(Photo Mike Riddering courtesy Sheltering Wings)
Burkina Faso (MNN) — Burkina Faso ends three days of national mourning today.
The president said security would be stepped up in the capital and
the country’s borders after Islamic militants killed at least 28 people
last week. The group, calling itself al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb
(AQIM), mounted its attack at the upscale Splendid Hotel in downtown
Ouagadougou, specifically because the area is popular with foreigners.
World Watch Monitor (WWM) noted in an earlier report that the AQIM
called the attack “a new message from the heroic champions of Islam,
with their blood and their bodies, to the slaves of the cross, the
occupiers of our homes, the looters of our wealth, and who would
undermine our security.” They’re based in the Sahara Desert between
Mali, Niger, and Algeria. This was their first attack in Burkina Faso.
Six of those who died were from Canada, on a mission trip, while a
seventh was a U.S. missionary. According to Brietbart and WWM, the
seventh victim was 45-year-old Michael Riddering, a native of Florida.
He was in Ouagadougou with Pastor Valentin, his Burkinabe associate, to
pick up a team of missionaries visiting from a church in Florida. They
were early, so they stopped by the Cappuccino Cafe to wait.
Not long after they arrived, AQIM launched the attack, beginning with
the café. Valentin called Amy to ask her to pray urgently, but the line
went dead before he finished what he was saying. Valentin was
eventually found and rescued by security forces. Mike was found in a
morgue 24 hours later.
(Photo courtesy World Watch Monitor)
Under the auspices of Sheltering Wings, Riddering and his wife, Amy,
have run the Les Ailes de Refuge orphanage in Yako since 2011. The
Ridderings and their team care for about 400 orphaned children, provide
direct assistance to disenfranchised widows, and help direct the
operations of schools. Funding for these programs comes from the
generous support of people of good will that sponsor children and donate
funds to carry out the work. During the recent Ebola crisis, Mike made
it a point to comfort families and dig graves.
Sheltering Wings is dedicated to impacting the world for Jesus
Christ. Everything the Ridderings accomplished under that commission
comes under this statement found on the Sheltering Wings website: “Jesus
gave His life for us, so we seek to give our lives back to Him.”
In the days following her husband’s death, the community the
Ridderings served has come around Amy and are mourning with her. She
posted on her Facebook page her struggle to come to grips with what
happened, her love for Mike, and her hope in Christ. That came through
yesterday, when amid her grief she posted this: “One of our ladies as
the Women’s Center gave birth two days ago. She [SIC] wated me to name
her child. Her name is Chantal Relwende. ‘Relwende’ is Moore and means
‘Lean on God.’”
Riddering is survived by his wife, two adult daughters, Hayley and
Delaney, in the U.S. and his adopted children, Biba and Moise.
Source: Mission Network
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