Candlelight vigil highlights plight of Sudanese Christians
Episcopal News Service, July 14, 2000
The Rev. Michael Kiju Paul remembers the day his classroom was bombed while he was teaching at a small Bible college in Sudan. Paul escaped, but three of his students were gunned down.
“That attack really scared me,” said Paul, a priest with the Episcopal Church of Sudan. He moved to neighboring Kenya but continued to sneak in and out of his native country. Today, his wife and three children remain in Nairobi while he continues his religious studies in the United States.
On the night of July 5, Paul joined about 75 Sudanese and American Christians who walked in a candlelight vigil from the Colorado Convention Center in Denver, site of the Episcopal General Convention, to the World Trade Center at 6th and Broadway. Sponsored by the Institute on Religion and Democracy (IRD) and Truro Church in Alexandria, Va., the vigil was intended to raise awareness of Islamic persecution of Christians in Southern Sudan.
Several bishops offered up their prayers, former Colorado Republican Sen. Bill Armstrong and IRD President Diane Knippers spoke briefly, and members of the Pittsburgh-based Rock the Youth provided much of the music for the vigil.
Speaking from harsh experience
The Sudanese at General Convention have come to tell their own, true stories, says Paul. They hope they can convince doubters who have heard about the atrocities, but who can’t believe they really happen. “It is my obligation to educate American society. … I wanted this conference to take our suffering as their suffering.”
He and others urged Episcopalians to write to government leaders, pressing them to take action. “We are beginning with the church because the church is supposed to preach love,” Paul said. “In spite of the killing, the church [in Sudan] is growing so tremendously,” he noted. “People see no hope in humanity, and therefore they are turning in great numbers to the church.”
Bishop Peter Munde of the Diocese of Yambio said he was present at General Convention and the vigil to make a personal “appeal to all of the American people, especially the believers, to speak on our behalf, to pray for us.”
He urged U.S. intervention to establish a no-fly zone to stop the bombing of Southern Sudan, to bring about a permanent cease-fire and to allow the Sudanese to decide what kind of government they need.
Jimmy Mulla also urged divestment from oil companies that do business with the Sudanese government. He would like to see the campaign for Sudan catch momentum in the United States just as the earlier anti-apartheid movement focused attention on South Africa. Mulla came to America as a refugee from Cairo after participating in student protests against the Sudanese government.
“You have all the opportunities to stop this war,” Munde said. “You are blessed with everything.” Munde and other participants are concerned that the Southern Sudanese are like “forgotten people” at a time when other conflicts draw international attention.
Looking for American help
Senator Armstrong, a Presbyterian, echoed Munde’s words as he quoted the scriptural dictum that much will be required of those to whom much is given.
“We Americans have been given everything,” he said. “We have so much prosperity that we can’t count it. We’ve been given every kind of freedom.” Americans are obligated to help the Sudanese, he said. “I think what our Lord said about stewardship applies to nations.”
Vigil participant Fran Boyle of Annandale, Virginia., experienced firsthand some of the hardship the Sudanese face. Her group was bombed when she was helping teach a religious program in Southern Sudan through Sharing Our Ministries Abroad (SOMA). Shrapnel passed over her bed in Marona’s house, where she was staying. “We went back to find our room in a shambles.”
One of the youngest marchers was Sadie Grubbs of Highlands Ranch, Colo., who turns 12 on July 19. Last year, her fifth-grade class raised money to redeem slaves through The Sudan Campaign. She attended the vigil with her mother, who works with the campaign, and their pet Pomeranian.
“I would hope that people would start helping as well” after seeing the vigil, said Sadie, adding she hoped it would inspire people to seek information about Sudan.