From Norway to the United States of America—Faith, Immigration, Culture and Politics

A Personal Testimony from R.K. Ulrich

On September 11 at 9:50 am—at that moment when the second terrorist plane hit the second tower in New York 19 years ago—I stood with 19 other foreigners in the local US Immigration Office Hall and cited the Oath of Allegiance to the United States of America.  I became a naturalized U.S. citizen after living as a legal alien in this country for 47 years!  It was an awesome moment, one I had seriously contemplated for a long time.  What stood out from the Oath, was the sentence, “that I will support and defend the Constitution and laws of the United States of America against all enemies, foreign and domestic.”

The timing, down to the date, hour and the minutes was historic, as I could sense God by His sovereignty guiding me through the decades of life to that precise moment in time.  I was watching Ephesians 2:10 unfold, “For we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus unto good works, which God prepared beforehand that we should walk in them.” An added, unexpected blessing was that last year, the Norwegian Parliament  ratified a new law, allowing Norwegians to obtain dual citizenship–I am now a citizen of both USA and Norway!

“Why did you wait so long? Why now?” many of my perplexed friends are asking, “just as this country is descending into chaos, with the burning of cities, riots, hate, and violence becoming the daily state of affairs in many parts of the country?”  My answer is, “Precisely now!”  To help you understand, please allow me to take you with me on a brief journey through a few of the main highlights in my life which have shaped me, and given me perspective on the current events in this country.

Norwegian flag.

Hitler’s Nazi Army invaded and occupied Norway for the duration of World War II (1940-45). At that time my parents lived near Trondheim, the 3rd  largest city in the country, where three of their four children were born.  I was the last one born before the end of the war.

The war had left Norway in ruins, and to provide for his growing family, my father found a secure job as the pulp factory’s Financial Director in Follafoss, a remote, picturesque industrial village, nestled between mountains at a fjord with a population of a little more than 600.  A paradise for children, my siblings and I freely and carefree roamed and played in the vast expanse of pristine nature, but the life of my parents was difficult, as it was for all families, due to the scars of war and scarcity of all things which marred everyday life.

In early nineteen hundreds,  Follafoss was industrialized with a pulp factory and a hydro-electric power plant built by a rough tumble group of itinerant construction workers from Sweden called «Rallare». They were known for their hard work, hard living, heavy drinking, and a strong belief in Communism’s Marxist ideology, which included the denial of God’s existence.  I am told that when the Bolshevik Revolution took place in Russia in 1917, several of  the men left Follafoss and fought side by side with the Russian proletarians in overthrowing their government, ushering in the “utopian New World Order.”

My parents were  well educated, independent thinkers (my father was also  an accomplished pianist) who probably today would have been considered  Libertarians.  They believed in individual freedom with responsibility, the value of education and the Christian faith and ethics were foundational in our home.  Having suffered through the war, they were nationalists, knowing all too well the cost and value of freedom and love for our country. We were different, and my parents made it crystal clear to us children that we were NOT Atheists, Communists, nor Socialists!

At sixteen, as was customary for rural children pursuing higher education, I left home and became a pre-college high-school student in the city of  Trondheim.  There, I was introduced to the seemingly glittering brave new world, beckoning with its secular humanism and fascinating philosophies. I fully embraced them, and declared myself an atheist. Four years later my world view bubble burst when I was drawn into occultism and encountered a dark, very different spiritual world, far different from the Christian faith from which I had come.

At twenty, I finally “woke up” while in college, and decided to give God a chance by reading the Bible as an adult, which brought me face to face with the risen Jesus Christ.  I embraced Him, which forever changed the course of my own pre-planned future.  God, the awesome Creator of the Universe, was also my Father who knew me—He had a plan for my life!  He had enlisted me into His vast eternal Kingdom without borders, and He would guide and protect me on my journey of life!  The whole world was open before me—I was ready to go out, follow His call, and do great things for God! My heart was set on mission work in Africa!

Well, life did not quite happen that way!  I was learning, to be a Christ follower requires obedience by accepting the unexpected, even if it defies one’s own desires and at times, common sense. In 1967, a few months before graduation, my father suddenly died.
Cont. below….…cont. from above

Grudgingly, I returned to Follafoss to care for my widowed mother, and accepted a teaching position at the local school. Determined to be content, I settled in, assuming this was to be my future. The postwar village of my childhood had faded for a much gentler community of prosperous middle class families, but it was practically void of any active Christian believers. I loved teaching, became active in our community, entered into the world of politics as a publicly elected official to the Municipal Council. I loved it, especially that I could be a light for Jesus and effectuate positive changes for our community. 

After six years, in 1973, an unexpected Fulbright Scholarship included me in a team of 12 European educators to study in the States for an 18 months post graduate research program of Dewey’s educational philosophy at the University of Hartford, CT.  Upon completion, we were all to return to our respective homelands and resume our jobs.  But surprisingly—by what can only be described again as a  supernatural intervention by God—my life took yet another  turn. 

The Fulbright Foundation granted me an unprecedented one year extension to remain in the States.  I helped establish a grade school in Upstate New York for the children of a group of former hippies of the Woodstock, Kent University riots, Vietnam antiwar generation—turned passionately committed Jesus people.  Emanating from the same secular ideologies that had swept through Europe and influenced me in the sixties, they were like me, seeking to understand God’s Kingdom and embrace practically the Biblical way of life.  46 years since the school was founded, it is today still in operation…  a pearl in Upstate New York – http://www.clcschool.org/wp/  When, as a community we sensed God’s leading for me to remain more permanently, I applied for immigration visa.  It was denied.  An appeal was made to the highest Immigration Court in the land—and we won!  Remaining a Norwegian citizen, I became a legal Alien Resident with a “Greencard”!  To our astonishment, my case became a Precedent, which is referred to in the law books. The argument centered on Christian education and on being a  believer in Christ — see https://casetext.com/admin-law/in-the-matter-of-kjeldaas and https://www.bridgeinternational.org/2017/02/  It was an obvious clash between two Kingdoms with a strong testimony about the Christian faith!

After six years in New York, I was thrust overseas into the nations to not only watch but experience and participate in serving peoples oppressed by Marxist, Muslim, and Tribal totalitarianism on many continents, and see them transformed and set free by the power and faith in the Risen Christ: a youth revival in the 1990’s among the atheist, communist youth of Russia and Eastern Europe; Muslims in Central Asia and Middle East; Tribal dictators in Africa. Traveling on my Norwegian passport gave me more open doors to countries hostile toward the United States as superpower.

 I am celebrating, as I am stepping onto a new, exciting road—as an American citizen!    

 

 

  

 

 

 

India & Nepal—Helping Victims of Covid-19 Pandemic via HGNM’s Love Your Neighbor Initiative

By Dawa Buthia—Founder and Director of
Himalayan Good News Networking Ministry (GNNM)

God has given us two hands, one to receive with and the other to give with.” Billy Graham

I am thankful to our hardworking teams who are continuously and selflessly laboring as leaders and team members in the  Covid-19 Response action called LOVE YOUR NEIGHBOR INITIATIVE by the NGO Branch of  HGNM, during these hard times we all are going through as we respond to the needy families who are starving  due to the shut-downs.  In addition to  dealing with our own personal challenges and lacks, we have the joy of reaching out with love and sacrificially serving others in our neighborhoods and communities who are in serious need, as we are all human beings created by God in our communities where we dwell.

Since April 14, we have visited countless communities and met the basic needs of thousands of families, many living in remote communities.  We are privileged to serve our fellow brothers and sisters in cooperation with, and under, the central and state government supervision.  We are motivated by the  many scriptures (more than 300) in the Bible which command us as believers to care for the poor and the least in society.

Blessed is he who considers the poor; The Lord will deliver him in time of trouble.  The Lord will preserve him and keep him alive, And he will be blessed on the earth…” Psalm 41:1
“Is this not the fast I have chosen… to share your bread with the hungry, and bring to your house the poor who are cast out; when you see the naked, that you cover him…” Isaiah 58:6-7
If anyone has material possessions and sees his brother in need but has no pity on him, how can the love of God be in him? Dear children, let us not love with words or tongue but with actions and in truth.” 1 John 3:17-18.

APRIL 12 Today we are able to help  very poor villagers who work daily for their basic food in a tea garden in Atal.  We also helped some brothers and sisters stuck in Siliguri and living in empty school class rooms.  For them it is difficult to even find enough food for one meal a day.  We provided cooking utensils, gas burners, and various food items.   I encourage each one of you to become partners with us in helping the really needy people like these who are struggling for survival!

APRIL 17  With the help of Siliguri traffic police, provided food items for around 90 families in two different locations.  During the next week, we provided liquid sanitizers, safety gloves, and masks to the local police, as well as to the general public.  Our NGO HGNM works under the instruction of, and in coordination with the government of India’s Ministry of Home Affairs.  We work well together.

APRIL 24   Distributed  food items to 200 of the most poverty stricken families in Mangpong Busty, Cha Aikar village, and in Rangdan, and Siliguri locations.  We will continue to provide food for the people who have been hardest hit by the Covid-19 lockdown till the closing of workplaces again open up.  We thankfully appreciate your prayer support and participation!  May God bless you richly and abundantly!

MAY 2    Praises be to God that by His provision we could respond to 79 underprivileged and needy families of Bhuttabari. Thank you to team “Compassionate Care” for your participation and contribution to make this distribution possible.

MAY 12   I learned that a woman was serving people in this pandemic with no distinction among the needy poor people of Daang midwestern Nepal and I felt immediately that I should extend my little weak arms to strengthen her and share what I have. She faithfully reached 106 families of Ward number 5/6 with food distributions for a month.

MAY 14  The love of God has no boundaries, no caste, colors and creed, it simply expresses His heart.  The Musahar are considered one of the lowest of the Dalit groups within Nepal and suffer tremendously from their low status in society. Their name is derived from two words meaning “rat catcher” which is attributed to them for their tendency to eat rodents. My friend Indra Shrestha, thanks for distributing food to them in Janakpur Tarai region of the flatland in Nepal bordering to India.

MAY 17  Our friends were feeding people and cleaning the temporary shelter,  home to those who have been held up during this lockdown in Nakpur Tarai areas of the flatland in Nepal bordering to India.  This was done with the  utmost dedication and service,  which reminds me of Jesus’ washing of His disciples feet.  Through that, He was teaching us humility and  service towards our fellow man.

MAY 18  Two outreaches today, one in Eastern Nepal and another in a district of Siliguri.  We met the immediate needs of the poor daily wage laborers who are without any food left in their kitchen.  We tried to make them smile and have a hope for tomorrow, trusting that God will deploy a good Samaritan to provide a little something more which will sustain them to see another tomorrow.


MAY 21
Today we initiated a successful outreach by feeding our neighbors at Kamlabagan Tea Estate. Praises be to the Almighty that we could shower compassion on this less privileged group in the midst of their traumatic situation while the tea plantation has been closed down.  I thank all our volunteers and partners of the ‘Compassionate Care’. without you this wouldn’t be possible. Thanks for your sacrifices and love for the people.

MAY 31
Yesterday, our team visited two small, very remote villages, Maisirang and Kutsing in the Chepang community with total of 48 homes. Some of them had walked nearly 3 hours to collect the food  we had for them.  Their food shortage is so desperate, they hardly have any rice to eat, let alone the variety of food we normally eat in abundance  daily.


JUNE
7   From T.E. Mirik Kharbari:  We feel so privileged to have served these needy families during the hardest time of their lives.  The pandemic has taken away their daily work which was the only means by which they were able to bring home food to their spouses and kids.  We were looking for someone who could help us reach them and help provide their daily needs.  So, we teamed up with HGNM.  Through their provision, we brought small packets with big love to the people which they accepted with great smiles on their fearful faces.Community service gives me a valuable opportunity to enter different communities which are less familiar to me, but they are just as colorful and valuable, and most importantly… they are in great need!

“When you’re giving to charity picture yourself helping Christ because by serving others you are serving Jesus”.

From R.K.’s Corner

Four years ago, I met Dawa S. Bhutia at a mission conference in Norway.  Dawa is an ethnic Tibetan and former Buddhist from Bhutan, who is founder and leader of Himalayan Good News Networking Ministry, India having raised up and trained scores of leaders serving the Lord in Bhutan, India, Nepal, and Tibet, and in some of the most remote  places in the Himalayan mountains. You can find his fascinating testimony and ministry information at

https://www.bridgeinternational.org/2016/09/

                 The Covid-19 is ravaging the globe with its  deadly disease; not a single country in the world has been able to avoid its devastating effect on their people’s very way of life.  Nowhere has it had a worse impact than among the poor. In wealthier Western countries, governments are assisting their population with medical and financial help, but in the third world, people have to fend for themselves. Before the pandemic, among India’s 1.4 bill. people, 300 million lived under the poverty level.  Imagine how many there are today!!
Dawa and his team are making a difference among the most needy.  They risk their own health by reaching out to those suffering from the shut down, but they follow Jesus’ command to feed the poor! Here you will find a few samples of the many places they visited with love, hope, and provision during April and May, and into June, when India opened up the country.

If you want to become a partner with Dawa and his team in serving Bhutan,
India, Nepal, and Tibet with the Gospel, please mark your donation: “Himalayas”.
THANK YOU!

Paul Booher—an Intercessory Prayer Warrior Gone Home!

By Corey Booher

Paul Lester Booher Jr. (78) of Indian Trail, NC, passed away June 29, 2020.  He was born in Toledo, Ohio on February 6, 1942. Paul graduated from North Miami Senior High and received an associate degree in Computer Programming from Davis Business College.  Paul served in the US Army from 1961-1964, obtaining the rank of Sargent E5.  During his enlistment, he began as a tank driver stationed at Fort Knox and transitioned to playing trumpet in multiple military bands and honor guards, receiving several accolades for his performance.  On April 7, 1972, he married Gloria Lynn Adams, and they had two sons, David and Corey, and he also had a daughter, Dawn, from a previous marriage.

Paul Booher as a Young Man

Paul worked as computer programmer for most of his professional career for a number of companies, finally retired from Wells Fargo Bank an Assistant Vice President in the IT Dept..

Throughout his life, Paul and Gloria were always active church members.  He served as youth pastor, Bible study leader in multiple venues, worship leader in still others, and prayer leader/organizer for multiple organizations, meetings and fellowships

Paul’s greatest legacy, as attested to by the many letters, emails and phone calls we have received since his passing, was his tenacious belief and passionate pursuit of God’s love for all people.  Paul never met a stranger.  He found new friends in every restaurant, post office or workplace he visited.  Paul believed deeply in the unfailing mercy of God, which covers all sin.  It did not matter to him who you were or what you had done; his message was one and the same for all: God’s love is greater than our sin, and the death of Jesus on the cross forgives all!

Paul could not be convinced that anyone was a ‘lost cause’.  He maintained relationship with anyone willing to do so and would work hard to convince all that they were not beyond God’s grasp.  Through many forty-day fasts, trips to visit others and generous self-sacrificial giving, he yearned to communicate God’s father heart and love to any he felt God had placed across his path.  Anywhere he went, he would be ready to listen to the cashier, the toll attendant, or whomever needed to hear of God’s love or a prayer right there where they were standing.

Paul was a man of fervent, intercessory prayer, passion and always up for a good laugh.  He loved his family, especially his wife Gloria, whom he often mentioned and longed to meet again.  He will be sorely missed.  Though we mourn, we do not mourn like those without hope.  We look forward to the day when we will experience God’s love with Paul, in the presence of the One in Whom he so deeply believed.  HE WILL BE DEEPLY MISSED!

PAUL BOOHER— CHANGING NATIONS THROUGH  INTERCESSORY PRAYER
by R.K. Ulrich

“Lord, You know  the secrets and the depths of the wicked ruler, Enver Hoxha’s heart.  If You see in him no room for repentance and turning to You, Lord… please remove him,” Paul cried out with his right arm stretched toward heaven.  The room filled with a holy hush, then we all lifted our hands, binding the evil forces of Marxist tyranny over the Albanian people, and cried out for their  liberation  and open doors and hearts for the Gospel.

Since The Bridge’s inception in 1983, we had been graced with an extraordinary Bridge International Prayer Group, consisting of eight committed men who twice a month came together to intercede for the persecuted church behind the Iron Curtain in Russia and the communist nations of Eastern Europe.  Paul Booher and Bert Cole were the most passionate in this endeavor.

In early 1985, I had returned from a visit close to the border of Albania, and had first hand learned about the horrific persecution of Christians and dissidents in this fully closed nation  which prided itself of being the only fully purely atheist Marxist country in the world.
At the next prayer meeting, several hours of intense prayer focused on Albania, culminated in Paul’s anointed proclamation.  Three days later, I was informed that Albania’s dictator Enver Hoxha, had died of a heart attack.  This was the beginning of Albania’s liberation from tyranny. In the Fall, 1985 I published this issue, the front image depicting their Marxist message: “Religion makes you blind, deaf, and dumb.”

It is in the field of prayer that life’s critical battles are lost or won…
In prayer we bring our spiritual enemies into the Presence of God and we fight them there.  John Henry Jowett

This initial Bridge prayer group was given a collective gift of intercession which effectuated nations with the kind of miraculous results which later would be reported through the international media—it was a very special time with a very special group of people, with Paul and Bert at the helm.

We were all members of the same church.  As years passed, changes took place and, for different reasons, all those men moved with their families out of the State of Florida to primarily Tennessee and North Carolina.  Steve and I lost touch with them, except with Bert Cole.  He continued to do the heavy lifting of prayer long distance for The Bridge.

Fast forward 28 years to 2013. Bert Cole had  decided to travel to South Sudan on a short term mission trip to help train a rural tribe establish micro businesses.  While there, he laid his life down for an obscure tribe in the South Sudanese bush. I flew up to Tennessee to participate in his funeral. My early morning flight back to Florida had a stopover in Charlotte, NC where I had to wait for several hours for the connecting flight.

Suddenly, I had a whisper in my spirit—I was compelled to call Paul Booher.  I called, “Do you want to have breakfast with me at the airport?”  A resounding “Yes”, so, at 6:00 am we were reconnecting after almost 30 years, and were reminiscing those early years of partnering in prayer. His beloved Gloria, had died the year before; he was desperately lonely and felt ready to go and be with the Lord and her. “I am finished here in earth,” he said.  The Bridge had during this time expanded to serving Christians in Central Asia, the Far East, Africa, and Caribbean.  The need for intercession was greater than ever.  As we were marveling at the many powerful moments in our past group, and I was sharing about the present, I found myself saying, “Paul, the world needs your gift of intercession.  Would you again head up our group, this time virtual on Skype which has been vacated by Bert, and befriend and pray for all our Bridge partners in the nation?” 

A recent picture of Paul, with his “love of my life”, adorable great granddaughter in his arms. He had apprehended and always freely transmitted THE FATHER’S MERCY & LOVE!

He accepted the challenge, and through that divine appointment, his life got a restart and a new purpose as he again rejoined our prayer group, and became a cornerstone of prayer and a friend to the many missionaries he served in the field.  Paul also passionately prayed for Steve and me!   He expressed often how much he loved it!  Steve and I and  our associates and foreign missionaries were graced with seven years of his gifts of love, compassion, encouragement, and enduring prayer which flowed from Paul’s heart.  He became a close friend, the kind you treasure!  Psalm 91 was one of his favorite scriptures as he reminded us all of the Lord’s love and protection!

Now, Paul is where he longed to be: in the presence of the Lord!  I could say much more about him, but I concur with his son Corey’s description of his father, and also concur with the words from some of our overseas Harvesters who were recipients of his intercession and love, as they express who Paul was to them:

YERMEK BALYKBEKOV – KAZAKHSTAN

My good friend and brother in Christ, Paul Booher was a great prayer warrior, filled with love towards people. I have never ever met such a faithful intercessor like him. He interceded for me, my family and ministry since we met on the Bridge Prayer Skype group.

I could feel his prayer over my life and almost all my prayer needs were met because of Paul’s prayers and dedication. He helped me going through a very difficult time in my ministry, always encouraging me to press through by the Grace of God. Surely, we will miss him a lot, however, I believe God is raising up a young generation of Christ’s warriors like Paul was.

         ROBERT AND SANDRINA YURJEVIC – SARAJEVO, BOSNIA

Shortly after arriving in 2013 back to Bosnia as missionaries, we were invited to meet with The Bridge International Prayer Team via Skype every two weeks. This team of prayer warriors, led by Paul Booher, has been an invaluable spiritual source of strength and encouragement to Sandrina and me. We had the honor of getting to personally know Paul, having met up with him for breakfast at Cracker Barrel several times through the years whenever we passed through Charlotte.
We came to love Paul as a friend and brother in Christ. Paul was passionate for the heart and Kingdom of God. He loved his family. He made us feel special – his zeal was focused and contagious. On my last trip to Charlotte back in the autumn, I contacted Paul to see if he was available to pick me up at the airport and to have dinner together. My flight was late, but he waited for me. We skipped the Cracker Barrel and made a quick stop at a Chick-fil-a. For about an hour Paul shared with me, besides his intercessory burden for the nations, his desire to see the coming of the Lord Jesus Christ. He wanted everyone in his life to be ready to meet Jesus, also. We will remember Paul as a man of faith, hope and love – he ended his race as a spiritual giant.

SARGON DANIALI CHAMAKI – TURKEY/IRAN

A group of our believers in Iran were arrested at the beginning of this year. Brother Paul passionately prayed for their strength, protection and release. They were released and encouraged!

These are some points which summarize Paul’s engagement in praying for and counseling me!
What can I say more about him, than that he motivated me!  I had a  lot of love and respect for Paul.  He —
1.  Was always there, only a message away.
2. 
Responded quickly to our notes
3. 
Encouraged us to share our prayer needs as soon as they arose.
4. 
Prayed diligently for our needs.
5. 
Was always ready to encourage and exhort as well as tell the truth, even when it hurt!
6. 
Was always Heaven and Kingdom oriented.
7.  Was always present in the prayer meetings, patiently took notes of all the needs and with great discipline wrote a report or minutes of the meeting shortly after. Was always encouraging and uplifting.

STEPHEN AND SOPHIA SCHMALZ – REPUBLIC OF GEORGIA, EURASIA

Paul was our prayer anchor. He had a well spring of hope and great faith for anything. He would always encourage us and remind us that nothing is impossible with the LORD! He  missed his wife every day of his life since she went to be with the Lord and he longed to see her again. That was not easy for him.  Praise the LORD,  Paul always had a listening ear and heart to us and we shared all of our lives with him for about five years. Thank you RK. You connected us. We feel a little lost now… But God’s grace is sufficient for us!

KEN AND FAITH NEGVESKY – RACINE, WI
Co-Leaders of the Bridge Prayer Group

A tribute to Paul Booher: For the past six years we have had the privilege of developing a friendship with Paul through praying for the “Harvesters” connected with R.K. and the Bridge International. Paul inspired and encouraged those men and women in the nations they represented. He had such a sweet but powerful way of exhorting his fellow intercessors! Paul was a dedicated intercessor and prayer warrior who impacted lives and nations for eternity. Faith and I will miss him deeply! He is with His Papa (as He referred to the Father!) Our love and prayers are with his family!

JOE O’NEAL – LORENZO, TX
Co-Leader of the Bridge Prayer Group

I loved that man.  I remember him decades ago, playing trumpet with me in the worship team at church.  I didn’t really know him in a personal way until these last four years.

Paul was always a person In could go to as a sounding board to discuss the world, life and the current events throughout the world.  What I loved most about him, was that he was a true prayer warrior, and I am honored to have known him.

 

PROLOGUE

In honor of the memory of Paul Booher, would you consider giving a donation to to his son, Corey Booher, who lives in Poland and is a full time missionary there with his wife and two children!  Just click on the DONATE button above and it will take you to our donation page, where you can give via PayPal and credit/debit card.  Please mark your gift “POLAND WORKERS”.  THANK YOU!

R.K.’s Personal Testimony: My Grandmother and I – A Story of Intercession and Call to the Nations

INTRODUCTION

My earliest and fondest memories during summertime, was to visit my father’s relatives.  After a six hour bus and train ride from our village to my grandmother’s home, upon arrival, I would run past everyone into the house, hurry up the long, steep stairway leading to the second floor, open the door and run into my grandmother’s apartment — right into her arms: ”Here I am!”  The cookies and milk were always ready. After a little chat came my favorite moment: She placed me on her lap and, at my eager bidding, began telling stories from her life and from the big, black Book always lying open on her table. A vivid storyteller, everything came to life through my grandmother’s words as the characters of the Bible walked out of the pages through her stories and became real people in real life! I sat spellbound as hours passed, not realizing then that through her vivid talent, the Living Word of God was being established in my heart.  It became my guide at 20 when I began seeking truth after a few years of self-declared atheist.

BERNTINE’S EARLY YEARS

To the human eye, there was nothing impressive or outstanding about Berntine Kjeldaas. Born in 1867 in Røra, a village in the Viking fjord (ocean inlet) near the city of Trondheim, she did, however, distinguish herself as one of the very few women of her day who attended college.  While there,  she encountered a spiritual awakening through the Pietist movement of lay revivalist and community transformer, Hans Nielsen Hauge. She came to faith in the living, resurrected Jesus Christ, and the Bible became her guide to life!

After college, Berntine returned home, and was ready to begin teaching in the local school she had attended as a child.  But her old  school Master had other thoughts. Peter Kjeldaas, still Headmaster and bachelor, was 20 years her senior.  He had also experienced a personal spiritual renewal; he had embraced a living faith in Christ through the Danish revivalist, N.S. F. Grundtvig, who impacted the more educated and cultured layers of society with a call back to living, personal, practical Biblical faith.  He was ready for a wife, had fallen in love with Berntine, and asked her to marry him.

In 1890, Peter and Berntine married.  They had nine children over a period of 18 years, my father Torvald being the youngest. Together, they experienced some very busy, happy years while raising their children, managing the family farm, while she carried out the duties of  the school and community leader’s wife.  The underlying strength in their marriage was their personal Christian faith and deep love and devotion to each other.  Musically talented, everybody sang and played various instruments—their home was always filled with the happy sound of music.

WIDOWHOOD

Then, a few days before Christmas 1913, tragedy struck. My grandfather suddenly died of a heart attack while waiting on the train at the nearby town on his way home, his backpack heavy with gifts and  goodies for his family’s Christmas celebration. Joyous anticipation suddenly turned to grief.  Berntine was left with five children under the age of fourteen still at home. Managing life alone and caring for her children’s needs was strenuous, but she worked the farm for 10 years before she decided to sell it.  With the proceeds, she moved into the center of a larger town, Stjørdal.  There, she built a multi-family home from which she started a small business selling milk from the farmers to her neighbors and students of the nearby elementary school. This enabled her to continue following her children’s growth into adulthood and see them married with families of their own. Her focus was hard work, a frugal lifestyle, and her trust in her Heavenly Father’s loving care and provision.

Then World War II broke out. The German war machine invaded Norway and took leadership.  Five years of horrific terror ensued. A strong resistance movement arose among the Norwegians who refused to buckle under the Nazi leadership. This resulted in several being captured and killed, or deported to concentration camps in Norway or Germany.  A couple of members of my family secretly collaborated with the resistance,  but none lost their lives, although one uncle was imprisoned and sent to labor camp.  I attribute that to God’s protection over them, thanks to my grandmother’s prayers.

My parents, Torvald and Signe, married the year before the war and moved into one of the apartments in Berntine’s spacious two story building. My aunt, Borghild lived with her husband in the other apartment, with Grandma in two rooms upstairs, sufficient for her.

WORLD WAR II

Jerusalem before World War II

In the beginning years of the war when Hitler’s “final solution” was not yet public, Grandmother would come downstairs from her apartment, telling my aunt, “Borghild, please listen to me. Something terrible is about to happen to the Jewish people I read it in the Bible we must pray for them and help them!” Brushing it aside as just talk of an old woman, no one listened to her pleas. But my grandmother kept interceding, although, to my knowledge, she never during her lifetime met a Jew!

Before the war, approx. 300 Jews lived in the city of Trondheim, most of them well respected, prosperous merchants. As the war progressed, secret messages came back from Norwegians detained in concentration camps in Germany: The Jews are being exterminated— get them out of the city as quickly as possible before they are rounded up and deported to the death camps!” Members of the resistance movement took immediate action. They secretly transported some of the Jews individually to checkpoints near the Swedish border where they were hid till they were a group to be walked across the mountains into freedom. (Sweden was neutral during the war). The farmers in the area helped by providing food and skis during the winter to make it easier to cross the mountains. A number of Jews in Trondheim who had not been arrested by the Germans were rescued from the fate of Hitler’s death chambers, due to the courage of a handful of Norwegians who risked their lives—and my grandmother’s prayers!

Right after the war, Norway was devastated, but worse than that was the public realization of the gruesome fate of the Jews of Europe. Berntine, however, was not despondent. She would come downstairs and say to the family, “Don’t worry,­ God will use this to bring the Jews back to their land. He will give them back their country!” Again, no one listened, it simply didn’t make sense.  That did not deter her—she kept on praying and interceding for the Jews and their homeland which God was going to give back to them. In 1948, three years after the war, Israel became an independent country—the Jews began returning to their ancient land!

PNEUMONIA AND MIRACULOUS HEALING

I was born in February, 1945 three months before the war ended, the third war-child of my parents. After five years of German occupation there was very little food, and everything was either destroyed or depleted. At nine months old, I contracted double pneumonia. There were no antibiotics, not even an aspirin to help reduce the fever. I ended up in a coma for twelve days; my limbs were turning blue, my lungs filling with fluid. When the family doctor arrived, he took my father aside and explained that I would surely die during the night; he could hear the “death rattle” in my breathing. If I were to survive, I would certainly be severely brain damaged. He would come early next morning to fill out the death certificate and remove me.

My grandmother came downstairs to find the nurse and my parents standing helplessly around my cradle. Had they prayed for healing, she inquired. No, not really, it was not customary. Berntine then lifted her youngest granddaughter out of the cradle, held me toward heaven and prayed, “Father, Ragnhild belongs to You, so You can take her home. But if You let her live, I’ll commit her life to Your purposes!”  Then she asked the nurse if there was anything else that could be done for me. The nurse nodded, as she remembered one remedy, although dangerous for the heart. She filled one bucket with very hot water, and one with ice cold, then she dipped me alternately into the buckets. Circulation gradually came back into my limbs. They wrapped me in a warm blanket and laid me back into the cradle.

The next morning when the doctor arrived to check on me, I was awake, alert, cooing in the cradle. I was completely healed with no signs of mucus in my lungs! My grandmother’s plea before the Father’s throne had effectuated a true, medical miracle! Puzzled, the doctor mumbled, “The Real Physician has been here before me, I have nothing to do.” He left empty handed!  During my childhood I enjoyed a very special relationship with my grandmother, realizing now in retrospect that she gave me special attention also as part of fulfilling her promise to God to guide me in His ways.

INTERCESSION

After the war, Berntine was part of a group of women who established the first local chapter of intercession for Den Norske lsraelsmisjon. I remember well as a little girl holding her hand as we walked to the one of the homes where the meetings were alternately held. Opening the door, I would see a handful of stern looking elderly ladies gathered. They first spoke on issues of concern regarding Israel – of which I remember nothing. Then they kneeled and folded their calloused hands. There were furrows between their knuckles as a result of years of clenched hands lifted up to heaven in petition for the needs of others.  They began interceding and crying out to God for Israel and the Jewish people.  I recall the aroma in the room: a mixture of mothballs, fresh coffee and hot, newly baked Norwegian pastries, mixed with something entirely different— the awesome fragrance of the presence of God! It was my first exposure to true intercession, the kind that changes nations and effectuates God’s purposes in people’s lives! I did not know then that a tremendously rich heritage was being imparted into my life, from which I have benefited greatly in the decades since then.

MY SPIRITUAL JOURNEY

My grandmother died when I was fourteen, which was a great loss for me and the family.  I wandered away from my childhood faith, found the 1960’s a seemingly glittering world beckoning with fascinating philosophies and secular humanism.  I fully embraced it, and at sixteen declared myself an atheist. However, four years later that bubble burst when I was drawn into occultism and encountered a dark, very different spiritual world—far from the power of God’s Kingdom and my grandmother’s faith!

At twenty, while in college, I finally woke up and decided to give God a chance by reading the Bible, which brought me face to face with the risen Jesus Christ.  I embraced Him which forever changed the course of my own planned future. I immediately knew that it was primarily my grandmother’s cumulative prayers which had precipitated the intervention of the Holy Spirit Who h caused me to commit myself to Christ and His Kingdom! I had come “home”, life returned to the Word which for years had been as boring as a phone book. Bible study became an exciting journey again as I identified with the men and women of old who embraced God’s Kingdom in faith.

Immanuel Church Tel Aviv, Center for Den Norske Israelsmisjon

A deep desire grew in me to visit Israel, but I avoided taking a group tour, waiting for the right timing when I would experience Israel as an insider through people of the land.  That took place in 1983, 18 years later.  In 1997, I visited Israel, again. I met the leader of a Messianic group from among the 15,000 Ethiopian Jews who six years prior had been rescued from Ethiopian genocide.  They had been given a spiritual home in the facilities of the Den Norske Israelsmisjon in Tel Aviv. Watching the jet black Africans and the white, blond Norwegians embrace in love, I knew my grandmother’s prayers were part of this—bringing believers together as one Body, with one Faith!

R.K.’S CORNER

We trust you and your family are doing well  while enduring the many adjustments to life under the restrictions of the Corona virus.  At times, being absorbed in taking care of the many concerns on the home front, I find myself losing sight of concern for those we serve in the nations who encounter far more restrictions and challenges in their daily lives than we can imagine.
Yet, when we connect on Skype, or via other media, they testify with thanks to God for provision and protection.  Psalm 91 is one of the favorite scriptures we recite to each other … it is a reminder that our destiny and future are in His hands! He is the Lord of history, He enacts His purposes tangibly through generations!
This is a testimony of how the Lord often calls an individual from one ethnic group to embrace His purposes and goals for another.  Often His tool is that individual’s prayers.  My own grandmother, Berntine Kjeldaas, who was also instrumental in my salvation and call to the nations, was one of them.  A Norwegian Viking has nothing in common with an Israeli Jew, but my grandmother received a supernatural, prophetic revelation of God’s heart and purposes for Israel and the Jewish people, and faithfully carried that burden by intercession throughout her life.

Would you consider taking up the banner of prayer for our Harvesters and help support them financially?  You can find their many powerful and exciting testimonies on this website!

In Kibera – Kenya’s Nairobi Slum: A Day in Pastor John’s Life

HAPPY EASTER TO FAMILY, FRIENDS AND PARTNERS FROM THE BRIDGE TEAM!

“In this the love of God was manifested toward us, that God has sent His only begotten Son into the world, that we might live through Him. 10 In this is love, not that we loved God, but that He loved us and sent His Son to be the propitiation for our sins. Beloved, if God so loved us, we also ought to love one another.”  John 4:9-11

FROM R.K.’S CORNER

How is it possible that Covid-19, this nano-tiny, attractive-looking ball with heart-shaped spikes, although not being alive, nor possessing a brain or a heart, has the ability to plow through humanity and cause death, distress and disruption in close to 190 countries in less than four months, while shaking the very world system to the core?

This pandemic is making it evident to all that man is not ultimately in charge of his destiny; he must look beyond himself to find purpose and security. Let us pray that  the many who are seeking a higher power for answers will, during this Easter Season, experience the fulfillment of the words in Jeremiah 29:12-13,You will call upon Me and come and pray to Me, and I will listen to you. You will seek Me and find Me when you search for Me with all your heart”and come to faith in a dynamic relationship with Jesus Christ!

I find it easy to fall into a complaining mode over the inconveniences of being quarantined at home. When I come into that mode, I am reminded of the scores of our brothers and sisters abroad whose life conditions are continually on the brink of disaster, yet they thank God for His love and care and steadfastly share the Good News with others – that makes my seeming hardships non-existent!!  Pastor John, one of the Pastors of the Least in the Disciple Ministry Support Bible Institute in the Kibera slum in Nairobi, Kenya, founded by Paul Cowley, is one of them.  May his testimony edify you as you and your family celebrate the Risen Lord during this Easter Season!

A DAY IN PASTOR JOHN’S LIFE – by Paul Cowley

It’s cold and damp this morning. A brisk wind is sweeping through the valley, making the 40-degree temperature seem much colder. With his thin Sunday suit jacket and hard sole shoes, Pastor John sets off for work. It is 3 a.m. The only light guiding him through the dark slum is the moon. It is a one mile journey weaving through the mud, stick and sheet metal shacks, over raw sewage ditches and finally onto the rail line. Shortly he is on the road, joined by hundreds of others beginning the day. Thankful that he has a job to go to, Pastor John shares the Good News with anyone and everyone he happens to be walking next to. He has at least several opportunities each morning. After all, it’s another 2 1/2 hours and 13 miles to work.

Like many of our students, Pastor John works as a security guard. He is fortunate to have the better shift… daytime duty. His official hours of duty are 6 a.m. until 6 p.m. He works 6 days a weeks. No food, no latrine, no water, no breaks are provided. And, ironically, no weapons other than a wood baton. Should any incident occur at the facility he is guarding, he will be arrested, and charged with either complicity with the criminals or criminal neglect. Either charge will result in immediate detention in “remand” waiting for a trial. Most remands continue for at least 60-90 days. His job will be lost even if found not guilty. It has happened to him twice before. To get such a job, every applicant must pay a “consideration” fee to those processing the applications. To keep such a job, every worker must pay a “appreciation gift” to the personnel manager every month. No delay, no complaints, no tattle-tales allowed.

Pastor John’s Path to Work

At 6 p.m., Pastor John begins the walk home. Within a half hour, darkness descends on the city. Another 14-mile journey along busy roads with no shoulder, no lighting and lots of thugs. He prays continually to arrive home safely…and find his family safe as well. It takes longer to get home, due to the countless masses of people walking. Nairobi is called “the Walking City”. There are in excess of 1,000,000 people in the Kibera slum alone, where Pastor John lives. The vast majority of the working poor walk to work because they cannot afford the public transport vans. Transport for John would cost $3 per day round trip. His net pay per day is $2.50. He walks 28 miles per day in order to simply eat.

At 9.30 p.m. he arrives home. His three children are already asleep. He sits down with his wife Janet and thanks God for another day of work, safe travel and provision. Janet uncovers a plate with his one meal for the day: maize and beans.  The couple whisper quietly as the children sleep nearby…very nearby. The house is the standard ten by ten foot shack. That space is the living room, dining room, kitchen, bedroom and bathroom…for two adults and three children. It is a combination of mud and stick walls, with sheet metal roofing. The sky is clearly visible through the holes and gaps in the rusted tin. During the two rainy seasons each year, the water literally flows across the floor and pours through the roof. In the dry season, the windowless shack becomes unbearably hot and suffocating.

Pastor John and his wife, Janet in front of their shack called Home.

Malaria ridden mosquitoes torment the family throughout the night. These accommodations are in Kibera, one of the most “preferred” slums in Nairobi. There are 199 slums and over 3,000,000 slum dwellers in Nairobi. Most slums are much worse than Kibera. But regardless of where one settles, there is no such thing as “squatting” on land in Nairobi. Everyone pays someone. John will work two full weeks to pay the rent. And that is just the beginning.

The DMS Bible Institute (white building in the background) towers as a Bright Lighthouse in the Kibera Slum

With the remainder of his pay, John and Janet must overcome a mountain of necessary expenses. They have to purchase and carry their water from a vendor… at nine times the rate the City charges customers with piped water. Then they must purchase wood or charcoal to boil the water. A bucket bath is a luxury. Once per week in the hot, dry season. Much less often in the cold rainy season. To use a pit latrine, they will have to “rent” a key. That is a luxury few slum dwellers can afford. Instead they will use a plastic bag and toss it out the window. They and another 3,000,000 people…every day.

Inside John and Janet’s 10 foot by 10 foot shack called Home

Janet shares with Pastor John the pressing news and needs of the day. She still has severe cramping and bleeding from her recent miscarriage…her third. They would not even examine her at the community hospital. She didn’t have the necessary “gratuity” to even enter the waiting room. And she was in such severe pain, she could not wait the two to three days to be seen. Their eldest daughter was sent home from school for failing to pay the school fees. It takes another 10 days of work to pay the basic tuition for the three children: Maureen is 14 years old in grade 6…the twins, Abel and Milcah are 7 years old in grade one. That does not include exam fees, marking fees, uniform fees, supplies or the development” fees charged by every school. Pastor John instructs Janet to send their daughter back and plead for mercy from the headmaster once again. He then gives her food money to buy some Tylenol.

By 10:30 p.m., dad and mom are asleep in their one bed with their children. Privacy is a luxury they and their children will never know.    Never to have their own bedroom, never to use a latrine…nor to use toilet paper or own a toothbrush. Pastor John is one of the fortunate ones…he has a job. At least for today.  In just four hours, he will awaken, put on his hard sole shoes and Sunday suit coat… and begin the long walk again… looking for every opportunity to invite people to the church… and to share with them the Good News in his life.

If you want to know more about Paul and Marcia Cowley and their life’s work at the Disciple Support Ministries’ Bible Institute for the Pastor’s of the Least in the  Kibera Slum, Nairobi, Kenya, please see a prior update:  https://www.bridgeinternational.org/2019/08/ 
Would you consider becoming a sponsor?  Please donate above and mark your donation  8344 Kenya Workers.

Kara Leigh – Serving Cambodia’s Child Victims of Sex Trafficking

Cambodia or Kampuchea (officially called Kingdom of Cambodia) is a country in Southeast Asia. It is located near Vietnam, Laos, and Thailand with a population of 13 million. The people of Cambodia are called Cambodians or Kampucheans. Khmer is the official language. The country has recently emerged from a long civil war and the rule of the Khmer Rouge. It is part of ASEAN, Association of South East Asian Nations. The Khmer (Cambodians) account for the vast majority of the population. Ethnic minorities include Chinese, Vietnamese, Muslim Cham-Malays, Laotians, and various native peoples of the rural highlands.

In the 1970’s, Cambodia’s Khmer Rouge regime killed over 2.5 million people, starting with intellectuals and community leaders. They forced children to be soldiers which escalated the genocide and destroyed family structures, cultural institutions, and the entire fabric of society. This left the people of Cambodia with a demoralized view of human worth, which was almost necessary for survival at that time. After the Khmer Rouge genocide ended, children became a commodity. Cambodia’s unique economic challenges, history, and geographic location make it a hub for human trafficking and child sex trafficking. The country provides a large population source for new victims, is a transit point along many organized human trafficking routes, and has become a destination for traffickers and sex customers alike. Svay Pak was once known as the child sex trafficking capital of the world. 

Buddhism has existed in Cambodia since at least the 5th century AD, with some sources placing its origin as early as the 3rd century BC. Theravada Buddhism has been the Cambodian state religion since the 13th century AD (exempting the Khmer Rouge period), and is currently estimated to be the religion of 96.9% of the population.

HERE I AM – SEND ME!

My name is Kara Leigh.  I am a missionary to Svay Pak, Cambodia to combat the evils of child sex trafficking with the love and Gospel of Jesus Christ. 

When I was in my early twenties, I learned about the horrors of child sex trafficking. I was reading Outlive Your Lifeby Max Lucado and after reading page 28, I never picked the book up again. On those pages, I learned that kids as young as two were being sold into the sex trade, specifically in Cambodia. I spent days researching what that actually meant. I wept over the acts of rape and violence that were happening to children around the clock; the starvation and abuse, and that they didn’t even have mothers to give them hugs or brush their hair.  Among the different times I have experienced brokenness in this world, this would certainly make the top three.

My faith was so young that I didn’t even know what a ministry was! After spending a few days crying, I googled something similar to “people doing something about sex trafficking in Cambodia.” After searching through different links I was completely inspired by the work being done by ministries to rehabilitate and reintegrate survivors of sex trafficking. Although programs existed, this did not quench the brokenness and drive in my heart for something to be done. I decided then that I would be going to Cambodia.

At that young age and as a young Christian, I really had no idea how it would all come together. I was at the age of making big decisions, but I didn’t feel any clear direction towards a specific career. I was passionate about Jesus and passionate about people, but I lacked the maturity to know where to invest this as it pertained to education. As I continued to study during my first two years of college, my heart became increasingly convicted that I was wasting away time. I began to really seek the Lord’s will and the words He spoke to my heart were “Love and get your hands dirty.”

It was time for a missions trip. I was looking into a one month mission trip to Cambodia, but through the Lord’s leading I landed on a year long international mission trip. During this trip, the Lord transformed my life.

I grew up in a broken home of divorced parents and many siblings. Although my family experienced a lot of hurt and betrayal, it was through the sacrifices of my parents that I was able to eventually come to a knowledge of the truth of Jesus Christ. I became a Christian at age 19, just before God called me to Cambodia, however He had a lot of healing to bring me through. At that point, I didn’t know what I didn’t know. A part of that was how much the enemy had sewed self-hate into my identity. Growing up, I had a family member repetitively tell me how ugly, stupid, and worthless I was. The words spoken became my core belief about myself. I grew up feeling like a burden and believing that I was so grotesque that I didn’t even want anyone to look at my face. I reached such a low point that I prayed to God that if it was best for me to die, He would take me away.

During that year of missions, I came face to face with the falsehoods that had been claimed over me for so long. Over the next several years I sought counsel and healing in order to be able to present myself as the best servant for Christ that I could. You see, the issue with self-hate is that it produces a broken understanding, view, and relationship with the Father. As long as I hated myself, I hated the image God and all within Him that was also found in me. The Enemy’s deceit in this created a wedge that needed to be removed. Through the struggles I experienced in this, a deep devotion and love for the Lord was born. I claimed then that I had suffered enough self-hate for 1,000 people, so I would bring 1,000 people into freedom with me. 

At the counsel of R.K., I eventually returned to school to pursue a degree in English Education. This was the route of tent-making that God opened as a practical way to serve the people of Cambodia. I am now on board with Agape International Missions and AIM School in Svay Pak, CambodiaAIM uses a holistic approach to prevent, rescue, and rehabilitate children from sex trafficking. AIM School provides academic and spiritual excellence in education while protecting children from trafficking and abuse.

One survivor who suffered the worst abuse that AIM has ever seen said of the school, “If I have had something like this I would have been able to go to school and be normal.” – Survivor Reaksmey.

My vision is to live out God’s desires of restoration and renewal in the chapter of Isaiah 61. It starts by stating, “The Spirit of the Lord God is upon Me, because the Lord has anointed me to preach good tidings to the poor; he has sent me to heal the brokenhearted, to proclaim liberty to the captives, and the opening of the prison to those who are bound…”  I may never fully understand the life that a trafficked person has endured, but what I do know is that I was once a captive to my own sin and hurt and the Lord set me free and this is exactly what I want to do for others. God has never turned His face from me because it was too difficult or too heartbreaking for Him, so how can I do this to any other? In fact, He sent His own Son into my world to pay the ultimate price for my sin. So now I also go.

This urgent call on my heart has led to my desire to give up all that an American life has to offer in order to reach out to this forgotten generation of Cambodia. Is it easy? No. As I choose this route, friends beside me are making high incomes, getting married, and having children. This often leads to feelings of loneliness and fear of “financial destitution” as some have warned me against; but at the end of my life when I draw my last breath, my desire is to hear, “Well done, thy good and faithful servant… enter into the joy of your Lord.”

“Children could survive a horrific event, but they can’t heal from it without the act of protection and unconditional love. That’s what it means to be safe and free.” Reaksmey

FROM R.K.’S CORNER

A few years ago, I met Kara in our then local church. She was then a shy and seemingly unremarkable woman in her early twenties, seeking to find her place in life as a new believer after growing up in a complicated family whereby her parents had gone through a painful divorce.  In a conversation with Kara, she told me she would forego her education, as she was called to Cambodia to share the Good News of the love of Jesus and care for the children who are victims of sex trafficking there  Thinking this was no more than youthful, ignorant zeal, my friend, Barbara and I met with her and urged her to go back to school and get a diploma in a “tent-making” profession to fall back on.  What about becoming a teacher of English as a foreign language?

Fast forwarding eight years.  A few days ago, Kara and my paths crossed again.  I was astounded—Kara has grown into a beautiful, confident, mature, well educated, and articulate 28 year old woman of solid faith.  Being discipled by the faith and wisdom of older women (thanks, Karen and Kathy!), Kara has used the years wisely in preparing herself to follow the call God gave her in her youth.  She is ready to walk away from the future comforts of the “American dream”, to follow in the Master’s footsteps and embrace the abused and wounded children of Cambodia with the love of Jesus.

In today’s crisis of the Corona pandemic when people fearfully worldwide are pulling into the isolation of their homes, Kara has still her heart set on Cambodia. I recommend Kara to you…  please consider partnering with her by financially investing in the restoring and healing of the trafficked children of Cambodia!