.

After six months of stepping out of the boat and being persistent in prayer, God blessed us so much.  In spite of the Covid-19 Pandemic (March 2020) and Covid restrictions, we grew to planting several house churches in Kazakhstan, using social media. Now, we have six established churches, up to appr. 100 people online and offline. Presently, there are two churches which are about to be born in different regions. The head church which I am currently pastoring, is presently in Karaganda.

Yermek visiting a co-worker for the Gospel – Bridge partner Sargon in Ankara, Turkey.

As I have mentioned above, for almost two decades I was carrying the vision of reaching only Kazakh people, but in the last three years, the Lord has expanded my vision from Acts 1:8 to reach other nations. The interesting thing is, as I kept submitting to a new phase of God’s calling, more Turkic people came to salvation and became part of our church. So, we  don’t have “only Kazakh church” anymore but according to Isaiah 56:7, it’s the House of Prayer for All Nations.  As we reach out and serve people from all ethnic groups, salvation, healing and deliverance are taking place among them.  Recently, we baptized over 20 new people; almost all of them are ethnic Kazakhs and Uighurs.

Yermek visiting another team for the Gospel – Bridge partners Steve and Sophia Schmaltz in Tbilisi, Republic of Georgia.

Our first hub is in Karaganda, Central Kazakhstan. We have been praying about moving with my family to Almaty in Southern Kazakhstan to start an outreach hub there.  We believe it’s His will, just waiting for the right timing and the right doors to open. As preparation, this summer, (July and August), we have decided to visit Almaty. We are beginning to gather people who are on-line members of our movement and start a house church. It’s going to be like a try run. The Lord showed me that I need to step out of pastoral and step into the apostolic ministry to edify, equip and raise up believers to send out into the unreached areas.  This transition should take place within the next few years as we move to Almaty.
                         Pastor Yermek, Kingdom of God Ministry Kazakhstan (KGM KZ)

THE FIVE COUNTRIES OF CENTRAL ASIA

Central Asia includes the five republics of the former Soviet Union: Kazakhstan pop. 19 mill, Kyrgyzstan pop. 6.5 mill, Tajikistan pop. almost 10 il, Turkmenistan pop. 6.4 mill, and Uzbekistan pop. 35 mill – a total population of almost 77 mill.  Afghanistan pop. 40 mill, is at times included, bringing the population in Central Asa  close to 120 million.

Central Asia is historically tied to its nomadic, Turkish language-based peoples, of which there are 25 ethnic groups, and the Silk Road, which has acted as a crossroad for the movement of people, goods, and ideas between Europe, Western Asia, South Asia, and East AsiaIn the 3rd – 4th Centuries, the entire region was Christian, evangelized by Nestorian, Assyrian missionaries, but later Buddhism and Islam became the dominant religions. Today, there are approximately 4% Christians in Central Asia, including the Orthodox Church; the majority of the population are Muslims. Since the fall of the Soviet Union, there has been no major persecution of the Christian churches by the authorities; Uzbekistan perhaps being the most restrictive country.  However, the various governments have a number of confining rules for the churches who choose to be registered, limiting the scope or freedom for the believers in expressing their faith publicly. On the basis of that, at times, local authorities imprison Christian leaders.  That is one reason why many fellowship of believers choose to gather “underground” in home churches, away from the prying eyes of the authorities.

FROM R.K.’S CORNER

This year, we celebrate with one of our partners, Yermek Balykbekov and his family, 20 years of ministry to his Kazakh people.  It is a far distance in time from being a young Kazakh athlete, passionately training in Marshall Arts in Moscow, Russia with the hope of being selected to the Olympic team, till 20 years later— a more seasoned man, married with three children, the oldest already through college, but with the same passion, this time reaching his Kazakh people with the life transforming Gospel  of Jesus Christ!

We have had the privilege of watching Yermek faithfully walk this journey of faith—definitely not an easy road, but a rewarding one as he watches lives being changed by the power of the Holy Spirit while he is ministers to them.  You can also follow his journey by going to our website, click on Countries, Central Asia, Kazakhstan.

In this month’s issue of The Bridge Report, Yermek is summarizing these years, and sharing what the Lord is showing him about his future ministry.  If you want to honor Yermek and his family with a financial gift, please click on the yellow DONATE button to the top right on this website, and mark your donation  “8342 Kazakh Worker”.

Dawa Singye Bhutia: 2022 Ministry Report From the Himalayas

Dear Steve, R.K. and our Bridge Sponsors,

Warm greetings to you in the matchless name of our wonderful Lord and Savior Jesus Christ!  I am delighted to share with you what the Lord has done in and through my life and ministry in the year 2022 for His glory and the extension of His Kingdom. I thank God for using this earthen vessel for His divine purpose in the Himalayas in India, Nepal and many other nations.

I also take this opportunity to thank you and express my heartfelt gratitude for your constant prayers, encouragement and financial support for my family and ministry. Without your precious partnership and support, it would not have been possible for me to reach the unreached and the lost with the message of hope and life eternal in Christ Jesus.

Thank you again for all your love and support for what we have been doing in this part of the globe for God’s Kingdom. My sincere prayer is that the Lord Almighty will continue to bless you and make you a channel of blessings for His Kingdom. I pray and believe that God will give us a bountiful harvest of souls in the days to come.

Yours sincerely in Christ, Dawa Singye Bhutia

Personal Evangelism

We keep on reaching the unreached and the lost people with the Good News of Jesus Christ through personal evangelism. Many people have heard the Gospel message and some of them have made the decision to accept Jesus Christ as their personal Lord and Savior.

Pastoral Ministry, Church Planting and Leadership Training

I have been shepherding New Creation Fellowship in Siliguri as the Senior Pastor and extending the church planting movement with our church members and leaders.

In the churches in Nepal, Bhutan, India and other places we train young men and women in various types of ministries and leadership roles, like evangelism, church planting, mission work and second level leadership. So far, hundreds of young men and women have been trained and then sent to the remoter and unreached areas with the Gospel and planting of churches.

Social Concerns

We met the needs of the poor, elderly and sick with the love of Christ. During Covid-19 and lockdowns we brought and distributed provision into a variety of communities among those who had lost their jobs, resulting in lack of food and basic needs. We especially brought basic relief aid into the Tea Gardens which were shut down by the company for a long time, and distributed school stationeries and toiletries to the needy children in the slums.

Reaching the Children with the Love of Christ

We gave daily free private tuition and daily meals for the poor and underprivileged children in the areas where parents can not afford to send them to regular school.

Rural Evangelists Training in Solukhumbu, Nepal

We have been working and training rural evangelists in one of the most remote and least reached regions of the Himalayas in Nepal. Many rural evangelists have been trained for the work of mission to reach the unreached and the lost souls for Christ. Every year we conduct this kind of training to train and equip the local believers and leaders to reach their unreached in their communities and neighbors, friends and families.

Praying for and Counseling People

During my travels, I visit and meet many people suffering from various kinds of sicknesses and diseases and facing all different kinds of problems and issues in their lives. I pray for them and give them the message of hope, unconditional love and new life in Christ Jesus our Savior.

Present Outreach

It gives me great joy and pleasure to share the excitements of the Short Term Mobile Bible Training all the way from the Tanahu District of West Nepal. The participants were the Pastors and Leaders from the different districts of Nepal.  The 4th Batch of the Mobile Training program was conducted from the 26th of January to 12th of February 2023. 29 leaders participated in the training from various districts consisting from Gorkha, Chitwan, Kathmandu, Sarlahi to different areas of Tanahu.

We were so pleased to see the transformation of lives and hear the testimonies by the participants, full of zeal and passion expressing they will continue to joyfully serve in the Kingdom of God!

Prayer Points

  1. Please pray for God’s guidance and protection in my family and ministry.
  2. Pray for us as we continue to reach the unreached and the lost people groups with the glorious message of the Gospel in the most remote and spiritually dark places of the Himalayas.
  3. Pray that our ministry will be more effective and fruitful in the days to come.

    FROM R.K.’S CORNER

    Some of you who have been with us for a while are familiar with Dawa Singye Bhutia and his ministry in the Himalayas from India, Bhutan, Nepal to the rural mountainous hinterland between India and Tibet, populated with a variety of small, ethnic minorities.

    For background information on Dawa, his family and ministry Himalayan Good News Networking Ministry, you will find the three prior stories on our The Bridge website banner above under  COUNTRIES—ASIA—HIMALAYAS

    In a world full of despair and darkness, in spite of much resistance,  Dawa and his team are fully committed to keep bringing the Light and Hope of Jesus Christ, our living Savior, to those who are hungry for truth and righteousness!  He and his team are a great investment of your finances and prayers for the Kingdom of God!

Kathy Veach Omer – Missionary to Thailand

Bloom Where You Are Planted! 

What does a missionary do when you can no longer serve in the land of your heart? What happens when you must come back home and you face great physical challenges, disappointments, spiritual warfare, and great sorrow? Is God still in control?

Indeed, He is! If we are His servants, and we solely look to Him for guidance and provisions, then a CLOSED door is as much His direction as an OPEN door. I agree with Abraham’s servant who was charged with finding a wife for Isaac among Abraham’s people. He was able to complete the task charged him and he gave glory the God: “I, being in the way, the Lord led me.” (Genesis 24:27)

I also believe that if we are totally sold out to being used by our heavenly Father and we completely trust His sovereign will, then the path that He places before us is where we must begin walking by faith. By seeking His will through prayer, He will show us. Step by step by step! (Isaiah 30:21)

I began my missionary service as a young woman in my twenties, blessed with a growing family of four children while my husband and I worked to plant a church, and share the Gospel in the country of Thailand. Sadly, years later, we had a tragedy in my family that left me a single mom with four young children.

My twin sister, Karen – she with her husband, Tom are my best friends and supporters!

Upon my return to America in 1997, I made my home in Florida, and by His grace, raised my young family in the Lord. I taught elementary, then secondary school in a Christian school, became a Ladies’ Sunday School teacher, and taught and counseled children and youth on Wednesday nights for many years.

When my children, one by one completed college, and started their own lives and families, my heart led me back again to Thailand (2014), to serve with Compassionate Hope Foundation, (CHF), founded by Dr Al Henson from Antioch Tennessee.  This Foundation rescues children from human trafficking, and places children at risk in CHF Homes of Hope in Thailand, Laos, and the Philippines. CHF also ministers to the persecuted believers, and families of martyrs, builds Christian schools and plants churches in the Homes, and trains national leaders.

For several years I absolutely loved working with these beautiful Thai children in the Homes in Northern Thailand, mentoring leaders, and being an educational consultant. Then in February 2020, a visa problem took me back to America. Although I had obtained a new visa within a few short weeks, and was preparing to head back to the Mission Field, the door was closed to return to Thailand because of Covid! The Lord went ahead of me and had, unbeknown to me, led me to safety back in America.

Then I prayed, ” Lord, open doors to ministry where you have planted your servant back in America!” I spent much time in the Word of God, and in prayer, also writing Bible lessons for women, teens, and children (Psalm 119:133). I communicated with loved ones and brothers and sisters in Christ while on lockdown.

People were just beginning to travel again in 2021, and I let pastors from several states know that I was available to serve in their church, be it teaching Sunday School, Junior Church, Awana, Youth group, Christian School Chapels, speaking in any of the church services sharing missions, and soul-winning. One pastor even invited me to go into a community, knocking on doors, to give the Gospel, and to invite families to church at a time when not many were opening their doors to strangers! I knocked on 84 doors that time, and had the opportunity to share the Gospel on the doorstep of 64 homes! Only God!! I believe that this is my reasonable service (Romans 12:1). Several pastors invited me to come teach, and helped supply my travel needs. From Vacation Bible School, Children’s Camps, Ladies Retreats, Ladies’ Bible Studies, to visiting in hospitals and rehabs, there was always an open door to serve Jesus, present His Truth, and encourage my fellow brothers and sisters in Christ!

Whenever I wasn’t traveling, I would go out daily in my community and share the Gospel along the way. At the bank, in EVERY store, grocery shopping, at a restaurant, or out on an errand…wherever my day took me, THAT’S where I opened my mouth, and proclaimed Christ! Since I live in an area where there are 5 beaches closeby, I would hit the boardwalk and the sand, passing out Gospel tracts to the young people and striking up conversations about Jesus! So much fun!

I came out of the hospital in a wheelchair – weak, but ALIVE!

THEN, sadly, I contracted Covid in Montana in May of 2021, and almost died there. The team of doctors told my family that I would most likely not make it, and that they needed to prepare for my death. My family prayed fervently for 10 days, and the Lord graciously answered their prayers! After being unconscious for many days, I woke up to a Christian nurse praying over me. When she left the room, I looked towards Heaven, praying, “Lord, am I dying?! I am ready to meet you, but I think that I have still a LOT of work left to do for you! There are many who do not know you and I want to be able to tell them! Please, let your servant live!” As I spent more days in the hospital recovering, I put dozens of Gospel tracts on my table and invited medical personnel that came and went to take one. I witnessed to my doctors, nurses, technicians, and aids. I left the hospital in a wheelchair, weak, but ALIVE! My family lovingly helped me to recover for several months. God’s clear message was that He was not done with me yet!

That fall of 2021, I went to go visit my 82 year-old aunt’s farm in Arkansas and helped her with farm chores, at the same time that I was helping my evangelist brother teach and build up a local country church there. I spoke in some area churches, and went street- preaching with my brother in Little Rock. He walked up and down the main street with his Bible, boldly sharing verses and preaching the way of salvation, while I passed out Gospel tracts to the people I met who were interested in his message. Several people came to believe and receive Christ! (Mark 16:15) We ministered to and fed the homeless, and had great fellowship together! Once, after several weeks of prayer, he preached the Gospel and we witnessed outside of a witch and warlock conference for 5 hours! There was great spiritual warfare, and our lives were threatened three times, but the Lord intervened and rescued us! (Ephesians 6:12)

Unfortunately, I suffered two injuries on the farm that would take the rest of 2021, and half of 2022 to recover! I got a wound in the right heel of my foot and it got seriously infected. That led to the emergency room, a wound care doctor, and then wound care several times a week back in Florida for many months! The second wound is that I injured my left shoulder, which led to much suffering, until I had to have physical therapy for seven months. Throughout both those ordeals, I had the opportunity to share my love for Christ with many therapists and technicians! The next physical challenge was that I had to take care of some varicose veins. I had ongoing treatments in both legs, which gave me some pain, swelling, and inflammation. Yet, at least 10 people in that doctor’s office have heard that Jesus loves them! The Lord continues to teach me through adversity (Psalm 119:71).

Tragedy struck on my birthday, on June 24th. My Thai “adopted” 40-year-old daughter passed into eternity! I had closely mentored her as a Christian leader for the last eight years, first while I was in Thailand, and then every day on the phone since I have been in America. She contracted a rare, deadly disease and was in the arms of Jesus within a few days! Though I continue to mourn and grieve this precious daughter, she left a huge impact for Christ in the lives of many!

All throughout the time that I have been back in the States, I have mentored 20 young people on a daily/weekly basis in four countries (Thailand, Laos, the Philippines, & America).  We communicate via social media and I mentor, encourage, share Bible truths, help solve conflict, give instruction, pray with, and counsel. So every morning and every evening, sometimes into wee morning hours (due to the time difference) I am busy about my Father’s work in mentoring the younger generations in serving the Lord! What a blessing to me! Even though I so long to return to Thailand, the Lord has enabled me to continue part of my ministry through social media! The three typical topics that I mentor are: (1) How to overcome evil with good, (2) How to apply Biblical truth to our daily lives and ministry, (as culture can make it quite challenging!) and (3) How to listen and obey the Holy Spirit.

In July, I had the amazing opportunity of going to spend 10 days at Bancroft Bible Camp in Tennessee and had an incredible time teaching the children twice a day about Biblical Heroes of the Faith. Four children accepted Christ!

Last Sunday, I taught a children’s class at church on Ephesians 6:10-17, where the Christian is instructed to put on the Armor of Christ so that we can fight against the fiery darts of the wicked one! In my lesson, we placed each piece of the armor on a child to demonstrate how we can boldly stand for Jesus!

This month, August, I am visiting my three grandchildren in Tennessee, and their mother, my oldest daughter, will travel with me to Montana as my youngest daughter will be having her first baby! I have 100 Gospel tracts already packed in my purse to give to those we meet along the way. I believe that the Lord’s servants should be ready to give an answer for the reason of the hope within! (I Peter 3:15) Our hope is in Christ and the world needs this message!

Lord willing, I hope to obtain a Retirement Visa back to Thailand in November. Please pray for His open doors! Upon my return to Thailand with CHF, I will continue to mentor female leaders, teach the Word of God in Thai, love the children, be an educational consultant for Thai teachers in the Homes, and encourage brothers and sisters in the ministry! In the future, I will be visiting many of our 60+ Homes of Hope, encouraging leaders and children alike, and serving in every way I can.

Being here in America for close to three years has only been a “pitstop” intending to strengthen my faith through trials, challenges, and loss, all to conform me into the image of His dear son, Jesus Christ. Truly, each of us CAN bloom where God plants us! We must have an attitude of gratitude, (Philippians 4:11-12), faith that overcomes doubt and fear, (Philippians 4:6-7), and a desire to be desperately used of God! (Psalm 119:2). EVEN IF I would be unable to return to serve in my beloved Thailand, I know that my Lord still has plans for me! (Philippians 1:6; 2:13)

So I have learned that no matter where I am in my walk of faith, or what country I am in, to keep my eyes glued to my Savior, my heart in tune with the Holy Spirit, and my mouth ready to boldly proclaim the mystery of the Gospel (Ephesians 6:19). In this way, I seek to use EVERY opportunity HE sends me. As Abraham’s servant said, we also can say, “I, being in the way, the Lord led me!”

From R.K.’s Corner

The two last years of Covid shutdowns have caused massive unforeseen changes in the world we used to know and live in.  One sad consequence are the many Western missionaries, many of whom have lived and served the nations well with the Gospel for decades, were forced to leave the field and return to their homelands. For many it was unexpected, they were therefore unprepared to start a new life back home. My heart goes out to those who with their families are struggling to find their place in the present secular culture so different from the one in which they grew up.

One missionary who did not miss a beat, is Kathy Omer returning home from Thailand. We introduced her to you in the July 2018 Bridge Report. https://www.bridgeinternational.org/2018/07/

Kathy has the gifts of an evangelist and mentor.  She found an open mission field in the United States, and she jumped right in. To be an encouragement to others, I have given her this issue to share her heart.

Tajikistan / Kyrgyzstan—Rustam and Zamira Serving Families with the Love of Jesus

RUSTAM: I was born on December 24, 1982 in the city of Dushanbe, Tajikistan.  I had a very difficult childhood.  We were five children, but when my parents fell into despair because of unemployment, my father became very aggressive and began drinking.  When he was drunk he was violent and beat us.  Often, we did not have bread at home because Dad drank away all the money.   Often as a little boy at 5:00 am I would I leave my home and walk through the garbage heaps in the city looking for something to eat.   When my mother contracted tuberculosis we were removed from our home by the authorities and placed in an orphanage. I was five years old. 

Four years later I ran away from the orphanage and ended up in the streets.  While a street kid, Civil War broke out in my country, resulting in severe famine.  I experienced first hand the horror of war.  I saw many dead people in the streets, both men, women and children; even a pregnant woman was killed right in front of me.  I did not understand why people were killing and doing terrible things to each other!  Later my siblings and I returned home and lived there for a while.

Then, my older sister came to know about a church nearby.  During the visit she heard the Gospel and became the first in my family to believe in Jesus Christ.  She then asked me to join her. We began attending the church regularly, and  gradually I came to faith in Jesus Christ.  Learning that God loves me and is my heavenly Father brought me much happiness.

When my Dad found out that we were attending a Christian church, he beat us furiously.  We were Muslims and believing in another god than Allah was illegal.  So, we fled home, again and sought shelter at the church.  We still loved our Dad very much, and would at times visit my parents and pray for them.  I would cry over the fact that we could not live together, but my Dad insisted that we were no more his children.

On October 1, 2000, a tragedy took place in our church.  More than 350 believers were gathered for worship service.  Suddenly, during the collection two bombs exploded among the people in the midst of the sanctuary.  It was carried out by Islamic radicals.  Just before the explosion, I had gone to the bathroom so I was not in my seat when one of the bombs went off, only two meters from where I had been sitting! I miraculously survived but there were 11 dead and 48 wounded among my brothers and sister in Christ.  One brother who was my friend died right there. The church survived—to the Glory of God, and became stronger and grew, as we kept fasting and praying.  

I had a deep desire to play the guitar and God helped me quickly learn how to play correctly. After a while I began to play in a worship group and kept praising God for this gift.  Later, I started two courses in the church for those interested in learning to play the guitar; many joined and became quite good.  We began the study sessions with praying and sharing the Word of God with each other. As time went on we also began studying and learning the Word together.  I led two groups, one for young men and one for young women.

A young woman by the name of Zamira joined to learn to play the guitar.  I liked her, and gradually we became friends. She knew the Lord and had attended the church before we met; actually, her whole family were believers in Christ.  After a while, we began praying for our future children and ministry.  In 2009, we were married, and a short time after we moved to the capital city of Bishkek in Kyrgyzstan.  We have a daughter, Sevinch and a son, Daniyar.  

Many years ago, I dreamed of having a good family and a good ministry.  Today, the Lord has fulfilled everything that I dreamed of.  He has given me a good wife in Zamira.
We do what we love doing among the Kyrgyz, Kurds, Gypsies and Russians peoples: serving with the love of Jesus widows, orphans, families, and parents who have lost their jobs. 

The Lord has given Zamira the gift of healing.  When she prays and lays hands on the sick, people often receive physical healing, which demonstrates God’s power and love to the unbelievers and encourages the faith of the believers. My dream is that as many orphans of widows and families as possible learn about Jesus Christ and accept Him as a personal Savior in their hearts.  Thank you brothers and sister for your prayers and love for us and our people!

ZAMIRA:  I was born in 1984 as one of four children to a Muslim family in the capital city of Dushanbe, Tajikistan.  My  parents were devout Muslims, so we learned the Surah from the Qur’an at an early age and knew the entire biography of the Prophet Muhammad.  Every night we would gather to recall what we had learned from the Qur’an.  The required 40 day fasting according to Muslim custom was also part of our lives.

Then, in 1998, the Lord Jesus revealed Himself to me. My classmate from school brought a few Christian pamphlets to my home.  She told  me she had left Islam and had accepted a different faith, in Christ and was going to a place called church to worship her new god.  At the time, my family had trouble, so I thought that perhaps reading these pamphlets would help me cope. 

I locked myself in my room and secretly began reading the booklets.  Something happened to me as I read that Jesus loved me and what a good God He is. The presence of God filled me with such an overwhelming sense of the awareness that He loved me personally that I began crying and I kept saying, “You are so kind, so very kind, Jesus. I want to believe in a God like You, I want  to accept You as my Savior.”   I knelt and prayed the prayer of repentance printed at the end of one of the booklets and simply invited Jesus Christ into my heart.

From that day on, big changes took place in my life.  The Lord Jesus is never late, He comes on time. He found me and came to me, as His mission is to seek and find the lost.

The Bible promises that you and your whole house will be saved. I told my mother and sisters about Jesus and I gave them the same pamphlets I had read. They began to read I prayed to Jesus for them.  One by one, each of my family members accepted Jesus as their Lord and Savior. A joy we had never known before filled our home. Now smiles and happiness became part of our lives.

In 2000, I began attending church. One Sunday, I missed church.  I later learned that that day there had been an explosion in our church and I realized that the Lord Jesus had saved me from the disaster. He is our great Protector! In 2001, our entire family was baptized.

I told my grandmother about Jesus.  At the time she was a Muslim who faithfully read the prayers in Arabic from the three books of the Qur’an which had been left by my grandfather who had been a Great Mullah.  When I told my grandmother about Christ and that God loves her very much, she listened very carefully. In the evenings, when I read the Bible to her, the Holy Spirit touched her and she would cry. Her leg and knee were painful.  The day she agreed to pray with me, her leg was healed. She accepted Jesus as her Lord!


I  began serving the church in a worship group. There were courses in the church to learn how to play the guitar. I really wanted to learn how to play that instrument, so I joined the group.
The instructor was a young guy named Rustam.  He later became my husband.  In his testimony here, Rustam describes the events that brought us together.  We have two children.

FROM R.K.’S CORNER

In this issue I am presenting you with a young couple  from the country of Tajikistan.  Rustam and Zamira Kazakbaev are serving the Lord among their own people in Tajikistan, as well among others in Kyrgyzstan, the country in which they currently live.

In June and July, 2014, I visited Central Asia  and participated in the joyous celebration of Agape Evangelical Center’s 25th Anniversary in Almaty, Kazakhstan with whom we have partnered since its inception, and also visited one of our other partners, Yermek Balykbekov in the city of Karaganda.  Then, I had a few days in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan where I met with a few Afghan refugees we had been helping.  There I was introduced to Rustam and Zamira, who invited me to stay in their home for the duration of the visit.   There was an immediate rapport, a kindred spirit between us.   I was impressed by their strong testimonies of faith, their humility, clarity and simplicity in following Jesus’ commandments to love and serve the unlovely, the poor, the hurting, the marginalized communities ignored by the world. With much joy, I share their life stories with you!  If you want to financially support the ministry of Rustam and Zamira, please  mark your donation: 8347 Kyrgyzstan Workers.  Thank You!

BRIEF DATA ON TAJIKISTAN AND KYRGYSTAN

TAJIKISTAN is a country in Central Asia surrounded by Afghanistan, China, Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan .  Tajikistan has the smallest amount of land among the five Central Asian states, but in terms of elevation it has the highest mountains of any other country in the region, with nine-tenths of the territory being mountainous, half reaching over  10,000 ft above sea level.  It is the poorest country in the region.  Dushanbe is the capital city.  In 1991, Tajikistan became an independent sovereign nation as the Soviet Union collapsed.  Almost immediately after independence, a civil war broke out between ethnic groups, lasting five years, causing much death and destruction. Since then, some political stability was reached, but under the present authoritarian regime led by President Emomali Rahmon who has been in power since 1994, there is still extensive corruption and widespread violations of human rights, including torture, arbitrary imprisonment, worsening political repression, and a lack of religious and other civil liberties. The Tajiks speak a form of a Persian based language.  In a population of nearly 10 million, 98% are Muslims, so the small communities of Christians face hardship and persecution.

KYRGYZSTAN borders to Tajikistan, to Kazakhstan and the other countries mentioned above.  It is also mountainous with one third of the country having peaks above  10,000 ft above sea level.  It is also regarded as one of the poorer countries in the region. The population is appr. 5 million with Bishkek as the capital city. Kyrgyz, which is Turkish based, is the officially spoken language.  Situated at the crossroads of several great ancient civilizations along the Silk Road with other commercial routes, it has a history which spans a variety of ancient cultures and empires.  In 1991, it won independence from the Soviet Union.   In 2021, the government embraced a presidential system.  It has a history of enduring ethnic conflicts, revolts, economic troubles, transitional governments and political conflict. There is a measure of religious freedom, with 90% of the population being Muslim and 7% adhering the Christian faith.



Bahram – an Afghan’s Journey to Faith in Jesus

My Family

My younger brother and me in Herat

I was born in the city of Herat in Afghanistan, located close to the Iranian and Turkmenistan borders.  My father is a doctor. I am the oldest of six, five brothers and one little sister.

One evening in 2010, my father was kidnapped by a terrorist group within the Taliban.  They broke into our home and took him away by force. In the morning, they leveled accusations against him:  He was working on a military base for the government and his salary paid by them, was not Halal (covered by Muslim law).  They sent a message to our family, “Your father is with us, if you want him back alive, you must pay us $40,000.”  At the time we did not have that kind of money, as my father had just spent his resources on building our family a new house. But, like a miracle, as neighbors and friends heard about our situation, during the next few days they came together and collected $35,000 among themselves which we offered as ransom.

The Taliban kept my father for three days while they tortured him, but eventually they accepted the ransom, although they misled my brother by guiding him to three false addresses before he finally found him.  My father was badly hurt, but did survive.  The two men in charge of the kidnapping were arrested by the government forces; one was sentences to 20 years, the other 15 years imprisonment.  Shortly after that, our family began receiving threatening phone calls from the Taliban, even from Pakistan and Saudi Arabia.

They were ordering my father to go to the Judge and talk with him to insist that the two guys charged was a mistake, that they were innocent as a matter of wrong identity.

But the government knew they had the right men, as they were part of the Taliban leadership, so the kidnappers remained in prison. Our family kept being harassed, so we decided to move from our new home to another part of town, thinking we would be safer.

One morning as my father opened the front gate to go to work,  he saw an object fastened to the gate.  It turned out to be bomb.  He contacted the authorities who came and deactivated it.  Other times when I answered the phone the voice would say, “We will kill your whole family!” We contacted the Judge, the government authorities, the offices of the foreign NGOs and the United Nations office and asked for protection, but they all stated it would not be possible. Therefore we left our city and moved to another city, Mazar-e-Sharif, located near the borders of Uzbekistan and Tajikistan, hoping our lives would be better.

Studies and Work on Military Base

We had a financial problem since we  needed to repay the funds our friends and neighbors had given us for the ransom.  So, as I began my university studies, my father also found me a job at a very large ISO international military base containing foreign troops from many different countries.  I was assigned to the Project German Training Team. The first three months I cleaned the barracks.  Later, I was entrusted a better job as security guard inside the camp. I shared room with an Afghani German translator, and we became very good friends.

One day, one of my friend’s German trainers told him that his father would come on a visit for a week from Germany—could he spend some time with him and help with interpretation?  He agreed and asked me to help when he took the guest around Kabul to show him around.  On the last day, as we took the guest to the airport, we expected to be paid for our time, but to our disappointment, he did not give us any monetary compensation, he just handed my friend a book as a gift.

The Book

The Bible in the Farsi language

My friend was very angry, feeling he had waisted a whole week for nothing, as he was used to be paid well a professional interpreter.  I suggested, perhaps the German had placed money inside the book, so when we arrived back to our room, we carefully examined it, but found nothing, so my friend threw the book on the table and walked away.  I had a thought, “What if the book is of more value than money?”  We removed the top book jacket, and to our horror found it was Injeel (the Bible). “Oh, no”, my friend exclaimed, “this is not a gift, this is not a book – it is a bomb! If anyone find we have a Bible in our room, we will be killed before we can explain where the book came from!” In Afghanistan it is a death sentence to have a Bible, as all Muslims are taught the Bible is corrupt and will pervert the reader. We were very afraid that night, so we hid the book.  We were curious, so after a week, I suggested we read the book to find out how the Christians pray. My friend opened the book and began reading from the beginning.  The Old Testament with the story about the creation was very interesting, as much is the same as in the Qur’an, although the names and places are different.  In the Qur’an a verse states: ”I believe in God, I believe in all the books of God which tells us about Injeel I believe in the Prophet I believe in the day of Resurrection”, so I told my friend, “Since it mentions Injeel, it’s okay to read this Bible, even though it is corrupted.”

Comparing the Bible with the Qur’an

After 4-5 months of reading, we came to the New Testament.  My friend read  the Gospel of John 1:1, “In the beginning was the Word, the Word was with God, the Word was God!”  That reminded me what I had read as a child in the Qur’an’s Book of Miriam (Mary) that Gabriel, God’s angel, came to Miriam with the Word of God, that God’s Spirit would come and give her a son, who would be called Isa (Jesus). 

The Qur’an in the Arabic language

This became very interesting as we saw the connection between the two books. We decided to begin comparing the Bible with the Qur’an. Since we did not know Arabic very well, I was able to get the Qur’an in my own language, Farsi.  At night after everybody was asleep, my friend would read the Bible, I would read the Qur’an, and we compared the two.

This continued till I found written in Surah al-Ma’idah Third Book of Qur’an all the miracles Jesus did.  It also states that He was not crucified but was taken into heaven and will come back on Judgement Day and judge the infidels.  It hit me that it’s neither Allah, nor Muhammed who will come and judge on Judgement Day—but Jesus!  Another story in the Qur’an impacting us, was when Muhammed was ill in bed, and his disciples came to him and asked him, “O, Prophet, what will happen to you when you die?” Muhammed answered, ”I don’t know where I am going – heaven or hell.”
So—all this time we had been following the Prophet who is promising us Heaven, but does not have a clue where he is going himself?  On the other hand, in the Bible’s New Testament, we read that Jesus not only promises us eternal life, but He was resurrected and ascended into Heaven where He now sits and prays for us.  Muhammad also writes that, if you have doubt about the revelations, go and ask the people of the Book, which means Christians and Jews, because they have the Injeel, which means the Light.

At this point my friend said, “Much which is written in the Qur’an is in the Bible, but in the Bible Jesus says we shall love another, even our enemies.”  As an Afghan-German interpreter,  my friend would go with many troops on different missions in Afghanistan.  One day, the Taliban captured one of his close friends and cut his head off in front of  his eyes, and while they did that, they were reading words from the Qur’an. He thought, “I am tired of killings and hatred.  I think I found a new way.  I don’t know what or how I should do this.” So, he simply prayed, “I believe you Jesus, I believe the Bible, please forgive my sins.”

Finding a New Way

Bahram sharing his testimony

After that, my friend told me he had now found a new way.  I watched him for a week to see if he would be punished or die—instead I saw him so happy and radiant, “I feel free and I have now contact with God, I can talk directly with Him without having to read in Arabic.” After a while, I wanted the same experience. I asked Jesus to come into my life.  For one year, we lived in Afghanistan as believers. No one knew, which was okay.

On October 1, 2013, we were praying late and my friend forgot to hide the Bible. One of our coworkers found it.  He reported us to his father, who was one of the leaders at the local Mosque.  They visited my friend’s mom, threatened her, and had her call us and command us to go to the Mosque to repent.

The Escape

We knew they would kill us, not only because we had changed religion, but also because we had been working with foreigners at a military camp.   We decided to escape.  We packed up some clothes and money and left during the night for the neighboring country, Tajikistan.  At the border town we hid in a hotel for three days, waiting for a friend to get us our passports and a visa to get into Russia.  But it was too late.  The Taliban was looking for us and had blocked our passports. They published our pictures on the local TV news, everybody was looking for us.

Finally, we came across a taxi driver who was willing to drive us to the Russian border for $1,500. We gave him almost all the money we had, and he drove us across the Afghan border into Tajikistan, and continued driving for one day till we crossed the Kyrgyzstan border.  There he stopped and demanded more money—which we did not have—to drive us all the way to Russia. He dumped us in the middle of nowhere with no money, no food, no visas, no passports.   

Bahram with fellow student in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan

Another taxi drove by. For the remainder of our money, $55.00 he picked us up and drove us a few miles and  dropped us off at the UNHCR (refugee branch of the U.N.)  There, we were told they could not help us because Kyrgyzstan is a Muslim country.  We would be sent back to our country.  They put us up for two weeks in a shelter, but without food.  Eventually, they contacted the Kyrgyz immigration authorities and they brought us to the capital of Bishkek and asked us to go to the Afghan Embassy and get identification cards, which we did not, since they would have reported us back to the Taliban, and we would have been deportet back to Afghanistan.

The Miracle of Healing

The first night in Bishkek, we sat on a bench, and suddenly I had excruciating, unbearable pain in one of my kidneys.   My friend thought I was dying and tried to get me into a hospital, but since I had no money, they refused to treat me.   I don’t know what happened, but I began to pray for myself, then my friend prayed for me.  I fell asleep, and when I awoke, there was no more pain as I passed a kidney stone. That was the first miracle I experienced!

In Bishkek, we were passed around to different agencies, from the UNHCR, the local immigration office, the Human Rights office who gave us a place to stay, but again without food.  We did not know anyone nor speak the language.

The Waiting Time – Learning, Growing, Maturing in Faith

Graduation with Diploma from Keiin College in Bishkek.

We thought, perhaps we should look for a church, and we found an Russians Orthodox church.  When we went inside, we met another Afghan man and woman who also were refugees.  They invited us to their home and fed us, and we stayed there for 10 days.  We learned that a kind woman in America, R.K. from The Bridge International was helping them, so we were introduced to her on Skype.  R.K. also helped both my friend and me, and began regularly sending funds through the Afghan we had met, to help support us.  We learned later, that this Afghan posing as a Christian brother was dishonest.  He  withheld the money R.K. sent to us and took it for himself, then lied to her that we had received it.  She stayed in touch with us and tried to help us in our situation.

R.K. contacted German officials, informing them that one of their translators was stranded in Kyrgyzstan.  They responded, so in 2014, my friend got a visa to move to Germany, where he is doing well. I was refused the German SIV, so I remained in Kyrgyzstan.  In the Spring of 2014, R.K. came to Kyrgyzstan, where I met her in person.

Christian Student Conference in Bishkek

I lived in Kyrgyzstan another five years, where God opened many doors for fellowship—via the International Church, foreign mission organizations, individual missionaries and local believer who demonstrated the real love of the Body of Christ.  Several  assisted with the college tuition, and R.K. also helped me during this time.  I graduated with a degree in Business Management.  Simultaneously, I  studied the Word of God, and began sharing my faith among Muslims from many countries using the Qur’an as a door opener to point to ISA—Jesus, God’s Son, the Savior of the World! I became the  leader of the International  Christian Student Fellowship.  I know God kept me in Kyrgyzstan for those years to teach, train, and mature me in the faith to be a witness for Him to my people, and Muslims in other places!

Leading Youth Camp in Kyrgyzstan

Christian Fellowship in Bishkek

Immigration to Canada  

My first Job in Canada

An American Missionary, James Hutchington and his family, helped me a lot.  He presented my case to the pastor of a Canadian church, who was visiting Bishkek.  After being interviewed, they decided to sponsor my immigration to Canada.  Through a long, difficult process, in 2019 my visa was approved. I moved to Manitoba where I now live, work, fellowship, and learning the Western way of life!

FROM R.K.’s CORNER

At this moment in time, you need no introduction to the nation of Afghanistan.  Due to the retreat of American troops and the fall of the country, including the capital of Kabul, to the Taliban, an internationally recognized terrorist group, the news media on a daily basis are filled 24-7 with reports from the tragic events unfolding in Afghanistan.
In the mid 1990’s, I had the privilege of personally becoming acquainted with a community of 2000 Afghan refugees living in Kazakhstan.  The Bridge helped  them establish a grade school for their children, where they were taught in their own language, through their own culture while living in diaspora. I came to love this beautiful, poetic mountain people, tragically trapped today by the evil ideology of Taliban’s extreme Islamic terrorism.
               In 2013, I was introduced to four Afghan refugees who had fled Afghanistan to Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan. The Bridge helped them while waiting to settle elsewhere.
               Bahram Aira is one of them, now living in Canada.  He has a powerful testimony which might help us understand the reality of what is happening in his home country; also how the power of God’s Word enlightens and transforms a soul and heart, even in a follower of Islam!

PLEASE PRAY FOR PEACE, SAFETY AND PROVISION FOR THE PEOPLE IN AFGHANISTAN AND THAT MANY MAY EXPERIENCE TRUE PEACE BY COMING TO FAITH IN HIM –  WHO IS THE PRINCE OF PEACE!