Iraq (MNN) — Picture this. You’re living in a city that has
been your hometown for generations. You hear about a new threat, a group
of religious extremists attacking your city. Considering there are
52,000 governmental security forces protecting you from the 3,000
terrorists, there’s not that much to fear. You go to bed at midnight
with news that the security forces are winning.
Someone shakes you awake at four in the morning: the 52,000 surrendered to the 3,000. The city is lost.
(Photo courtesy VBB)
That’s what happened in Mosul, Iraq, and the surrounding villages
last year in June. ISIS beat a force over 17 times their size then
stormed from house to house.
Vision Beyond Borders
President Patrick Klein elaborates: at each house, he says ISIS “told
the people to convert to Islam or die or leave. Many of them left.”
How many? Enough to cause a serious problem in Dohuk, “which is about an hour north of Mosul.
“We’re seeing more and more flooding of refugees,” Klein says, “and
the government in Dohuk said, ‘We can’t handle all this influx of
refugees.’ Camps can have as many as 70,000 refugees, and they’re
desperate for care.
“They can’t afford to buy anything because when they left Mosul and
the surrounding villages, they left with just the clothes on their
backs,” says Klein. “They had no time to go to the banks and get any
money out.” One man even lamented to partners that ”he had $60,000
saved. It was his life’s savings, and ISIS took all of his money.”
ISIS isn’t done traumatizing the people of Mosul. Young girls and
women are being taken as prizes by ISIS members who use and abuse them
before “sending them back to their families [so] that they’re terrorized
to increase the fear in families,” says Klein.
One man’s 70-year-old mother was beaten and abused until the
militants decided, “’We don’t want her, we don’t want to feed her
anymore, we don’t want to be responsible for her. Let’s let her go back
to her family.’”
The most fervent prayer for many refugees is that “we might just see
ISIS get routed and then people can go back and live in their homes
again,” says Klein. But even then, they are still fearful. “A lot of
them said they were afraid because they thought there were land mines
actually put in their houses.”
So what can we do to help? Vision Beyond Borders is taking a giant first step.
Klein says, “We’re doing containers to Northern Iraq to help our
Christian brothers and sisters and also to reach out to Yazidi people in
Iraq that have been affected by ISIS.”
This first container will include “school supplies, medical supplies,
and also hygiene supplies,” says Klein, “just to say, ‘We’re with you
in this.’”
Photo Courtesy Vision Beyond Borders
And that’s not the end of it. Vision Beyond Borders has been ”raising
funds to buy Bibles to help them to replace the Bibles that have been
lost.”
But for such a big problem, there needs to be a long-term plan in
place. “What we thought we’d do is start small,” explains Klein. “We
thought, ‘Let’s send a container. Let’s get Bibles for them. Let’s start
small and then let’s see where God takes it.’”
That doesn’t mean this first container will also be the last. “I
think what we want to do is continuously send containers and supplies
for them.”
As the people struggle for money, Klein introduces yet another
long-term plan. He says they want “to set up micro-finance loans, to
help ]refugees] get settled in Northern Iraq.”
So how can you help? It turns out you are vital to the cause. You’ve
also got options. Klein says they can get full Arabic Bibles from
Northern Iraq for “$4 a piece.” In addition, Vision Beyond Borders is
still accepting “school supplies, hygiene materials, and basic medical
supplies” for the container.
Klein closes by reminding us that God can use the warpath of ISIS to
His glory. “I feel like there’s an opportunity for Christians and
Americans around the world to say, ‘We’re standing with you. We love
you. We care about you.’”
Source: Mission Network
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